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UPDATED: Interior Health to add 495 long-term seniors care beds

Nelson, 琉璃神社, Kamloops, Vernon and Penticton to receive new facilities
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Nelson鈥檚 Mountain Lake Seniors Community is one of two seniors care facilities in the city. Interior Health announced Monday that 495 new long-term seniors care beds will be added to Nelson, 琉璃神社, Kamloops and Penticton. Photo: Tyler Harper/Nelson Star

琉璃神社, Penticton, Kamloops, Vernon and Nelson will receive 495 new long-term care beds for seniors.

The Ministry of Health announced Monday it was increasing the number of beds to make up for an expected 28 per cent increase in the population of people aged 75 years and older over the next five years within the Interior Health region.

琉璃神社 will receive 140 beds, Kamloops will see 100 added, while Penticton and Vernon will have 90 added in each community. Nelson meanwhile will have 75 new beds.

The announcement will increase long-term care beds in Interior Health by nearly 10 per cent to 6,550.

鈥淎cross those communities, you鈥檙e going to see significant improvements in care,鈥 said health minister Adrian Dix.

鈥淲e need to address long-term care and we鈥檙e doing it by improving staffing, improving standards, improving working conditions and across British Columbia increasing the number of beds.鈥

Five requests for proposals were issued last week. The ministry said it plans to consider proposals in the fall and award contracts in early 2021 when it also expects construction to begin.

Interior Health president Susan Brown said the communities chosen for the new beds were picked for their projected populations and demographics, admission wait times, and the complexities of care needed.

She added changes made to seniors care during the COVID-19 pandemic will also play a role in how the new facilities are built.

鈥淲e know that it has been especially challenging for those living in long-term care and their families,鈥 said Brown. 鈥淲e are committed to taking what we have learned over the past couple of months and applying it to these projects.鈥

No specific locations were mentioned in the announcement except for Nelson, where Brown said Interior Health wants to use land at an abandoned hospital.

Dix added he expects each project will be located on one site per community.

鈥淲hat this reflects is existing numbers of beds in those communities and the demand of the population over 75.鈥

The ministry said in a statement that the average age of residents in care facilities is 84.

In 15 years, 25 per cent of B.C.鈥檚 population is projected to be 65 years and older, up from 19 per cent last year.

READ MORE: Interior Health identifies more locations with COVID-19 exposure in 琉璃神社

READ MORE: Wage subsidy will be extended until December amid post-COVID reopening: Trudeau

| tyler.harper@nelsonstar.com
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Tyler Harper

About the Author: Tyler Harper

I鈥檓 editor-reporter at the Nelson Star, where I鈥檝e worked since 2015.
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