Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T05:57:20.525Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Problematizing Sexual Harassment in Residential Long-Term Care: The Need for a More Ethical Prevention Strategy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 April 2019

Alisa Grigorovich*
Affiliation:
Toronto Rehab Institute–University Health Network
Pia Kontos
Affiliation:
Toronto Rehab Institute–University Health Network Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto
*
La correspondance et les demandes de tirés-à-part doivent être adressées à : / Correspondence and requests for offprints should be sent to: Dr. Alisa Grigorovich CIHR Health System Impact Fellow Toronto Rehab Institute–University Health Network 550 University Ave., Suite 11-175 Toronto, ON M5G 2A2 (alisa.grigorovich@uhn.ca)
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Supporting sexual rights in residential long-term care is ethically complex. The well-being of care workers and residents is inextricably linked, and increasingly recognized empirically, yet public policy in Canada generally continues to exclusively focus on either the well-being of residents or workers. The consequences of this are particularly evident when we consider how to prevent sexual harassment towards workers without unjustly restricting the freedom of sexual expression for residents living with dementia. Employing Carol Bacchi’s “What’s the Problem Represented to be?” approach, we critically analysed a recent Canadian action plan to prevent sexual violence and harassment. Our analysis suggests that this policy is less than promising and may reproduce the very phenomenon it is intended to redress. The need to refocus prevention efforts on the structural factors implicated in this phenomenon is urgent if we are to support the sexual rights of both care workers and residents.

Résumé

La promotion des droits sexuels dans les établissements de soins de longue durée est complexe sur le plan éthique, étant donné que ce milieu est à la fois une résidence et un lieu de travail. Bien que les données empiriques démontrent que le bien-être des soignants professionnels et des résidents sont inextricablement liés, les politiques publiques au Canada ne reconnaissent généralement pas cette relation et continuent de se concentrer isolément sur le bien-être des résidents ou des travailleurs. Les conséquences problématiques de cette situation sont particulièrement mises en évidence lorsque l’on considère les défis associés à la prévention du harcèlement sexuel envers les travailleurs, dans un contexte où l’on ne veut pas restreindre indûment la liberté d’expression sexuelle des résidents atteints de démence. Nous avons utilisé l’approche « Quel est le problème représenté ? » (“What’s the Problem Represented to be?”) de Carol Bacchi pour analyser de façon critique un plan d’action canadien récent visant à prévenir la violence et le harcèlement sexuels. Notre analyse suggère que cette approche de prévention du harcèlement sexuel n’est pas une politique publique prometteuse et pourrait même contribuer à augmenter le phénomène qu’elle vise à corriger. Il est donc urgent de concentrer les efforts de prévention sur les facteurs structurels de ce phénomène afin de soutenir les droits sexuels des soignants et des résidents.

Type
Policy and Practice Note/Note de politique et practique
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Association on Gerontology 2019 

Introduction

Residential long-term careFootnote 1 is a particularly ethically complex setting given that it is both a workplace for diverse care workers (e.g., nurses, personal care aides) and a communal home for older adults, the majority of whom live with cognitive impairment (e.g., dementia). In line with Bacchi (Reference Bacchi2007), our reference to “ethical” is intended to broaden the predominant scope of ethical reflection beyond individual decision-making to consider the ways in which public policies construct social “problems”, and to thereby open up policies to ethical debate. Although there is increasing empirical recognition that the well-being of care workers and residents is inextricably linked (Bos, Boselie, & Trappenburg, Reference Bos, Boselie and Trappenburg2017; Daly, Banerjee, Armstrong, Armstrong, & Szebehely, Reference Daly, Banerjee, Armstrong, Armstrong and Szebehely2011), public policy in Canada and the United States generally does not recognize this relationality and continues to focus on either the well-being of residents or workers. The consequences of this are particularly evident when we consider the case of sexual rights, which include the right to have control over the expression of one’s sexuality free from coercion, discrimination, and violence (Lottes, Reference Lottes2013; World Health Organization, 2015). For example, residents’ rights to sexual expression may necessitate facilitation by care workers (e.g., provision of information, help acquiring sexual goods or services, assistance with sexual positioning) for whom such facilitation may be perceived as outside of personal values and beliefs regarding acceptable sexual conduct. As such, it may be morally offensive or a violation of workers’ own rights (Earle, Reference Earle2001; Everett, Reference Everett2007; Grigorovich & Kontos, Reference Grigorovich and Kontos2018; Kontos, Grigorovich, Kontos, & Miller, Reference Kontos, Grigorovich, Kontos and Miller2016). In more extreme cases, the right to sexual expression may manifest as a violation of another kind (e.g., sexual harassment) if the sexual expression is directed towards the care worker.

In Canada and internationally, the operational definition of “sexual harassment” includes unwanted actions or remarks that are associated with sex, sexual orientation or gender, and that are perceived as offensive, embarrassing, or intimidating (e.g., making sexual jokes, requesting sex, unwanted touching). This type of conduct is recognized as a form of workplace discrimination and sexual- and/or gender-based violence (Government of Canada, 2017; Ontario Government, 1990; Viglianti, Oliverio, & Meeks, Reference Viglianti, Oliverio and Meeks2018; World Health Organization, 2015). However, research studies have found that although workers describe experiences of unwanted sexual attention from residents living with dementia that fit the parameters of sexual harassment, and report such experiences as uncomfortable or offensive, they hesitate to qualify these experiences as harassment (Burgess, Barmon, Moorhead, Perkins, & Bender, Reference Burgess, Barmon, Moorhead, Perkins and Bender2016; Daly et al., Reference Daly, Banerjee, Armstrong, Armstrong and Szebehely2011). As we will argue here, this is in part because of the complexities that dementia introduces regarding determining the intent of the resident. Nonetheless, regardless of whether the worker qualifies their experiences as harassment and/or whether the intent of the resident can be determined with certainty, such conduct is experienced as unwelcome, it negatively impacts the worker and the worker-resident relationship (Archibald, Reference Archibald2002; Burgess et al., Reference Burgess, Barmon, Moorhead, Perkins and Bender2016; Friborg et al., Reference Friborg, Hansen, Aldrich, Folker, Kjær, Nielsen and Madsen2017; Roach, Reference Roach2004), and thus requires prevention. However, existing policies focused on the support and protection of either workers or residents are “ill-designed” to address these complexities.

Using Carol Bacchi’s poststructuralist approach to policy analysis – “What’s the Problem Represented to be?” (WPR) (Bacchi, Reference Bacchi2009) – we examine recent policy developments in Ontario, Canada, aimed at preventing sexual harassment encapsulated in the provincial action plan It’s Never Okay: The Action Plan to Stop Sexual Violence and Harassment (Ontario Government, 2015). Our purpose here is to critically analyze how the “problem” of sexual harassment, particularly when cognitive impairment is a factor, is represented within public policy, to explore the discourses that underpin this problem representation, and their symbolic and material effects. Our intention is not to deny that sexual harassment is a significant public policy issue that requires redress, nor is it our intention to identify the scope of the “real” problem. Rather, like Bacchi (Reference Bacchi2012), we believe that uncovering and interrogating the dominant epistemic assumptions of public policy texts is a productive contribution to the policy process as it enables us to imagine how to develop alternative policies and practices.

