Wednesday, May 20, 2026
ADVT 
National

Pandemic changed LTC views, survey finds

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Jul, 2021 10:02 AM
  • Pandemic changed LTC views, survey finds

A survey from the Angus Reid Institute suggests that the pandemic has changed the way most Canadians think about their future with long-term care.

The survey finds that just 18 per cent of respondents say their views haven't changed since COVID-19 hit, but about half of those surveyed say they now "dread" the thought of themselves or their loved ones being in long-term care.

Long-term care residents have accounted for the majority of COVID-19 deaths in Canada.

The report says that both those with loved ones in care and those without are equally likely to have changed their views. On other questions throughout the survey, such as what should change within the system, the two groups of people often held similar views.

That doesn't always happen, said president Shachi Kurl.

"Often lived experience can lead to a very different outlook on an issue as opposed to those who have an opinion on an issue but don’t have the lived experience," she said.

"In this case on many fronts, there’s a significant amount of alignment and consistency between those who have spent the last year or so dealing with the day in day out of having a loved one in a long-term care facility and those who have simply been observing, reading about, hearing about it...That’s probably a pretty critical marker for policymakers."

She noted that a previous Angus Reid survey on long-term care found that even though some people with family in a facility felt their loved one had been failed, there were significant numbers who felt that their facility did everything it could under the circumstances.

"What came out, what captured the attention of people across the country, were those stories of failure," she said.

"It’s the issue that horrified and galvanized Canadians as they heard about it."

Three-quarters of respondents said significant changes, if not a complete overhaul, should happen in long-term care, though responses were divided on how people prioritized areas of need. The top option was having more inspections and enforcement of standards.

More than half of those surveyed - 55 per cent - said they would be willing to pay an increase of two per cent in their tax rate to fund improvements to long-term care. The most support for that idea came from British Columbia, where 60 per cent of respondents agreed with that idea, and in Ontario, it was 59 per cent.

"One of the chronic challenges in addressing systems that need changing or need improvement in this country is often that Canadians have an appetite to see those improvements, but they’re not…as willing to dip into their own wallets to fund them," Kurl said.

"I do think the fact that you have more than half…saying, 'Yeah, I personally would pay more to see improvements and those improvements could be anything from hiring more staff in such facilities or paying workers more or investing more in enforcement,' you see that healthy appetite."

Three-quarters of respondents also said they would support making long-term care a fully integrated part of the public health system, and 40 per cent said private companies should be phased out of operating long-term care homes. A majority also agreed that Canada should invest in-home care.

The self-commissioned online survey was conducted from March 15 to 18, among a representative randomized sample of 1,503 Canadian adults who are members of Angus Reid Forum.

The polling industry's professional body, the Canadian Research Insights Council, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.

MORE National ARTICLES

Trudeau leaves for G7, NATO after London attack

Trudeau leaves for G7, NATO after London attack
Trudeau is to arrive in Cornwall, U.K., today for a three-day gathering with G7 leaders and then travel to Brussels for a NATO summit, followed by a meeting between Canada and the European Union.

Trudeau leaves for G7, NATO after London attack

Trudeau, Biden to talk border at G7: Higgins

Trudeau, Biden to talk border at G7: Higgins
The White House said the pair, who are in the United Kingdom for the three-day summit that gets underway Friday, will discuss the matter before the weekend, Rep. Brian Higgins told a panel discussion hosted by the Tourism Industry Association of Canada.

Trudeau, Biden to talk border at G7: Higgins

PBO: Student aid revamp may cost feds more

PBO: Student aid revamp may cost feds more
The Liberals proposed a sweeping package in the April budget to ease student loan costs and expand a non-repayable grant program for tens of thousands of post-secondary students and recent graduates.

PBO: Student aid revamp may cost feds more

Under Biden, Canada's opinion of U.S. soars: Pew

Under Biden, Canada's opinion of U.S. soars: Pew
The global Pew Research Center study released Thursday points to strikingly similar shifts in sentiment elsewhere around the world in the months since Biden took over the Oval Office.

Under Biden, Canada's opinion of U.S. soars: Pew

Canada's COVID-19 infections continue to plummet

Canada's COVID-19 infections continue to plummet
Canada's COVID-19 infections are at the lowest level since last September, with the seven-day average of new cases sitting at 1,611 as of Wednesday.

Canada's COVID-19 infections continue to plummet

Commons committee blasts Liberals over WE deal

Commons committee blasts Liberals over WE deal
The report from the House of Commons ethics committees followed months of contentious hearings and the release of thousands of pages of documents since last spring, when the government first inked the agreement with WE.

Commons committee blasts Liberals over WE deal