Thank you Mr. Chairman. The policy or however you want to call it, the work that we are doing in the Department of Health and Social Services is pretty much in line with what has been there for as long as I have been here, I believe.
I know the Member is right, there are some facilities in the communities that were built by the Housing Corporation in at least three or four communities, but those were not meant to be long-term care as Department of Health and Social Services know it. When we are talking about long-term care, we are talking about acute care or more intense care. I believe there is room for those other facilities in the communities as we go forward, to look after the people who need more assistance, but that can be done outside of the acute care that the Department of Health and Social Services is responsible for.
We really need to invest in home care and wellness workers so that we can support our elders in the small communities, or small community or
anywhere, even in Yellowknife, we do need to do more home care, or in bigger centres, so that we keep our people in their homes, supported by resources that are not 24/7. I could ask my deputy minister to speak to you more about why there needs to be a minimum level of service for us for when we talk about acute care health and social services facility of long-term care and why we need to have certain makeup of staff and a certain number of patients.
With the advancement in pharmaceuticals and treatments and many things, a lot of people can live in their home with support and we need to keep people who need more intense care in long-term care facilities, and there is a certain specified staffing makeup that we have to have there.