We argue that conceptual inconsistencies within the action plan itself, and its mechanisms for response, undermine the effectiveness of this plan for preventing resident-to-worker sexual harassment in long-term care settings. In putting forth this critique, we hope to demonstrate the urgent need for the development of an alternative approach to the prevention of sexual harassment in residential long-term care, one that is focused on structural causes (e.g., provider-resident staffing ratios, workers’ autonomy, residents’ lack of privacy) and the recognition of the need to protect the sexual rights of both workers and residents (Grigorovich & Kontos, Reference Grigorovich and Kontos2018; Kontos et al., Reference Kontos, Grigorovich, Kontos and Miller2016).

Building a context for our analysis, we first review empirical literature on sexual harassment of residential long-term care workers. We suggest that the dominant focus in the literature on “individual deviance” offers only a partial understanding for guiding prevention efforts since it neglects structural factors. Policy interventions that rely on simple and linear causal explanations may thus be ineffective approaches to prevention in this setting. We then describe the policy text (It’s Never Okay) and the methodological framework used (WPR), following which we problematize the policy to demonstrate its reliance on similar underlying assumptions and the effects that this produces for workers and residents.

Literature Review: Sexual Harassment of Care Workers

Much of the literature on the sexual harassmentFootnote 2 of care workers does not distinguish prevalence of harassment by care setting, age cohort, or by the relationship between the individuals involved (e.g., resident-to-worker, family/visitor-to-worker, worker-to-worker). However, it does suggest that care workers most often experience sexual harassment from the individuals that they care for and that these experiences include unwelcome verbal sexual commentary, non-contact sexualized actions, or direct contact (Madison & Minichiello, Reference Madison and Minichiello2001; Phillips, Reference Phillips2016). Although there have not been any quantitative prevalence studies of sexual harassment in the context of residential long-term care homes, quantitative research on mostly hospital-based samples of nurses (including assistants) has found prevalence rates between 8.6 and 25 per cent, and identifies male patients as the main sources of harassment (Hesketh et al., Reference Hesketh, Duncan, Estabrooks, Reimer, Giovannetti, Hyndman and Acorn2003; Spector, Zhou, & Che, Reference Spector, Zhou and Che2014). The limited available qualitative research on resident-to-worker sexual harassment in residential long-term care homes suggests that sexual harassment from older male residents is an “everyday” occurrence for female workers in both Canada and the United States (Burgess et al., Reference Burgess, Barmon, Moorhead, Perkins and Bender2016; Daly et al., Reference Daly, Banerjee, Armstrong, Armstrong and Szebehely2011; Nielsen et al., Reference Nielsen, Kjær, Aldrich, Madsen, Friborg, Rugulies and Folker2017).

Sexual harassment is considered to be hazardous to the health and well-being of health care workers and costly to health care organizations and systems; these experiences can prompt feelings of stress, guilt, and shame in workers that negatively affect their mood and overall mental health (Friborg et al., Reference Friborg, Hansen, Aldrich, Folker, Kjær, Nielsen and Madsen2017; Roach, Reference Roach2004). It has also been linked to job dissatisfaction, burn-out, long-term sickness, absence, and high staff turnover (Clausen, Nielsen, Carneiro, & Borg, Reference Clausen, Nielsen, Carneiro and Borg2012; Evers, Tomic, & Brouwers, Reference Evers, Tomic and Brouwers2002). In the context of residential long-term care, these experiences can lead to the avoidance of, and depersonalization towards, residents, thereby undermining the quality of care provided (Archibald, Reference Archibald2002; Burgess et al., Reference Burgess, Barmon, Moorhead, Perkins and Bender2016). Finally, the sexual harassment of an individual worker by a resident may, if not prevented, be directed towards other workers or residents.

Incidents of resident-to-worker harassment are generally managed on an ad hoc and case-by-case basis, with the majority of long-term care homes lacking formal guidelines or policies for regulating this type of conduct (Burgess et al., Reference Burgess, Barmon, Moorhead, Perkins and Bender2016; Nielsen et al., Reference Nielsen, Kjær, Aldrich, Madsen, Friborg, Rugulies and Folker2017). Generally, long-term care workers tend to excuse such incidents and do not document or formally report these in an effort to protect residents from stigma and sanctions (Burgess et al., Reference Burgess, Barmon, Moorhead, Perkins and Bender2016; Daly et al., Reference Daly, Banerjee, Armstrong, Armstrong and Szebehely2011; Nielsen et al., Reference Nielsen, Kjær, Aldrich, Madsen, Friborg, Rugulies and Folker2017; Ruchti, Reference Ruchti2012). When reported, and if determined to be offensive or harmful to others, the most common approach is a combination of pharmacological (e.g., antidepressants, hormones) and non-pharmacological interventions (e.g., isolation, physical restraint, or behavioural modification) rather than reprimand, discharge, or criminalization of residents.

Such approaches typically position resident-to-worker sexual harassment as an example of BPSD (behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia) or as a “responsive behaviour” – that is, an expression of an unmet need or a reaction to a difficult situation or discomfort (Alzheimer Society of Ontario, 2017; Cipriani, Ulivi, Danti, Lucetti, & Nuti, Reference Cipriani, Ulivi, Danti, Lucetti and Nuti2016; Gutmanis, Snyder, Harvey, Hillier, & LeClair, Reference Gutmanis, Snyder, Harvey, Hillier and LeClair2015; Legere, McNeill, Schindel Martin, Acorn, & An, 2018). Regardless of etiology, the first line of treatment recommended for this phenomenon is non-pharmacological behavioural modification interventions (e.g., distraction, redirection, and engagement in non-sexual activities such as music therapy or physical activity), with restraint or pharmacological therapies as a last resort principally because of concerns about side effects or even death (De Giorgi & Series, Reference De Giorgi and Series2016; Legere et al., Reference Legere, McNeill, Schindel Martin, Acorn and An2018). However, because both non-pharmacological and pharmacological strategies target sexual harassment at the level of individual resident/incident, broader structural factors (e.g., provider-resident staffing ratios) that may be implicated are not addressed.

An example of the combined non-pharmacological and pharmacological approach in Ontario is the Behavioural Supports Ontario initiative (Gutmanis et al., Reference Gutmanis, Snyder, Harvey, Hillier and LeClair2015), where the focus is education for care workers on how to identify and minimize “responsive behaviours”, as well as more direct and rapid referral to geriatric psychiatric consultants and in-patient psychiatric facilities for older people living with dementia. This program also includes system coordination and management, integrated service delivery, and capacity building. Although this initiative included committed funding to hire approximately 633 new workers, these workers are primarily educational leads or consultants whose main purpose is to support direct care staff in identifying “triggers” of responsive behaviours and developing intervention plans, rather than to provide direct-care and thereby improve staffing ratios in long-term care homes (Behavioural Supports Ontario, 2013). Despite these important advances, the overriding focus remains on enabling individual residents’ access to psychogeriatric care.

