Seniors Advocate branding logo Seniors Advocate branding logo mobile
Skip to navigation Skip to Contents Skip to Accessibility Statement
1-877-952-3181
Menu

British Columbia’s home support program is unaffordable for most seniors, offers too little service for high-need clients and has created a workforce where 75 per cent of staff are casual or part-time, says B.C. Seniors Advocate Isobel Mackenzie. In a comprehensive report released today titled Home Support…We Can Do Better, Mackenzie examines the health care program, which is a lifeline for many seniors, and makes recommendations for improvement.

Key findings from the review include:

  • Public home support is unaffordable for most seniors. A senior with an income of $27,800 is expected to pay $8,800 a year for a once-daily home support visit;
  • 61 per cent of residents admitted to long-term care received no home support in the 90 days before admission;
  • 15 per cent (4200 beds) of long-term-care residents could be living in the community;
  • On average, a long-term care bed costs taxpayers $27,740 more per year than two hours of daily home support;
  • Overall 63 per cent of home support clients receive less than an hour of home support per day on average;
  • 51 per cent of home support clients are assessed as high or very high risk for placement in long-term care but receive only 1.2 hours or less of home support per day on average;
  • Nearly one-third of family caregivers are in distress;
  • The community health workers who provide home support have the highest rate of casual/part time workers of any health care classification;
  • Home support has not kept pace with the growing number of seniors. Over the last five years, the number of seniors has grown by 22 per cent but the number of home support clients has increased by 15 per cent;
  • The rate of home support clients for the population 85 and older has decreased 4.3 per cent in the last five years;
  • The rate of home support hours for the population 85 and older has decreased 10.3 per cent in the last five years; and
  • Complaints to the Patient Care Quality Office have increased 62 per cent in the last five years.

The report makes a series of recommendations focused on making the program more affordable for seniors, increasing service levels, exploring a client direct-funding model, providing seniors with consistent and comprehensive information on the services available to them and exploring ways to make the job of being a community health worker more attractive.

Read the Full Report
Read the News Release
Watch the Media Release Video