Quebec allowing four people per room in care homes, against coroner’s recommendations
MONTREAL — Quebec’s decision allowing long-term care centres to house up to four residents per room will put people at risk without freeing up hospital beds, according to a patients rights advocate.
The Health Department’s new directive is meant to reduce long-term care wait lists and ease pressure on hospitals. But Paul Brunet, president of the Conseil pour la protection des malades, says housing up to four residents per room will increase their risk of catching COVID-19 and other diseases, such as C. difficile, and he says it would make it more likely that residents would need to be hospitalized.
As well, he says he’s worried COVID-19 outbreaks will lead to a rise in lockdowns of long-term care homes.
“We’re going to lose people with different infections and we’re going to lose them psychologically because we’re going to go back to isolation, which was a tragedy for a lot of elders,” he said in an interview Monday.