It’s Never Okay – An Action Plan to Stop Sexual Violence and Harassment

In 2015, the Ontario liberal government introduced a 3-year, $41M action plan on sexual violence and harassment aimed at ensuring that “everyone in Ontario can live free from violence or harassment” (Ontario Government, 2015). The plan is intended to raise public awareness and to provide a “roadmap for taking action” that includes supporting sexual harassment/sexual violence “survivors”, and legislative amendments to better protect workers, students, and tenants from sexual violence and harassment (Ontario Government, 2015, p. 35). It is stated in the action plan that sexual harassment and sexual violence are “shockingly prevalent in our society” and “cros[s] all social boundaries.” It is further stated that “government cannot stop sexual violence on its own” and that prevention requires “collective societal action” (Ontario Government, 2015, p. 4). Commitments articulated in the action plan include the following: (1) launching a public awareness campaign to challenge myths about sexual harassment and violence (e.g., #WHOWILLYOUHELP); (2) legislative changes to strengthen provisions related to workplace sexual harassment; and (3) investments in the development of training for frontline workers in health, community services, education, and justice sectors (Ontario Government, 2016). We focus our analysis here on commitments #2 and #3.

Methods

For our analysis of It’s Never Okay, we have adopted Bacchi’s (Reference Bacchi2009) WPR approach. This discursive and critical approach to policy analysis entails interrogation of “problem representations” within policies and policy proposals, and how these “give shape” (Bacchi, Reference Bacchi2009, p. xi) to policy “problems” and proposed solutions. This approach to policy analysis is based on the premise that public policies are not “reactions” to presumed social problems that await discovery, but rather that policymaking involves the creative constitution of the very “problems” under investigation. In other words, the representation of public policy problems within policy texts is based on particular assumptions about the social issue, which not only structure the possible courses of action to address it (e.g., proposed interventions), but also have material effects on populations.

WPR focuses on problematizing underlying taken-for-granted assumptions to reveal how they direct governmental courses of action, which can have both beneficial effects and unanticipated consequences. WPR offers an analytic strategy that is based on six interrelated questions that are applied to a proposed “solution” (e.g., the policy text). In particular, it emphasizes attending to “hierarchical binaries” and silences within public policies to explore their symbolic and material effects, as well as the importance of embedding the critique of individual policy texts within broader policy debates and discourses. Using this approach we consider the implications of recent policy developments in Ontario (as encapsulated in It’s Never Okay) regarding the prevention of sexual harassment in residential long-term care, and the applicability of these policy developments to the specific case of resident-to-worker sexual harassment.

Analysis

Inconsistencies in the Legislative Changes (Commitment #2)

Amending the Occupational Health and Safety Act.

The primary commitment cited in the plan to better protect workers is the statutory amendment of Ontario’s occupational health and safety legislation – the Occupational Health and Safety Act (OHSA) (Ontario Government, 1990) – to include sexual harassment as a workplace hazard that employers and workers have a duty to prevent.Footnote 3 Although sexual harassment is already recognized as a human rights issue under the Ontario Human Rights Code, this amendment recognizes sexual harassment as a workplace health and safety issue, and sets out specific duties regarding investigation and prevention. Employers’ specific duties regarding sexual harassment are to investigate complaints and develop a harassment prevention policy that is reviewed annually. In addition to the duties of employers, the act also sets out duties and rights for workers (e.g., employees). Workers have a general duty to prevent sexual harassment by taking responsibility for personal health and safety, reporting hazards, and refraining from acting in such a way that would endanger themselves or others.

Workers’ rights include their right to participate in the identification of hazards and development of prevention polices, their right to know about potential hazards, and their right to refuse work that they believe is unsafe. However, workers cannot refuse work “on the grounds of harassment” alone (Ministry of Labour, 2016, p. 23). Further, for residential long-term care workers (as with workers in other health care settings), the right to refuse unsafe work is restricted under this act to cases where the risk is not considered to be a normal condition of their employment, or when refusal to work directly endangers the health and safety of another person. These restrictions undermine the effectiveness of this policy in protecting long-term care workers as it limits their ability to keep themselves safe from sexual harassment from residents.

The Long-Term Care Setting.

OHSA is presumed to apply to all workplaces, and yet in the context of residential long-term care, there is a regulatory inconsistency between OHSA and the Ontario Long-Term Care Homes Act (LTCHA) (Ontario Government, 2007). The LTCHA is legislation that is intended to support the safety and quality of care of residents living in residential long-term care homes. The fundamental principle of the LTCHA is that the “long-term care home is primarily the home of its residents” (Ontario Government, 2007, Part 1) and it states that residents have a specific right to be protected from sexual abuse.Footnote 4 The LTCHA sets out duties for licensees (e.g., municipalities or board of management that manages the home) and workers in the homes to protect residents from abuse from anyone; this duty includes the mandatory obligation to report cases of alleged, suspected, or witnessed cases of resident sexual abuse directly to the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care. There is a further obligation to report cases of sexual abuse to the police if the suspected sexual abuse is also a criminal offence (Health Quality Ontario, 2011; Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario, 2017). Unlike the OHSA, the LTCHA does not prescribe any duties to residents in relation to their conduct or to supporting health and safety.

The difference between the recognition of residents’ and workers’ duties to support the safety of others is an example of what Bacchi terms public policy “binaries or dichotomies” (2009, p. 7) that reveal conceptual logics that influence understanding of the problem of sexual harassment and potential management strategies. Specifically, this binary overlooks that residents can also be potential perpetrators of sexual harassment towards workers. This inconsistency has material effects given that OHSA requires workers to protect themselves from harm, and yet the LTCHA mandates that workers protect residents from harm. Given the very narrow parameters for refusal of work as stipulated in the OHSA, there appears to be no legislative mechanism for the protection of workers from sexual harassment by residents. With the emphasis of LTCHA on protecting residents from abuse, and the absence of any mention of the duty of residents not to inflict harm, the OHSA is rendered ineffective as legislation to protect workers from residents. The constitution of the problem of sexual harassment by the action plan thus has a concerning “lived effect” (Bacchi, Reference Bacchi2009, p. 43) for workers in residential long-term care as it limits their protection.

Irreconcilable Differences.

A further inconsistency is that the OHSA qualifies the right to protection from harassment. In the OHSA, protection from harassment is afforded to workers only in instances where it can be established that the conduct was offensive to both the complainant and to a “reasonable person” in a similar environment. To qualify as harassment, the conduct most often has to occur on multiple occasions and it has to be demonstrated that the harasser knew, or should have known, that what they were doing would be unwelcome and experienced as offensive (Dimock, Reference Dimock2008). Adjudicators consider the complainant’s behaviour within the context of the specific workplace by asking questions such as “Did she participate in the conduct in question? [and] Was this type of conduct normal to the workplace?” (Matulewicz, Reference Matulewicz2015, p. 403).

