Eastern Ontario nursing home eagerly awaits Red Cross help

A nursing home east of Ottawa says it is eagerly awaiting help from the Canadian Red Cross to offset heavy workloads as it battles a COVID-19 outbreak.

The Prescott and Russell Residence in Hawkesbury, Ont. run by the local municipality, now has 48 cases of COVID-19 among its residents and staff.

The Red Cross was on site on Tuesday and will be finalizing its workforce deployment plan on Wednesday, according to Alexandre Gorman, administrator of the home.

"We have new employees coming in, for us the sooner the better, hopefully they'll be in on Friday," Gorman said.

COVID-19 cases were first confirmed at the long-term care home on Oct. 5. To date, 31 residents and 17 workers have tested positive and one resident has died.

The Red Cross workers will not be providing any direct care to residents but instead they will support staff, Gorman said.

"They'll be helping us with housekeeping, high intensity disinfection, cleaning. Just having an eye on residents as well is great and bringing plates to the residents' rooms," he said.

Denis Babin/CBC
Denis Babin/CBC

Shortage of nurses at Embrun, Ont. home

Meanwhile, workers at the St. Jacques Nursing Home in Embrun, Ont. are raising concerns about a staffing shortage there and the need for Red Cross help.

The home was put in lockdown recently due to a much smaller outbreak reportedly involving one staff member who tested positive.

Staff at St. Jacques tell CBC there's been a chronic shortage of workers, including personal support workers and registered nurses. The workers asked CBC not to publish their names out of fear of reprisal.

Jacynthe Barbeau, a CUPE national representative, has spoken to unionized staff inside the home.

"From what I understand, the greatest staff shortage is with the registered nurses," said Barbeau. "Usually they have six and they're down to two at the moment. But there's staff shortages everywhere in the home."

By law, long-term care homes in Ontario must have at least one nurse on duty 24 hours a day.

Workers at St. Jacques say they've been told the Red Cross is planning to help them out, but they aren't sure exactly when they will arrive.

Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press
Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press

The nursing home was on an initial list of eastern Ontario facilities slated to get assistance from the national organization, although the home's administration told CBC they weren't aware of that plan.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford confirmed on Oct. 13 that he had asked the federal Ministry of Public Safety for help from the Red Cross. But in the past week, neither the Ministry of Long-Term Care nor the federal department has been able to confirm details of that assistance.

The private owner of St. Jacque's Nursing Home didn't respond to CBC's request for information.

The Eastern Ontario Health Unit monitors care homes in both Embrun and Hawkesbury. The health unit told CBC it can't comment on human resources at the facilities.

"The CRC (Canadian Red Cross) did a site visit at the Prescott and Russell Residence...We are not aware if the CRC will visit other homes," the unit said.