运动犬可以轻松地攀爬巨大的栅栏
当地新闻报道计划
根据新民主党的说法,新的COVID-19限制措施应该更早出台
Saskatoon – An hour before Prime Minister Scott Moe and Saskatchewan’s Chief Medical Health Officer Dr. Saqib Shahab, on Dec. 14, announcing further COVID-19 public health restrictions, urged New Democratic Party chairman Ryan Meili to call on the province to call in the military to support long-term care and not wait any further. Essentially, these restrictions included bans on most home social gatherings and other retail restrictions. They were announced three days before the originally planned December 17th. In response to the December 14th COVID-19 announcement, Meili released the following statement: “The Sask. The party government’s approach to the second wave of COVID-19 is chaotic. It is never clear what standards the government uses to make decisions about what the next steps will be or when those decisions will be made. This creates confusion as families have to protect each other and make ends meet. Today’s announcement shows that the government’s half-measures announced in November have failed, but it is clear they plan to move on from too little to late. “We have schools that close early while bars and restaurants stay open. Family celebrations have been effectively reduced to zero – unless you meet for a drink, dinner, or rent a hall. Small businesses have the worst of both worlds: they have to stay open while encouraging their customers to stay at home. The new retail measures won’t go into effect until Christmas Day, when they will have the least impact on the spread of the virus. One wonders why, if these measures are not necessary now at the busiest time of year, why does Scott Moe even consider them necessary? “Asked Meili. He continued, “Nothing was announced today that couldn’t have come into effect weeks earlier when a targeted breaker could actually have a tangible impact on the spread of COVID-19 in our communities. The government’s chaotic, wait-and-see approach has resulted in lockdown measures that are both more stringent and less effective. “The total number of new cases is growing less rapidly than before, but it is simply more than our health system can handle. No new measures have been announced to protect our loved ones in long-term care facilities when there are 32 active outbreaks and we witness a tragic death that affects so many families. Due to the delay in this government, the new measures will not only not lower our numbers, but also have a lasting effect on our quality of life. “Prior to the government announcement, Meili held a Saskatoon press conference on Zoom with senior reviewer Matt Love, MLA for Saskatoon Eastview, reiterating concerns about long-term care facilities, particularly those that have up to four patients in a room with a washroom shared among them. Love said the Saskatchewan government should urge the Canadian armed forces to provide assistance to overburdened health care providers in long-term care facilities, which the government does not intend. Love said: “Today we call Sask. Party government to reverse course and urge the federal government to ensure that military personnel are available to support ongoing long-term care efforts and save lives; essentially to save the lives of Saskatchewan seniors and other people living in long-term care. “We know that employees with long-term care are simply completely overwhelmed. And we know that an increasing spread of COVID-19 in the community makes long-term care outbreaks much more likely. “Love urged the Saskatchewan Party government to fulfill its campaign promise to hire 300 care workers. “This is an election promise that they announced that they would wait until spring 2021 to fulfill it. We ask for it now. We are also number two and ask this government to introduce a standard of care, not a proposal, but a clear standard of no more than two residents per room. And number three, we are asking the server to conduct personal inspections and any facilities that have experienced an outbreak and make the results of those inspections available to the public, “Love said. Meili said there have been 18 deaths in one facility and many more in other facilities. “This is an avoidable, predictable, avoidable situation,” he said. He suggested that the provincial government did not want military aid because when the military went to nursing homes in Ontario they wrote a report of their shortcomings. “Is that why you don’t want this military aid? Aren’t you ready to admit that things are out of control on your watch? Instead of trying to save their own reputations, they should try to save lives. You should seek all available assistance. And that means getting every possible source of aid, including the military, ready, either on the ground if necessary. Or at least just a phone call away to get started. “Reducing the number of rooms When asked if these four people per long-term care room would be reduced to two people where they would put the other two people,” Meili replied, “So there is an immediate need for accommodation and we have to look into all of them creative ways to do this carefully and safely. “When we talk about it, we need to recognize that our nursing homes are under too much pressure. What drives a lot of this isn’t necessarily physical space, but the amount of staff available to be at the bedside. We don’t have the staff-to-residents ratio that we should have. And that has to be part of it in order to increase the number of employees. Yes, there will be a need to build more facilities, but we also need to look a lot more into home care to keep people at home for much longer, where they can be safer, happier and relieve the pressure on long-term care a little they are in long-term care, receive the safest and highest quality care, but also that as few people as possible are in long-term home care. “Regarding Extendicare Parkside in Regina, the 228-bed facility with 18 deaths, he said,” They’re not full, they just don’t have enough staff. They keep people in larger groups and in smaller rooms because the staff is easier to manage. There are other facilities that are not full. Are we using all of the space? If so, if this space is fully used, what else is possible? What other places can we have people so that they are in a place that is safe and has the right care, because the alternative of keeping people in overcrowded, understaffed situations and letting COVID-19 run through facilities is clear unacceptable. “While for some people a limit is crossed at some point where home care is insufficient. But he said:” The longer it takes to cross this limit, the longer we can keep people at home. The more people we care for always at home that never end up in long-term care the better. That’s why it’s not just about improving the home care of what we see, which is mostly care, but also about maintenance, Meals and the like. Expand knowing this is far cheaper than doing the same work in your own home. ”Brian Zinchuk, Local Journalism Initiative reporter, Estevan Mercury