Although the “reasonable person” standard is assumed to be an “objective” element of proof of harassment, research suggests that adjudicators (like others) evaluate sexual conduct on the basis of personal and cultural stereotypes of male-female sexual behaviour and comportment (Beiner, Reference Beiner2005). Further, with OHSA, the onus is on individual workers to demonstrate not only that the advance was unsolicited, but also that they clearly and consistently communicated this to the accused harasser. This is concerning in light of a large body of qualitative research on sexual harassment that demonstrates that explicit resistance to unwanted advances is often not possible or feasible due to fear of retaliation, fear of exacerbating such advances, self-blame, and/or the acceptance of unwelcome sexual advances as a condition of work (Burgess et al., Reference Burgess, Barmon, Moorhead, Perkins and Bender2016; Huebner, Reference Huebner2008; Matulewicz, Reference Matulewicz2015).

In the context of workers in residential long-term care who experience harassment from residents, this burden of proof may be especially difficult to demonstrate. Care work is an intimate and relational form of labour that involves direct handling and manipulating of others’ bodies, cross-gender tending, and management of emotions in order to establish trust and make others feel cared for (Ruchti, Reference Ruchti2012; Twigg, Wolkowitz, Cohen, & Nettleton, Reference Twigg, Wolkowitz, Cohen and Nettleton2011). As Twigg et al. argued, such work thus “lies on the borders of the erotic, its interventions paralleling and mimicking those of sexuality” (2011, p. 172). These aspects of the work itself make it difficult to demonstrate that workers did not incite the sexual advance in some way. Indeed, research suggests that managers may blame care workers for residents’ sexual advances and that workers generally feel unsupported by management when it comes to addressing harassment from residents (Braedley, Owusu, Przednowek, & Armstrong, Reference Braedley, Owusu, Przednowek and Armstrong2017; Daly et al., Reference Daly, Banerjee, Armstrong, Armstrong and Szebehely2011; Morgan et al., Reference Morgan, Crossley, Stewart, D’Arcy, Forbes, Normand and Cammer2008).

A Poor Fit in the Case of Dementia.

Establishing that residents are reasonably aware that their sexual advances towards workers are unwelcome is even more complex when there is dementia or some other form of cognitive impairment. In residential long-term care in Ontario, more than 70 per cent of residents have some form of cognitive impairment (Canadian Institute for Health Information, 2013; Ontario Long-Term Care Association, 2016). Given that a diagnosis of dementia is typically assumed to render a person globally incapable of meaningful self-expression or interaction (Behuniak, Reference Behuniak2011; Hall, Reference Hall2012), it is unlikely that workers (or adjudicators) would perceive residents with dementia as having reasonable awareness that their conduct was unwelcome or offensive. This is particularly so when we consider that all sexual expression in the context of dementia is typically interpreted as a symptom caused by neurodegenerative dysfunction (for a critique see: Grigorovich & Kontos, Reference Grigorovich and Kontos2018; Kontos et al., Reference Kontos, Grigorovich, Kontos and Miller2016). For example, everything from handholding to the use of pornography, masturbation, sexual interest in someone other than a spouse, or a “change” in sexual preference is pathologized in dementia care (Cipriani et al., Reference Cipriani, Ulivi, Danti, Lucetti and Nuti2016). The pathologization of sexuality has material effects in that workers (and managers) typically rationalize and normalize unwanted sexual attention from residents as unintentional and expected, and thus are not likely to interpret it as harassment from which protection is needed (Burgess et al., Reference Burgess, Barmon, Moorhead, Perkins and Bender2016; Daly et al., Reference Daly, Banerjee, Armstrong, Armstrong and Szebehely2011).

Establishing the capacity of the accused harasser is an important legal concern in terms of determining whether an individual had a sufficient level of awareness of the wrongfulness of their conduct. The presence of cognitive impairment (or a diagnosis of dementia), however, does not in and of itself determine the lack of capacity.Footnote 5 In Ontario, there are several legislations that govern decision-making regarding mental capacity with respect to personal and financial decisions (Wahl, Reference Wahl2009). Generally, capacity should be measured on a case-by-case basis, and in the context of a specific issue or task.

There is no consensus or established guidelines regarding how best to evaluate capacity in the context of sexuality; however, it is assumed to be similar to the capacity for deciding on medical treatments and is assessed as such (Syme & Steele, Reference Syme and Steele2016). There is also an inconsistency in whether the accused harasser’s capacity is deemed relevant for liability in residential long-term care. For example, in the context of resident-to-resident sexual abuse, which is covered by the LTCHA, even if the resident who harms/offends does not understand and appreciate the consequences of their actions, this does not eliminate the legal obligation to report such incidents to the Ministry and the police (Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario, 2017). However, it is important to note that despite such obligation, sexual abuse cases in the context of residential long-term care are underreported, and even if reported, successful prosecution is unlikely (Bandera, Reference Bandera2016; Malmedal, Iversen, & Kilvik, Reference Malmedal, Iversen and Kilvik2015). Nonetheless, this inconsistency within the policy suggests that residents of the long-term care home are afforded greater protection from sexual harassment when compared to workers in this setting. In identifying this inconsistency, we do not mean to suggest that a mandatory reporting clause for resident-to-worker harassment is necessarily warranted. Here we concur with McDonald et al. (Reference McDonald, Sheppard, Hitzig, Spalter, Mathur and Mukhi2015) that holding organizations, rather than individuals, responsible for such incidents may be a more suitable approach. This is also consistent with research that suggests that even in instances where unwanted sexual attention from residents is interpreted as harmful, workers often oppose the pursuit of criminal sanctions against residents (Baines, Reference Baines2005).

The management of unwanted sexual attention is thus most often treated with pharmacological therapies to dampen a resident’s sexual desire, or with behavioural change interventions to distract them (Makimoto, Kang, Yamakawa, & Konno, Reference Makimoto, Kang, Yamakawa and Konno2015; Tucker, Reference Tucker2010). However, this combined pharmacological and non-pharmacological approach to sexual harassment, like the legal approach emphasized in the action plan’s legislative focus, effectively reduces sexual harassment to a behavioural problem of deviant individuals.

Inconsistencies in the Development of Training (Commitment #3)

The framing of the category of “survivor” within It’s Never Okay produces a key subjectification effect (Bacchi, Reference Bacchi2009, p. 69) in that it implicitly denies health care workers the possibility of being a “survivor” themselves. This framing can be seen in the key commitment of the action plan to develop training regarding sexual harassment, something that is a common recommendation for the effective implementation of sexual harassment policies (Reese & Lindenberg, Reference Reese and Lindenberg2003). A key objective of this training is for health care workers to detect and respond to sexual harassment in a manner that is sensitive to, and supportive of, “survivors” (Ministry on the Status of Women, 2017; Ontario Government, 2015, p. 11).

