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In this section :

Past Huddles

Supporting family caregivers in British Columbia: advancing caregiver friendly health care

March 15, 2023

Speakers:

  • Barbara MacLean, Executive Director
  • Wendy Johnstone, Director of Programs and Innovation.

) proudly and compassionately supports over one million people in British Columbia who provide care and support to a family member or friend living with disease, disability or frailty due to aging. Their mission is to improve the quality of life of family and friend caregivers through support, information, education and leadership. FCBC鈥檚 health system collaboration work over the past 13 years has been focused on strengthening the voice of family caregivers and the significance of their role. As a partner in the BC Ministry of Health鈥檚 Patients as Partners Initiative, they adopted the 鈥渘othing about me without me鈥 value of person and family centered care. This session will describe their efforts to engage with the health sector and effect systemic, structural and cultural changes at the micro, meso and macro levels so that family caregivers are valued, recognized and included as partners in care.

Partners in Care: Implementation of the Essential Caregiver Program at Oak Valley Health

February 15, 2023

Speakers:

  • Kanwal Ali, Quality and Patient Safety Specialist
  • Elaine Richards, Manager, Quality and Patient Safety
  • Michelle Samm, Director, Quality, Patient Safety, Patient Experience & Relations and IPAC

Oak Valley Health developed an Essential Caregiver Program to support the safe reintegration of families and loved ones in the patient鈥檚 care throughout their hospital journey. Essential caregivers are chosen by the patient to assist with patient care and well-being while in the hospital and are considered to be an integral part of the care team. This session will provide an overview of the development and implementation of this program.

A policy approach to a better caregiving landscape in Canada

January 18, 2023听

Speaker:

Liv Mendelsohn, M.A., M.Ed. (she/her), Executive Director Canadian Centre for Caregiving Excellence

Caregiving is the next frontier of public policy in Canada. Across the country, caregivers and care providers support the people we love with very little assistance from our governments. In this session, Liv Mendelsohn, Executive Director of the Canadian Centre for Caregiving Excellence (CCCE), will show how doing better is possible. CCCE recently launched鈥, a wide-ranging policy whitepaper that lays out the state of caregiving and offers policy solutions for how to make Canada the best place in the world to give and receive care. Learn how good public policy 鈥 proper income supports, improved tax credits, and accessible services, among others 鈥 can help caregivers, care providers, and care recipients.

Related resources:鈥

Learning from Each Other 鈥 Implementing the Essential Partners-in-Care program at Lakeridge Health

Nov 16, 2022

Additional resources

This session will focus on the implementation journey of the Essential Partner-in-Care (EPC) program at Lakeridge Health, including why the program was developed, the various components of the program, and challenges and successes of the program roll-out so far. It will also include a brief overview of the Ontario Caregiver Organization鈥檚 Caregivers as Partners Learning Collaborative and highlight key learnings from cross-sectors partners that support the inclusion of caregivers.

Speakers:

  • Lina Reid, Consultant, Patient Experience, Lakeridge Health
  • Marina Gaziani, Consultant, Patient Experience, Lakeridge Health
  • Alison Kilbourn, Project Lead, Strategic Partnerships & Innovation, The Ontario Caregiver Organization

How safe is your care?听 Building capacity for patient safety in partnership with providers, patients and essential care partners

October 19, 2022

Additional resources

Improving patient safety has been a priority for more than 20 years, yet harm continues to occur an unacceptable rate. To enable safe care, we must rethink our approach.听 The Measuring and Monitoring of Safety (2013, Vincent, Burnett and Carthey) offers a broader, dynamic approach for creating and sustaining safer care, in which patient partnerships are integral. This session prepared and delivered in partnership with patients, will explore the questions 鈥渉ow safe is your care?鈥 and 鈥渨hat makes you feel safe?鈥 and illustrate actions patients, carers, healthcare providers and leaders can take to support safety though inquiry and conversations.

Speakers:

  • Anne MacLaurin, Senior Program Lead, 日本无码
  • Maaike Asselbergs, Patients for Patient Safety Canada.

Creating and Sustaining Engagement Capable Environments

September 21, 2022

Additional resources

Engagement capable environments are environments that have incorporated the values of patient-centered and patient-partnered care as a philosophy underlying the organization's priorities. We will present co-created resources for building the capacity of patient partners, health service teams and sector leaders. This session will include information and lessons learned from ongoing efforts to bring the voices of patients and essential care to the table to improve safety and quality of care.

