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A long-term care home worker speaks with a resident in their room.

Reimagining LTC: Enabling a Healthy Workforce to Provide Person-Centred Care

As we work towards building a more resilient long-term care system, supports to improve the health and safety of the workforce and person-centred care are needed more than ever.

In this section :

Reimagining LTC: Enabling a Healthy Workforce to Provide Person-Centred Care (Reimagining LTC) was an initiative that supported quality improvement on these important issues. The program ran from January to December 2023.

 This program aimed to:

  • Increase capacity for safety and quality improvement work within long-term care.
  • Support long-term care homes to identify, plan and implement changes that will enable a healthy workforce to deliver more person-centred care to residents.
  • Foster peer-to-peer sharing and learning among long-term care homes across Canada.

Reimagining LTC Webinar Series

The Reimagining LTC webinar series explores topics related to people in the workforce and person-centred care, with the aim of fostering a more resilient long-term care sector. Hour-long webinars are hosted monthly and feature speakers with expertise in topics related to long-term care.
This new series builds on ÈÕ±¾ÎÞÂë’s previous webinar series, Next Steps in COVID-19 Response in Long-Term Care.

Learn more

Participating long-term care homes

Through Reimagining LTC, ÈÕ±¾ÎÞÂë supported more than 230 long-term care homes in all 10 provinces to implement quality improvement projects focused on fostering healthy work environments that will enable safer, higher-quality person-centred care.

Map of Canada showing 83 participating homes in British Columbia, 30 participating homes in Alberta, 19 participating homes in Saskatchewan, 14 participating homes in Manitoba, 47 participating homes in Ontario, 19 participating homes in Quebec, 11 participating homes in New Brunswick, four participating homes on Prince Edward Island, four participating homes in Nova Scotia, and two participating homes in Newfoundland and Labrador.

ÈÕ±¾ÎÞÂë partnered with Health Quality BC to provide coaching and additional supports to 79 long-term care homes in British Columbia focusing on the appropriate use of antipsychotic medications.

Areas of focus for participating teams

Reimagining LTC teams implemented a range of diverse projects focused on enabling a healthy workforce to provide person-centred care. Specific areas of focus included:

  • Improving care for people with dementia, including helping staff to better understand dementia so that they can provide more person-centred care.
  • Strengthening person-centred care, including creating and implementing approaches to deliver care that centres on the person.
  • Creating healthy workplace cultures, including staff and workplace assessments, workplace charters and educational opportunities.
  • Improving staff well-being with a focus on morale, job satisfaction, stress management and mental health promotion.
  • Creating and sustaining psychologically safe and healthy workplace environments, addressing specific aspects of psychological safety or implementing the .
  • Appropriate use of antipsychotic medications.

What teams received

Teams participating in Reimagining LTC received:

  • Funding of up to $10,000 per home
  • Implementation and capacity-building support such as coaching, monthly webinars, quality improvement basics workshops and mental health first aid training
  • Peer-to-peer learning and connections

The program will enable participating teams to accelerate efforts to align with the new released by the , and , the National Standard of Canada published by .

Reimagining LTC builds on earlier programming that supported long-term care and retirement homes to respond to COVID-19 and build capacity to implement quality improvement projects.

Program Results

The Reimagining LTC program was impactful for participating long-term care homes* in various ways, such as:

  • Improved 1:1 engagement between staff and residents
  • Enhanced ability to create a more home-like environment
  • Improved staff engagement and workplace culture
  • Increased resident, family and essential care partner engagement
  • Better support for resident safety and wellbeing

* All findings are based on 220 final report submissions. The total number of participating teams in the program was 233.

Site-level Outcomes

  • The program evaluation found that nearly 100% of participating homes achieved or somewhat achieved their aim, related to person-centred care and/or workforce well-being, during the program period.
    • Teams reported improvements for their staff, such as: increased attendance, reduced turnover, increased staff satisfaction, improved teamwork, increased knowledge and confidence (in handling responsive behaviour, care planning, understanding data, etc.), improved wellbeing, reduced workload, and decreased workplace incidents.
    • Teams reported improvements in person-centred care for residents, including: individualized care planning approaches, new or increased recreational activities, better mealtime experience, home environment improvements, and increased medication review.
  • 59% of BC AUA project sites decreased the percentage of residents on antipsychotics without an appropriate diagnosis
  • 49% of teams are working to spread their changes to additional sites
  • Overall, many teams stated their participation in the Reimagining LTC program strengthened their relationships with team members and residents, offered peer-to-peer connection and learning between LTC homes, and helped them to feel that they are making a difference towards providing meaningful care.