Stolen Time (8/10)
by Tony Medley
95 Minutes.
Written and directed by Helene Klodawski, this
documentary reveals the tawdry, untold story about for-profit nursing
homes in Canada. Canadian attorney Melissa Miller has been suing some of
the largest for-profit nursing homes in Canada since 2018
Klodawski interviews many knowledgeable people,
like Brent Rigby, a Private Investigator who was hired to investigate
systemic negligence by Extendicare, Revera, Inc., and Sienna Senior
Living. He says, “There’s essentially no regulatory oversight and no
repercussions at all for the complete systemic failure across all the
companies while they bring in record profits.” Pat Armstrong writes
about long term care in many countries. Lisa Alleyne worked as a
personal care worker (PSW) in nursing homes run for profit.
When Covid-19 hit, governments across North America
passed legislation to protect nursing homes from lawsuits. The stain of
corruption is obvious. Mike Harris was Premier of Ontario from
1995-2002. He was responsible for privatizing lolong-termare in Ontario.
Now guess where he is. He is Vice President of long term care operations
for Extendicare!
Jackie Brown researches how nursing home chains
create high returns for investors. “Revera was purchased by the Public
Sector Pension Investment Board. The Public Sector Pension Investment
Board is actually a Federal Crown corporation that manages the pension
funds of all federal civil servants and also some members of the
military. What Revera is doing is essentially growing the pension
savings, the retirement savings of federal civil servants by actually
extracting money from the care provided to seniors.”
Revera does not report profits but the Public
Sector Pension Investment Board, its parent company, reports annual
profits of around $25 billion.
Katha Fortier has been fighting for the rights of
care workers for decades.
Ayesha Jabba, a social worker, at one of the
companies, says, “if there was an individual with responsive behaviors
and causing trouble, I had a lot of pressure to harass the families to
change the facility…try to get them out, try to get them elsewhere. Try
to pressure the families to agree to get them elsewhere. Even
though families may be living close by and it’s convenient for them. My
role was to try to pressure them into going to another facility and make
it as appealing as possible to leave our facility and go elsewhere.
Which made me very uncomfortable.”
There is only one part of the film that was
inappropriate. Rai Reece writes about anti-black racism. Her
contributions alleging racism have no place in this film. It’s not about
racism and her presence and what she says detracts from the message and
point of the film. I would have rated this 10/10, but her presence was
so offensive that I downgraded it substantially.
I had a good friend who developed Parkinson’s
Disease and bought his way into one of the best nursing homes in
Southern California. He told me after he had been there for awhile that
it was the worst decision he ever made.
This is a movie that everyone should see if they
are considering going into a nursing home or committing a relative to
one.
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