The categorical separation between health care workers and survivors in the action plan suggests that health care workers and “survivors” cannot be one and the same (Ontario Government, 2015, pp. 16–17). This is reinforced by existing professional education and standards for health care workers that emphasize that it is their responsibility to protect their clients (e.g., residents) from sexual harassmentFootnote 6 (College of Nurses of Ontario, 2017; College of Physiotherapists of Ontario, 2018a). Standards and professional education rarely acknowledge that workers can and do experience unwelcome sexual advances from clients. Where such advances are acknowledged, they are constructed as a breach of professional boundaries for which workers are held responsible (College of Physiotherapists of Ontario, 2018a, 2018b). There is thus an inconsistency between the professional education of residential long-term care workers and the required training they receive based on the OHSA that mandates that they protect themselves from sexual harassment (Ministry of Labour, 2016). The omission in the action plan of the development of training that focuses on health care workers protecting themselves from harassment (Ontario Government, 2015) effectively reinforces residential long-term care workers’ vulnerability to harassment from residents. This is particularly concerning given the frequency with which residential long-term care workers experience unwanted sexual attention from residents (Burgess et al., Reference Burgess, Barmon, Moorhead, Perkins and Bender2016; Daly et al., Reference Daly, Banerjee, Armstrong, Armstrong and Szebehely2011).

The Behavioural Supports Ontario initiative is illustrative of the kind of professional education provided to residential long-term care workers. Although there are a number of programs offered through this initiative, the P.I.E.C.E.S. program (Hamilton, Harris, Le Clair, & Collins, Reference Hamilton, Harris, Le Clair and Collins2010) is the oldest and most established. The overarching purpose of these educational programs is to reduce reliance on pharmacological and physical restraints by training care workers to identify the antecedents of residents’ unusual or aggressive actions – that is, “responsive behaviours” – and to develop “communication strategies and techniques” to defuse, minimize, or prevent these (Speziale, Black, Coatsworth-Puspoky, Ross, & O’Regan, Reference Speziale, Black, Coatsworth-Puspoky, Ross and O’Regan2009). In particular, a central component of such programs is to prompt workers to reflect on how their own care practices are contributing to residents’ actions towards them (Alzheimer Society of Ontario, 2017; Hamilton et al., Reference Hamilton, Harris, Le Clair and Collins2010). This is also made explicit in the explanation provided on the Behavioural Supports Ontario website for their preference for the use of this term: “the term responsive … encourages health care providers … to focus more on what can be done to make change rather than [on] the behaviour’s impact” (Behavioural Supports Ontario, 2018).

These types of professional education programs are not designed for the prevention of sexual harassment of workers per se; indeed, sexual harassment is not even explicitly identified in these programs. Where unwanted sexual verbal or physical advances by residents towards workers are addressed, they are identified as examples of agitation or aggression rather than harassment (Hamilton et al., Reference Hamilton, Harris, Le Clair and Collins2010, p. 98). The focus of such training on workers’ management of residents’ sexual advances further holds workers primarily responsible for their prevention. Thus, where management strategies fail to achieve prevention, workers are likely to be blamed or to blame themselves. Moreover, and equally concerning, is that the focus of such education on workers themselves as the intervening agents leaves them without protection and thus vulnerable.

Discussion: An Alternative Prevention Approach for Residential Long-Term Care

Sexual harassment of residential long-term care workers is an underreported and a persistent social problem. While It’s Never Okay represents an important step towards addressing sexual harassment in Ontario, our problematization of this policy suggests that as an approach to the prevention of sexual harassment, it is less than promising and may in fact reproduce the very phenomenon it is intended to redress. Although it is presumed that the action plan can be implemented in all contexts equally, the ethical complexity of residential long-term care undermines the feasibility of adopting a standardized and decontextualized approach to the prevention of sexual harassment. In particular, our analysis suggests that the current approach may be particularly ineffective in preventing sexual harassment by residents living with dementia, as they may be perceived as lacking the capacity to intentionally harass.

Regardless of whether there is a lack of capacity on the part of the resident who is suspected of harassment, this does not diminish the ethical and legal obligation to protect workers (and others) from the offense or harm caused by such incidents. Yet the solution should not be automatic and excessive restriction of the sexual freedom of persons living with dementia; indeed, there is already evidence that all sexual expression in the context of dementia (assentual or not) is ignored, discouraged, or suppressed (Everett, Reference Everett2007; Grigorovich & Kontos, Reference Grigorovich and Kontos2018; Kontos et al., Reference Kontos, Grigorovich, Kontos and Miller2016). The minimum necessary restrictions on the individual liberty of residents should thus be used only as a last resort (Department of Health, 2011; Kelly & Innes, Reference Kelly and Innes2013, p. 63; RNAO, 2012; UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, 2015, paras. 27, 92)

Our problematization of the current policy on sexual harassment suggests the need for an alternative approach to prevention of sexual harassment in long-term residential care. Specifically, there is a need to shift the exclusive emphasis on reactive medico-legal interventions (e.g., pharmacological restraint, behavioural change interventions, criminalization) to manage what is interpreted as “individual deviance”, to broader consideration of the structural factors that create the conditions in which sexual harassment occurs. Insights from scholarship on structural violence are pertinent here given the emphasis placed on the causal relationship between poor quality of the long-term care environment and interpersonal acts of aggression (Banerjee et al., Reference Banerjee, Daly, Armstrong, Szebehely, Armstrong and Lafrance2012). For example, research suggests that resident aggression is linked to overcrowding (Rosen, Pillemer, & Lachs, Reference Rosen, Pillemer and Lachs2008), restricted access to the outdoors, coercion, and lack of privacy (Duxbury & Whittington, Reference Duxbury and Whittington2005; Tufford, Lowndes, Struthers, & Chivers, Reference Tufford, Lowndes, Struthers and Chivers2017).

There is further suggestion that residents’ sexual harassment of workers may be linked to work organization and understaffing (Banerjee et al., Reference Banerjee, Daly, Armstrong, Szebehely, Armstrong and Lafrance2012; Lachs et al., Reference Lachs, Teresi, Ramirez, van Haitsma, Silver, Eimicke and Pillemer2016). Finally, sexual harassment in residential long-term care may also be associated with existing prohibitions in these settings against autonomous and resident-to-resident sexual expression, and the use of sexual materials or services (Grigorovich & Kontos, Reference Grigorovich and Kontos2018; Kontos et al., Reference Kontos, Grigorovich, Kontos and Miller2016; Miles & Parker, Reference Miles and Parker1999). This research suggests that prevention of sexual harassment in residential long-term care, while no doubt difficult, necessitates tackling neoliberal austerity, the marketization of social care, and structural barriers to residents’ assentual sexual expression with individuals who are not workers (e.g., other residents, spouses). The ethical complexity of residential long-term care, and the paucity of research in this area, will require the engagement of workers and residents, as well as other relevant stakeholders (e.g., gerontologists, ethicists, lawyers, and policymakers) in the development of more effective sexual harassment policies for this sector. Given that the well-being of workers and residents is intertwined, a transdisciplinary approach (Grigorovich, Fang, Sixsmith, & Kontos, Reference Grigorovich, Fang, Sixsmith and Kontos2018) to public policy reform that includes these stakeholders in the development of problem definitions and problem solutions will be crucial to achieving meaningful and sustainable social change.

