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Granddaughter and NDP addressed sanitary risks and understaffing in long-term care

Health Critic Vicki Mowat joined Marea Olafson, a teacher living near Wynyard who has become an advocate for her grandmother, to raise concerns about how understaffing in long-term care has put their residents at an elevated risk during a pandemic.

Health Critic Vicki Mowat joined Marea Olafson, a teacher living near Wynyard who has become an advocate for her grandmother, to raise concerns about how understaffing in long-term care has put their residents at an elevated risk during a pandemic.

鈥淯nderstaffing of long-term care is a serious problem in Saskatchewan, as Olafson鈥檚 grandmother has experienced these past months,鈥 said Mowat.

鈥淲e know that frontline care workers are working incredibly hard under difficult circumstances and understaffing by this government is putting them in impossible situations. Especially during a pandemic, we need urgent action to address that understaffing, for the safety of residents, of staff and of families,鈥澛燤owat continued. 聽

Olafson鈥檚 grandmother, Ellen Ross, is a 93-year-old retired nurse from Saskatoon recently placed in a long-term care home in Foam Lake.

With the understaffing the home experienced, Ross complained she 鈥淗as never felt so filthy in her life鈥 and that she only gets to wash her hands with soap and water once a week when she has her bath. Also, when she uses the call button to use the washroom, the call often goes unanswered.

鈥淢y grandmother has already cursed me that she hopes when I鈥檓 93, I have to go through what she is, so I鈥檓 speaking out to anyone who will listen,鈥 said Olafson.

鈥淚 am disappointed that there are no provincial regulations on resident-to-care-worker ratios, just very vague guidelines,鈥 Olafson said.

鈥淲e have to do better by our elders than what they are currently forced to endure.鈥

Olafson wrote to Health Minister Reiter and Premier Moe on July 8 to raise her concerns with her grandmother鈥檚 treatment and to challenge the premier to learn more about the situation facing long-term care residents.

鈥淎s a teacher, we run role-playing exercises for students all the time on how government works 鈥 well, maybe it鈥檚 time our government understands how long-term care works,鈥 said Olafson.

鈥淢y message to the premier is this: Come walk a mile in my grandma鈥檚 shoes, then tell me there are no problems with seniors鈥 care in Saskatchewan.鈥

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