Orchard Villa families detail conditions at facility before long-term care commission
Residents of a long-term care home hard hit by the COVID-19 pandemic were crammed into overstuffed rooms and denied access to life-saving treatment because the facility was short on both staff and equipment, their families told Ontario’s commission on the matter.
Family members of some of the 70 residents who died and 155 others who were diagnosed with COVID-19 during an outbreak at Orchard Villa in Pickering, Ont., told Ontario’s Long-Term Care COVID-19 Commission that the deaths and many of the infections could have been prevented had the home held up its duty of care.
“Current regulations indicate that if a resident is not being nourished and hydrated, their power of attorney must be notified. But this regulation was not adhered to during the lockdown,” said Cathy Parkes, whose father died of the virus at Orchard Villa in April.
“We feel that almost every death could have had a different outcome if the families and POAs were informed and allowed to send the residents to hospital, which many of us weren’t.”