Conclusions

Despite decades of social activism and the establishment of legal prohibitions in jurisdictions around the world, workplace sexual harassment remains a pervasive and costly social problem (Chan, Lam, Chow, & Cheung, Reference Chan, Lam, Chow and Cheung2008; Quick & McFadyen, Reference Quick and McFadyen2017). Although the high prevalence of sexual harassment in the health care sector is receiving increasing scholarly attention (Phillips, Reference Phillips2016; Spector et al., Reference Spector, Zhou and Che2014), there is a concerning dearth of critical engagement with the public policy response to this problem in the context of residential long-term care. As our analysis demonstrates, Ontario’s public policy on sexual harassment, It’s Never Okay, may contribute to social injustice by failing to adequately protect already vulnerable populations (i.e., care workers, and residents living with dementia) from harm. The pursuit of a morally just public policy response in this context necessitates a radically different approach that recognizes the relational and complex nature of sexuality in this care setting.

Footnotes

Alisa Grigorovich gratefully acknowledges funding from the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care (Ontario Women’s Health Scholars Award) and from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (Health System Impact Fellowship).

1 We use the term residential long-term care to refer to facilities that are homes for primarily older adults who require 24-hour nursing care, personal care, and/or types of supportive services. Depending on jurisdiction/country, such settings may also be called nursing homes or personal care homes.

2 Despite that there are differences between “unwanted sexual attention”, “sexual harassment”, and “sexual violence”, sexual harassment is an umbrella term that is used most commonly in reference to workers’ experiences of unwelcome sexual advances from residents. For this reason we similarly use the term sexual harassment.

3 In Canada, occupational health and safety is regulated by jurisdiction, of which there are 14 in total (one in each province or territory and one federal for employees of the federal government). Ontario is not unique in having harassment covered under this type of legislation (e.g., Alberta, Saskatchewan).

4 The LTCHA recognizes sexual abuse as well as physical, emotional, financial, and verbal abuse. Sexual abuse includes non-consensual touching, sexual behaviours, sexual remarks, and sexual exploitation.

5 “Mental capacity” is a problematic construct in both law and medicine. The application of this construct to understand the decisions of persons living with dementia has received significant critique. In particular, it is argued that the assumption that mental capacity is essentially cognitive ignores the embodied and relational nature of decision-making and sets the bar for undue interference significantly high (for example, see: Grigorovich & Kontos, Reference Grigorovich and Kontos2018; Hall, Reference Hall2012; Kontos et al., Reference Kontos, Grigorovich, Kontos and Miller2016).

7 In part, this type of training exists because there are a number of regulations regarding sexual abuse of patients in Ontario, which include mandatory reporting obligations for workers who are health care professionals and their employers.

