Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C.’s First Mental Health, Substance Use Urgent Care Response Centre Opens In Surrey Memorial Hospital Campus

Darpan News Desk, 10 Jul, 2019 05:21 PM

    SURREY – People who need urgent mental health and addictions care in the growing community of Surrey can now be referred to a central location for help.


    The Surrey Mental Health and Substance Use Urgent Care Response Centre — the first of its kind in the province — will start supporting patients this month. It will be a new resource for community care providers to quickly connect people with speciality services and will divert patients from emergency departments to a more therapeutic environment.


    “When you or a loved one needs urgent support for a mental health or substance use challenge, the last thing you want to hear is take a number,” said Judy Darcy, Minister of Mental Health and Addictions. “This centre will provide easy-to-access services where people ask for help once and get help fast, all in one welcoming place.”


    The centre is an integral part of A Pathway to Hope, B.C.’s recently launched roadmap for making mental health and addictions care better and more accessible for people in British Columbia.


    With a welcoming, patient-centered and culturally appropriate environment, care providers at the centre will focus on managing a person’s urgent needs. Patients, who are referred by community care providers or diverted from emergency departments, will work with staff to identify their needs and build on coping skills and resilience while creating a treatment plan.

     


    Patients will be connected to the most appropriate services to provide them with ongoing care and support moving forward. The centre will also provide support to people from the surrounding communities of Delta, Langley and White Rock when they require urgent support on evenings and weekends.


    The new centre will make it easier for community care providers to quickly connect patients with mental health and substance use specialty services and will offer same-day appointments to clients to help them stabilize, to determine what services will best meet their needs, and then to connect them with those services. Ensuring everyone feels comfortable when accessing care is essential. Patients will be cared for by staff who are trained in culturally appropriate delivery of health care, and language interpreting services will be available.


    “We consulted with more than 20 different groups, including people with lived experience, to ensure the centre meets their unique needs,” said Dr. Victoria Lee, president and CEO for Fraser Health. “From how our waiting room is laid out to culturally sensitive healing ceremonies, their recommendations are woven throughout this centre.”


    The centre has a number of special features as a result of stakeholder consultations, including:


    nature-inspired interior design, with private spaces for patients and their families while they wait to receive care; a group room available for healing circles, smudging ceremonies and drumming; andlaundry and shower services, as well as light snacks available on-site, supporting patients with basic comfort needs to help them stabilize.


    “We know that mental health plays a vital role in our overall well-being, and it’s important that people are able to access all types of health care when they need it,” said Adrian Dix, Minister of Health. “This unique centre is transforming the way these supports are provided and it is going to improve the health and lives of thousands of British Columbians through its team-based care approach.”


    Patients will be supported by 84 staff and physicians, including clinical counsellors and social workers, a substance-use services access team, psychiatrists, mental health care workers, nurses, homeless outreach workers and a pharmacist.

     


    Community health care providers, such as family physicians and nurse practitioners, will use Telehealth to access mental health and substance use care expertise in real-time for clients in their own offices. Care providers can use these virtual support appointments to ask questions and help ease patient anxiety by showing what they can expect during their appointment at the centre.


    Located in the Charles Barham Pavilion on the Surrey Memorial Hospital campus, the Surrey Mental Health and Substance Use Urgent Care Response Centre is in close proximity to the emergency department, public transit and patient parking.


    The centre is opening in a phased approach starting July 24, 2019, from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Starting Aug. 7, 2019, the centre will be fully operational and open 16 hours a day, seven days a week from 7:30 a.m. to 11:30 p.m.


    The project came in at $5 million, with $38,000 donated by the Surrey Hospital Foundation for renovations and technology enhancements. Once fully operational, operating costs will be $8.9 million annually.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Missing, murdered women inquiry calls for justice system to review policies

    Canadian society has shown an "appalling apathy" towards addressing the issue, say the inquiry's commissioners, who reach the explosive conclusion "that this amounts to genocide."

    Missing, murdered women inquiry calls for justice system to review policies

    Modest home sales boost in Greater Vancouver in May, but market still sluggish

    Modest home sales boost in Greater Vancouver in May, but market still sluggish
    The board says 2,638 homes changed hands in May — the first time this year that sales jumped above 2,000 properties in a month.

    Modest home sales boost in Greater Vancouver in May, but market still sluggish

    Report forecasts higher costs for local force in Surrey, B.C., than use of RCMP

    Report forecasts higher costs for local force in Surrey, B.C., than use of RCMP
    Doug McCallum said Monday a municipal force would be able to recruit officers who spend their careers in the city, develop relationships with residents, businesses and community groups, and improve public trust and safety.

    Report forecasts higher costs for local force in Surrey, B.C., than use of RCMP

    Officer hurt in crash between RCMP cruiser, transport truck, near Kelowna, B.C.

    Officer hurt in crash between RCMP cruiser, transport truck, near Kelowna, B.C.
    The officer was responding to a call in the Kelowna area at about 6 p.m. Monday when his unmarked, SUV collided with a transport truck travelling in the same direction.

    Officer hurt in crash between RCMP cruiser, transport truck, near Kelowna, B.C.

    Trudeau accepts the finding of genocide, but says focus needs to be on response

    Debate has erupted over the definition of the term after the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls repeatedly used it in its final report released Monday.

    Trudeau accepts the finding of genocide, but says focus needs to be on response

    Action needed after report on murdered and missing Indigenous women: families

    Sharon McIvor says she has been part of the fight for the rights of Indigenous women for more than 40 years and she didn't believe she would live to see the day that the report would be released.

    Action needed after report on murdered and missing Indigenous women: families