Speakers

  • Carol Fancott, Director, Patient Engagement & Partnerships, 日本无码
  • Adrienne Zarem, Patient Partner

Join the Essential Together program for a presentation from the Fraser Health, BC 鈥 Patient & Family Advisory Councils

June 15, 2022

Speakers

  • Laura Klein Clinical Practice Consultant in Fraser Health Authority

Essential Care Partners Supporting Care Activities 鈥 Process and Resources for Implementation

May 18, 2022

Additional resources

Join the Essential Together program for a presentation from the University Health Network, Ontario, when they will discuss 鈥淓ssential Care Partners Supporting Care Activities 鈥 Process and Resources for Implementation鈥澨

Speakers

  • Laura Williams, Senior Director, Patient Experience;
  • Kerseri Scane, Manager, Patient Engagement for Healthcare Improvement;
  • Farrah Schwartz, Patient Education & Engagement

A Discussion with Tideview Terrace Nursing Home

April 20, 2022

Join the Essential Together program for a Q &A with Ariel Rice from Tideview Terrrace Nursing Home, an Eden Alternative Registered facility, located in Digby, Nova Scotia. We will discuss how they have welcomed essential care partners during COVID, the barriers and facilitators, and why they have taken the Essential Together pledge.听

  • Ariel Rice - Neighbourhood Manager & Volunteer Lead听
  • Debra Boudreau - administrator / CEO

Committing to Family Presence during COVID- An Alberta Story

March 16, 2022

Presenters

  • Jennifer Symon 鈥 Senior consultant Engagement and Patient Experience
  • Valrie Stewart- Consultant Patient and family Centred Care

Session Description - a general discussion of the keys to success in maintaining family presence during COVID.听 Identification of some of the challenges of this commitment and the learnings along the way.

Jennifer is a registered nurse whose passion for family presence and PFCC grew after caring for her husband at while he battled a rare disease in hospital for a year.听 She now works with AHS听Engagement and Patient Experience department and lives and breathes her passion for this听work in all she does.

Valrie is a registered nurse with many years of nursing leadership and a special interest in patient and family centred care and family presence. She left a manger鈥檚 role in 2013 to join the South Health Campus Patient and Family Centred Care Department and subsequently the Calgary Zone Patient and Family Centred Care Team.

Patient and Family Partnership: Essential or Essential with Conditions? The Kingston Health Sciences Centre Experience.

February 16, 2022

Presenters:听 Angela Morin, Lead, Patient and Family Centred Care & Anne O鈥橰iordan, Patient Family Experience Advisor

Are patient and family partners considered essential in your organization or essential with conditions? To kick off the discussion, Angela and Anne will do a brief presentation on the role of patient and family experience advisors, at the organizational and leadership levels, at Kingston Health Sciences Centre during the pandemic and their impact on family presence and the role of essential care partners. The experience of Kingston Health Sciences Centre will be shared with insights into changes that developed over the course of the pandemic and reflections about factors that fostered or challenged the role of patient and family partners at all levels of the organization.听

Creating the conditions for change: Future proofing caregiver presence policies听

January 19, 2022

Discover听the key steps to shift existing visitor and caregiver presence policies towards person- and family-centred care based on the three foundational principles for successful reintegration of essential care partners into health and care settings.听听

Drawing on the latest evidence,听policy guidance听and lessons learned through the pandemic,听日本无码 has developed tools and resources that support Essential Care Partner programs.听This session will show participants how to use the听Essential Together Change Packageand听create an opportunity for them to share experiences听and听lessons learned.听听

Host:听听

  • Jessie Checkley, Senior Program Lead, Patient Engagement and Partnerships, 日本无码

Speaker:听

  • Jill Ritchie, Program Lead, Patient Engagement and Partnerships, 日本无码听

Staying in Touch With Informal Caregivers During The Pandemic

December 8, 2021

Speakers:

  • Ms. Am茅lie听Boutin,听Assistant, Support for elderly autonomy program 鈥 home care continuum)听
  • Mr. Jo毛l Bouchard, Senior Advisor, accommodation, harmonization, practice quality, and living environment approach)
  • Ms. Pascale Castonguay, regional coordinator, informal caregiving

The role and importance of informal caregivers as partners in the care and services provided to clients in public residences have continued to evolve over the past decade. However, the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic has turned everything on its head, forcing the Direction du programme de soutien 脿 l鈥檃utonomie des personnes 芒g茅es (Support for elderly autonomy program) to reinvent itself and come up with other ways of communicating. During this time of great uncertainty when in-person contact was no longer an option, various initiatives were introduced to maintain these important relationships. This presentation gives an overview of the issues and the solutions identified to overcome them.

Ethical Considerations in the Implementation of Vaccination Requirements for Essential Care Partners and Visitors

November 24, 2021

Speaker 鈥 Mike Kekewich,听Director of Clinical and Organizational Ethics at The Ottawa Hospital, as well as the Director for the Champlain Centre for Health Care Ethics, and the Champlain Regional MAID Network.

Recent visiting policies to health and care facilities across the countries have shown considerable change in the last few months, with some introducing vaccine mandates for staff, essential care partners and general visitors. Mike will present about the ethics and decisions involved when considering introducing vaccine mandates for essential care partners.