References

Alzheimer Society of Ontario. (2017). Shifting focus: A guide to understanding dementia behaviour. Toronto, ON: Author. Retrieved from http://www.alzheimer.ca/en/on/We-can-help/Resources/Shifting-FocusGoogle Scholar
Archibald, C. (2002). Sexuality and dementia in residential care – whose responsibility? Sexual and Relationship Therapy, 17(3), 301309. doi: 10.1080/14681990220149103CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bacchi, C. (2007). The ethics of problem representation: Widening the scope of ethical debate. Policy and Society, 26(3), 520. doi: 10.1016/S1449-4035(07)70112-1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bacchi, C. (2009). Analysing policy: What’s the problem represented to be? Frenchs Forest, N.S.W.: Pearson.Google Scholar
Bacchi, C. (2012). Why study problematizations? Making politics visible. Open Journal of Political Science, 2(1), 18. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ojps.2012.21001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baines, D. (2005). Criminalizing the care work zone? The gendered dynamics of using legal and administrative strategies to confront workplace violence. Social Justice, 32(2), 132150.Google Scholar
Bandera, S. (2016). Counting sexual assaults in Ontario nursing homes . Toronto, ON: Bell Media. Retrieved from https://www.ctvnews.ca/w5/counting-sexual-assaults-in-ontario-nursing-homes-1.2847855Google Scholar
Banerjee, A., Daly, T., Armstrong, P., Szebehely, M., Armstrong, H., & Lafrance, S. (2012). Structural violence in long-term, residential care for older people: Comparing Canada and Scandinavia. Social Science & Medicine, 74(3), 390398.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Behavioural Supports Ontario. (2013). Final implementation report. Sudbury, ON: Author. Retrieved from http://brainxchange.ca/Public/Files/BSO/BSO_Q4-Report-FINAL-en.aspxGoogle Scholar
Behavioural Supports Ontario. (2018). Behaviour change in older adults. Sudbury, ON: Author. Retrieved from http://www.behaviouralsupportsontario.ca/32/Behaviour_Change_in_Older_Adults/Google Scholar
Behuniak, S. M. (2011). The living dead? The construction of people with Alzheimer’s disease as zombies. Ageing & Society, 31(1), 7092.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beiner, T. (2005). Gender myths vs. working realities: Using social science to reformulate sexual harassment law. New York, NY: NYU Press.Google Scholar
Bos, A., Boselie, P., & Trappenburg, M. (2017). Financial performance, employee well-being, and client well-being in for-profit and not-for-profit nursing homes: A systematic review. Health Care Management Review, 42(4), 352368.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Braedley, S., Owusu, P., Przednowek, A., & Armstrong, P. (2017). We’re told, ”Suck it up”: Long-term care workers’ psychological health and safety. Ageing International, 43(1), 91109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burgess, E. O., Barmon, C., Moorhead, J. R., Perkins, M. M., & Bender, A. A. (2016). “That is so common everyday ... Everywhere you go”: Sexual harassment of workers in assisted living. Journal of Applied Gerontology, 37(4), 397418.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Canadian Institute for Health Information. (2013). When a nursing home is home: How do Canadian nursing homes measure up on quality? Ottawa, ON: Author. Retrieved from https://secure.cihi.ca/estore/productFamily.htm?pf=PFC2033Google Scholar
Chan, D. K. S., Lam, C. B., Chow, S. Y., & Cheung, S. F. (2008). Examining the job-related, psychological, and physical outcomes of workplace sexual harassment: A meta analytic review. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 32(4), 362376. doi: 10.1111/j.1471-6402.2008.00451.xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cipriani, G., Ulivi, M., Danti, S., Lucetti, C., & Nuti, A. (2016). Sexual disinhibition and dementia. Psychogeriatrics, 16(2), 145153.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Clausen, T., Nielsen, K., Carneiro, I. G., & Borg, V. (2012). Job demands, job resources and long-term sickness absence in the Danish eldercare services: A prospective analysis of register-based outcomes. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 68(1), 127136.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
College of Nurses of Ontario. (2017). Therapeutic nurse-client relationship, revised 2006. Toronto, ON: Author. Retrieved from http://www.cno.org/globalassets/docs/prac/41033_therapeutic.pdfGoogle Scholar
College of Physiotherapists of Ontario. (2018a). Boundaries and sexual abuse standard. Toronto, ON: Author. Retrieved from https://www.collegept.org/rules-and-resources/new-boundaries-and-sexual-abuseGoogle Scholar
College of Physiotherapists of Ontario. (2018b). FAQs: Relationships and boundaries. Toronto, ON: Author. Retrieved from https://www.collegept.org/members/practice-advice/boundaries-and-sexual-abuse-faqsGoogle Scholar
Daly, T., Banerjee, A., Armstrong, P., Armstrong, H., & Szebehely, M. (2011). Lifting the ‘violence veil’: Examining working conditions in long-term care facilities using iterative mixed methods. Canadian Journal on Aging / La Revue canadienne du vieillissement, 30(2), 271284.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
De Giorgi, R., & Series, H. (2016). Treatment of inappropriate sexual behavior in dementia. Current Treatment Options in Neurology, 18(9), 41. doi: 10.1007/s11940-016-0425-2CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Department of Health. (2011). Towards a restraint free environment in nursing homes. Dublin, IRL: Author. Retrieved from http://health.gov.ie/blog/publications/towards-a-restraint-free-environment-in-nursing-homes/Google Scholar
Dimock, S. (2008). Reasonable women in the law. Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 11(2), 153175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duxbury, J., & Whittington, R. (2005). Causes and management of patient aggression and violence: Staff and patient perspectives. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 50(5), 469478.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Earle, S. (2001). Disability, facilitated sex and the role of the nurse. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 36(3), 433440. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2648.2001.01991.xCrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Everett, B. (2007). Ethically managing sexual activity in long-term care. Sexuality and Disability, 25(1), 2127. doi: 10.1007/s11195-006-9027-3CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evers, W., Tomic, W., & Brouwers, A. (2002). Aggressive behaviour and burnout among staff of homes for the elderly. International Journal of Mental Health Nursing, 11(1), 29.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Friborg, M. K., Hansen, J. V., Aldrich, P. T., Folker, A. P., Kjær, S., Nielsen, M. B. D., … Madsen, I. E. H. (2017). Workplace sexual harassment and depressive symptoms: A cross-sectional multilevel analysis comparing harassment from clients or customers to harassment from other employees amongst 7603 Danish employees from 1041 organizations. BMC Public Health, 17(1), 675. doi: 10.1186/s12889-017-4669-xCrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Government of Canada. (2017). Sexual harassment. Toronto, ON: Queen’s Printer of Ontario. Retrieved from https://www.canada.ca/en/employment-social-development/services/labour-standards/reports/sexual-harassment.htmlGoogle Scholar
Grigorovich, A., Fang, M.-L., Sixsmith, J., & Kontos, P. (2018). Defining and evaluating transdisciplinary research: Implications for aging and technology. Disability and Rehabilitation: Assistive Technology, 111. https://doi.org/10.1080/17483107.2018.1496361Google ScholarPubMed
Grigorovich, A., & Kontos, P. (2018). Advancing an ethic of embodied relational sexuality to guide decision-making in dementia care. The Gerontologist, 58(2), 219225. doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/geront/gnw137Google ScholarPubMed
Gutmanis, I., Snyder, M., Harvey, D., Hillier, L. M., & LeClair, J. K. (2015). Health care redesign for responsive behaviours – The Behavioural Supports Ontario experience: Lessons learned and keys to success. Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health, 34(1), 4563.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, M. (2012). Mental capacity in the (civil) law: Capacity, autonomy, and vulnerability. McGill Law Journal, 58(1), 6194.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamilton, P., Harris, D., Le Clair, J. K., & Collins, J. (2010). Putting the P.I.E.C.E.S. together: A model for collaborative care and changing practice, P.I.E.C.E.S. resource guide (6th ed.). Canada: P.I.E.C.E.S. Consult Group.Google Scholar
Health Quality Ontario. (2011). A guide to the long-term care homes act, 2007 and regulation 79/10. Toronto, ON: Queen’s Printer for Ontario. Retrieved from http://www.hqontario.ca/Portals/0/Documents/pr/ltc-mohltc-ltcha-guide-phase-1-1206-en.pdfGoogle Scholar
Hesketh, K. L., Duncan, S. M., Estabrooks, C. A., Reimer, M. A., Giovannetti, P., Hyndman, K., & Acorn, S. (2003). Workplace violence in Alberta and British Columbia hospitals. Health Policy, 63(3), 311321. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0168-8510(02)00142-2CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Huebner, L. C. (2008). It is part of the job: Waitresses and nurses define sexual harassment. Sociological Viewpoints, 24, 75.Google Scholar
