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Opinion

As doctors who work in long-term care homes and serve marginalized populations, we believe it’s well past time to end for-profit long-term care

For-profit homes are literally designed in a way that puts frail seniors at risk. With structural safety standards that were set in the 1970s, these homes are more likely to have three or four people living together in one room, which can accelerate the spread of the virus, doctors write.

3 min read
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The Tendercare Living Centre in Scarborough is dealing with a lack of medical staff, specifically doctors, and how that is negatively affecting the residents during this pandemic.


We’re almost a year into this pandemic and the inhumane horror in long-term care homes is repeating itself. It’s been nothing short of a nightmare. Vulnerable elders at a private for-profit Scarborough long-term care home, Tendercare, have died and will most likely continue to die from a virus that they were supposed to be protected from with an “iron ring”. It is unconscionable that this one home alone now has over 40 deaths. Adding further insult to this tragedy is a recent investigation showing for-profit long-term care companies paying out $170 million dollars to shareholders. And for what performance?

As physicians who work in long-term care homes and serve marginalized populations, we believe governments have been shirking crucial questions for far too long.

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