Canadian Patient Safety Week Webinar

October 27, 2021

Panel speakers included:

  • Dr. Amit Arya - Palliative Care Lead at Kensington Health; Lecturer, Department of Family & Community Medicine, University of Toronto; Assistant Clinical Professor, Faculty of Health Sciences, McMaster University
  • Jennifer Baumbusch - Caregiver for her daughter who is medically complex, Associate Professor at the UBC School of Nursing
  • Jannice Kaffer - President and CEO, Hotel Dieu Grace Healthcare
  • Linda Moss 鈥 Patient Advocate, Ontario
  • Carol Fancott 鈥 Director, Patient Engagement and Partnerships, 日本无码
  • Maggie Keresteci - Essential Care Partner, Executive Director, Canadian Association for Health Services and Policy Research

Questions from the webinar

Essential Care Partner - Bringing Evidence to Life and Busting Myths through Stories

October 13, 2021

Host:

  • Carol Fancott, Director, Patient Engagement and Partnerships, 日本无码

Speakers:

  • Maggie Keresteci, Caregiver Advocate, Executive Director CAHSPR, PCAG Co-chair
  • Lisa Raffoul, Patient Advocate, H么tel-Dieu Grace Healthcare, Windsor, PCAG Member
  • Pamela Libralesso, RSSW, Founder, Ontario Families of Group Home Residents, PCAG Member
  • Serena Thompson, Vice President, Sickle Cell Association, Patient Advocate, PCAG Member

This huddle will share stories, bust myths and clarify the facts that show how essential care partners benefit care, experience, safety and outcomes, including during COVID-19. Stories written by members, colleagues and friends of the Essential Together Patient and Caregiver Advisory Group bring evidence to life and demonstrate the vital role essential care partners play in a patient鈥檚 care team.

Family Presence Policies 鈥 The latest evidence and policy guidance

September 23, 2021

Host:

  • Jessie Checkley, Senior Program Lead, Patient Engagement and Partnerships

Speakers:

  • Carol Fancott, Director, Patient Engagement and Partnerships, 日本无码
  • Shoshana Hahn-Goldberg Senior Program Lead 鈥婻epresenting 日本无码鈥 Patient Engagement and听Partnerships

This huddle will provide an overview of updated policy guidance and evidence for implementing family presence policies in health and care settings, including during the pandemic.

During 2020, policy guidance regarding family presence policies was co-developed with range of people with expertise and COVID-19 related experience, including providers, administrators, patients, families and caregivers. Using the latest evidence about the impact of restrictive policies on patient outcomes, this policy guidance has been updated to reflect the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. This session is particularly relevant for healthcare decision makers and those implementing policy that impacts on essential care partners' access to loved ones in any health and care setting.

Staff training to support family-centred care during COVID-19

June 30, 2021

Speakers: Dr. Jasneet Parmar (Care of the Elderly physician and Associate Professor at the Department of Family Medicine, University of Alberta) and Cecilia Marion (Senior Director of Operations, Addictions, Mental Health and Continuing Care, Covenant Health).

Key resources:

Caregiver ID 鈥 A tool to support the reintegration of essential care partners during the pandemic and beyond

June 9, 2021

Speakers: Alison Kilbourn (Project Lead, Strategic Partnerships and Innovation, Ontario Caregiver Organization) and Jennifer Killing (Vice-President - Quality, Research and Strategic Partnerships, peopleCare Communities)

Key resources:

Family Presence 鈥 Mutual Expectations

May 26, 2021

Speakers: Kristin Grunert (Director, Patient and Family Centered Care and Area Engagement), Amber Clarke (Patient and Family Centred Care Specialist) and Erin Kell (Patient and Family Centred Care Specialist) from the听Saskatchewan听Health听Authority

Essential Together, moving co-developed policy into practice across Alberta Health Services

May 6, 2021

Speakers: Chris Mayhew (Senior Consultant, Engagement and Patient Experience, Alberta Health Services) and Dean Radbourne (Patient and Family Advisor, Alberta Health Services Patient and Family Advisory Group)

Key resources:

  • (updated as of October 1, 2021)

鈥滿rs Jones, who are your essential care partners?鈥

April 8, 2021

Speaker:听Lisa Raffoul, Patient Advocate, H么tel-Dieu Grace Healthcare

Key resources (currently English only):

Supporting staff in the safe reintegration of essential care partners

March 25, 2021

Speaker: Jennifer Cornell, Director of Long-Term Care, Grey County

Key resources (currently English only):

We know there is different language and terminology used across the country, but to make sure we provide as much clarity as possible, in this context:

Blanket visitor restrictions refer to restrictions that extend to all 鈥渧isitors鈥 entering a facility, often without exceptions, including essential care partners.

Essential care partners听provide physical, psychological and emotional support, as deemed important by the patient. This care can include support in decision making, care coordination and continuity of care. Essential care partners are identified by the patient (or substitute decision maker) and can include family members, close friends or other caregivers.

Patients includes residents and clients.

Patient partners include patients, residents, clients, families, caregivers and care partners, and others with lived experience who are working together with teams to improve the quality and safety of healthcare.

Health and care facilities refers to hospitals, long-term care/residential care/nursing homes and other congregate care settings as well as primary care and outpatient care settings.

Open family presence policies support the presence of essential care partners at patient bedside at any time and not restricted by 鈥渧isiting hours.鈥