Kelly, F., & Innes, A. (2013). Human rights, citizenship and dementia care nursing. International Journal of Older People Nursing, 8(1), 6170.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kontos, P., Grigorovich, A., Kontos, A. P., & Miller, K. L. (2016). Citizenship, human rights, and dementia: Towards a new embodied relational ethic of sexuality. Dementia: The International Journal of Social Research and Practice, 15(3), 315329.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lachs, M. S., Teresi, J. A., Ramirez, M., van Haitsma, K., Silver, S., Eimicke, J. P., … Pillemer, K. A. (2016). The prevalence of resident-to-resident elder mistreatment in nursing homes. Annals of Internal Medicine, 165(4), 229236. doi: 10.7326/m15-1209CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Legere, L. E., McNeill, S., Schindel Martin, L., Acorn, M., & An, D. (2018). Nonpharmacological approaches for behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia in older adults: A systematic review of reviews. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 27(7–8), e1360e1376. doi: 10.1111/jocn.14007CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lottes, I. L. (2013). Sexual rights: Meanings, controversies, and sexual health promotion. Journal of Sex Research, 50(3–4), 367391. doi: 10.1080/00224499.2013.764380CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Madison, J., & Minichiello, V. (2001). Sexual harassment in healthcare: Classification of harassers and rationalizations of sex-based harassment behavior. Journal of Nursing Administration, 31(11), 534543.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Makimoto, K., Kang, H. S., Yamakawa, M., & Konno, R. (2015). An integrated literature review on sexuality of elderly nursing home residents with dementia. International Journal of Nursing Practice, 21, 8090. doi: 10.1111/ijn.12317CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Malmedal, W., Iversen, M. H., & Kilvik, A. (2015). Sexual abuse of older nursing home residents: A literature review. Nursing Research and Practice, 2015, 17. doi: 10.1155/2015/902515Google ScholarPubMed
Matulewicz, K. (2015). Law and the construction of institutionalized sexual harassment in restaurants. Canadian Journal of Law and Society/Revue Canadienne Droit et Société, 30(3), 401419.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McDonald, L., Sheppard, C., Hitzig, S. L., Spalter, T., Mathur, A., & Mukhi, J. S. (2015). Resident-to-resident abuse: A scoping review. Canadian Journal on Aging / La Revue canadienne du vieillissement, 34(2), 215236. doi: 10.1017/S0714980815000094CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Miles, S. H., & Parker, K. (1999). Sexuality in the nursing home: Iatrogenic loneliness. Generations, 23(1), 36.Google Scholar
Ministry of Labour. (2016). Health and safety guidelines: Workplace violence and harassment: Understanding the law. Toronto, ON: Queen’s Printer for Ontario. Retrieved from https://files.ontario.ca/wpvh_guide_english.pdfGoogle Scholar
Ministry on the Status of Women. (2017). Training programs for professionals on violence against women. Toronto, ON: Queen’s Printer for Ontario. Retrieved from http://www.citizenship.gov.on.ca/owd/english/organizations/training-programs.shtmlGoogle Scholar
Morgan, D. G., Crossley, M. F., Stewart, N. J., D’Arcy, C., Forbes, D. A., Normand, S. A., & Cammer, A. L. (2008). Taking the hit: Focusing on caregiver “error” masks organizational-level risk factors for nursing aide assault. Qualitative Health Research, 18(3), 334346. doi: 10.1177/1049732307313754CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nielsen, M. B. D., Kjær, S., Aldrich, P. T., Madsen, I. E. H., Friborg, M. K., Rugulies, R., & Folker, A. P. (2017). Sexual harassment in care work – Dilemmas and consequences: A qualitative investigation. International Journal of Nursing Studies, 70, 122130. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2017.02.018CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ontario Government. (1990). Occupational health and safety act, R.S.O. 1990, c. O.1. Toronto, ON: Queen’s Printer for Ontario. Retrieved from https://www.ontario.ca/laws/statute/90o01Google Scholar
Ontario Government. (2007). Long-term care homes act, c. 8, s. 195. Toronto, ON: Queen’s Printer for Ontario. Retrieved from http://www.e-laws.gov.on.ca/html/statutes/english/elaws_statutes_07l08_e.htmGoogle Scholar
Ontario Government. (2015). It’s never okay: An action plan to stop sexual violence and harassment. Toronto, ON: Queen’s Printer for Ontario. Retrieved from http://www.ontario.ca/document/action-plan-stop-sexual-violence-and-harassmentGoogle Scholar
Ontario Government. (2016). Progress report 2015–2016: It’s never okay: An action plan to stop sexual violence and harassment. Toronto, ON: Queen’s Printer for Ontario. from https://www.ontario.ca/page/its-never-okay-action-plan-stop-sexual-violence-and-harassment-progress-update-2016-2017Google Scholar
Ontario Long-Term Care Association. (2016). This is long-term care 2016. Toronto, ON: Author. Retrieved from http://www.oltca.com/OLTCA/Documents/Reports/TILTC2016.pdfGoogle Scholar
Phillips, J. P. (2016). Workplace violence against health care workers in the United States. New England Journal of Medicine, 374(17), 16611669.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Quick, J. C., & McFadyen, M. A. (2017). Sexual harassment: Have we made any progress? Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 22(3), 286298. doi: 10.1037/ocp0000054CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Reese, L. A., & Lindenberg, K. E. (2003). The importance of training on sexual harassment policy outcomes. Review of Public Personnel Administration, 23(3), 175-191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario. (2012). Promoting safety: Alternative approaches to the use of restraints. Toronto, ON: Author. Retrieved from http://rnao.ca/sites/rnao-ca/files/Promoting_Safety_-_Alternative_Approaches_to_the_Use_of_Restraints_0.pdfGoogle Scholar
Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario. (2017). Long-term care best practices toolkit (2nd ed.). Implementing and sustaining evidence-based practices in long-term care: Prevention of abuse and neglect. Toronto, ON: Author. Retrieved from https://ltctoolkit.rnao.ca/clinical-topics/prevention-abuse-neglect?field_resource_type_updated_tid=98&items_per_page=5https://ltctoolkit.rnao.ca/clinical-topics/prevention-abuse-neglect?field_resource_type_updated_tid=98&items_per_page=5Google Scholar
Roach, S. M. (2004). Sexual behaviour of nursing home residents: Staff perceptions and responses. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 48(4), 371379. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2648.2004.03206.xCrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rosen, T., Pillemer, K., & Lachs, M. (2008). Resident-to-resident aggression in long-term care facilities: An understudied problem. Aggression and Violent Behavior, 13(2), 7787.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ruchti, L. C. (2012). Catheters, slurs, and pickup lines: Professional intimacy in hospital nursing. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.Google Scholar
Spector, P. E., Zhou, Z. E., & Che, X. X. (2014). Nurse exposure to physical and nonphysical violence, bullying, and sexual harassment: A quantitative review. International Journal of Nursing Studies, 51(1), 7284. doi: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2013.01.010CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Speziale, J., Black, E., Coatsworth-Puspoky, R., Ross, T., & O’Regan, T. (2009). Moving forward: Evaluating a curriculum for managing responsive behaviors in a geriatric psychiatry inpatient population. Gerontologist, 49(4), 570576. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnp069CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Syme, M. L., & Steele, D. (2016). Sexual consent capacity assessment with older adults. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 31(6), 495505. doi: 10.1093/arclin/acw046CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tucker, I. (2010). Management of inappropriate sexual behaviors in dementia: A literature review. International Psychogeriatrics, 22(5), 683692.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tufford, F., Lowndes, R., Struthers, J., & Chivers, S. (2017). ‘Call security’: Locks, risk, privacy and autonomy in long-term residential care. Ageing International, 43(1), 3452.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Twigg, J., Wolkowitz, C., Cohen, R. L., & Nettleton, S. (2011). Conceptualising body work in health and social care. Sociology of Health & Illness, 33(2), 171188. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2010.01323.xCrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. (2015). International standards on the right to liberty and security of persons with disabilities: Background note. Retrieved from www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Disability/DeprivationLiberty/BackgroundNote.docGoogle Scholar
Viglianti, E. M., Oliverio, A. L., & Meeks, L. M. (2018). Sexual harassment and abuse: When the patient is the perpetrator. The Lancet, 392(10145), 368370.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wahl, J. (2009). Consent, capacity and substitute decision-making: The basics. Toronto, ON: Advocacy Centre for the Elderly Retrieved from http://www.advocacycentreelderly.org/appimages/file/Consent%20and%20Capacity%20Basics%20-%202009.pdfGoogle Scholar
World Health Organization. (2015). Sexual health, human rights and the law. Geneva, CHE: Author. Retrieved from http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/175556/9789241564984_eng.pdf;jsessionid=4D84C082F5955C09C21FD785A936CDF4?sequence=1Google Scholar