Petition updateHuman Rights Should Be For Everybody. My sister with Down syndrome wants an apologyDear Minister of Health, How Do You Measure One Year?

Franke JamesSaanich, BC, Canada
Dec 5, 2014
For Teresa, it’s all about freedom. A freedom she almost didn’t have…
http://www.frankejames.com/wp-content/TeresaPocock_ZackEmbree_980px.jpg
The truth is that if we had not rescued Teresa from the nursing home, she would have been living in an Ontario institution — with no right to choose otherwise — for the rest of her life.
To: Ontario Government Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care
Dear Dr. Eric Hoskins,
I look at my sister Teresa and all the wonderful things she is doing with us now and I take a deep breath. I give thanks for where we are today. This past year has been an extraordinary and tumultuous year for Teresa — and for myself and my husband, Billiam James.
One year ago, my sister Teresa was forced into an Ontario nursing home, against her wishes, and against the wishes of my father. I was horrified to see Teresa in an old age home — surrounded by very elderly people, many of whom were severely incapacitated. She did not belong there.
One year ago, on November 30, 2013, my husband and I helped my father secure Teresa’s official release, and she came to live with us.
The truth is that if we had not rescued Teresa from the nursing home, she would have been living in an Ontario institution — with no right to choose otherwise — for the rest of her life.
How could this happen in Canada? That’s what we want to know. I presented 'Teresa’s Story: Crisis Capacity and Courage' to the Ontario Government’s Select Committee on Developmental Services on January 21, 2014.
Their final report acknowledged what we already knew was happening: “Long-term care homes are pressured to accommodate young and middle-aged people with developmental disabilities without any medical need for this type of care or any training to support this group of clients.”
How big a problem is this in Ontario? How many developmentally disabled people are forced into nursing homes? CBC Radio did some digging and discovered that 5,338 developmentally disabled people under 65 were put in Ontario long term care homes between 2008-2012. Listen to The Current’s documentary: 21-year old Ontarian lives in a nursing home.
But, here we are — one full year since Teresa’s discharge — and we still don’t have any accountability.
It’s not for lack of asking… on April 16, 2014, with the help of a human rights lawyer, we filed a 12-page complaint to the Ontario Ministry of Health. Seven months later, Teresa is still waiting for a response from the Ontario Government Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care.
Dear Minister of Health, Teresa would love to hear from you. She wants to know what went wrong. How can you fix your policies and procedures to make sure it never happens again? Teresa wants an apology and explanation.
See Teresa's past year of freedom, adventure and discovery -- and realize that she almost did not experience any of it.
http://www.frankejames.com/how-do-you-measure-one-year/
Sincerely,
Franke James
Teresa's sister
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