Close X
Friday, November 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s old Riverview Hospital to offer substance-abuse, mental-health programs

Darpan News Desk, The Canadian Press, 17 Dec, 2014 05:43 PM

    COQUITLAM, B.C. — What was once the home for Metro Vancouver's mentally ill will soon be the location of a rehabilitation and recovery program for those battling mental-health and substance-abuse issues.

    Riverview Hospital in Coquitlam, B.C., first opened in 1913, began taking fewer patients in the 1990s and officially closed in 2012.

    Health Minister Terry Lake announced Wednesday that a new program run by Coast Mental Health will offer 25 beds for men and 15 beds for women in two upgraded buildings on the old hospital grounds.

    Client services will include programs for ongoing support, assessment, crisis intervention, co-ordinated psychiatric and medical treatment, life-and-social skills, drug-and-alcohol recovery, jobs skills, education and peer support, said Lake.

    "By providing community support through the rehabilitation and recovery program, we can help individuals with severe mental illness and substance-use concerns on their journey to wellness," said Lake in a news release.

    The program will take a holistic approach, integrate primary care with mental-health and substance-abuse treatment, and help clients return to the community with continued support, the ministry added.

    Lake's announcement quickly came under fire from the Opposition New Democrats and mental-health advocates who pointed out that of the 40 beds, only 14 will be newly funded and the remaining 26 will transfer to Coquitlam from the Burnaby Centre for Mental Health and Addiction.

    NDP Health Critic Sue Hammell said the 14 new beds are great for those who will receive them but they don't touch the need in a province of more than four-million people.

    "It isn't as if we're not spending the money," she said. "We are putting people in jail, we are housing them in hospitals, we have police dealing with them, we spend huge money on social assistance and all kinds of other ways," she said.

    Hammell said the province needs to get serious about responding to mental health, just as it has become serious about cancer treatment, and mental-health patients need a continuum of support.

    Bev Gutray, CEO of the Canadian Mental Health Association, B.C. Division, said she is pleased people have somewhere to go where they can enter a period of stability and receive treatment from a multi-disciplinary team.

    But Gutray said more focus needs to be placed on the return of people to their communities.

    "At the end of the day, people will be coming home to their communities, and a chronic critical issue still remains, and that's people getting safe and secure housing with community-mental-health support," she said.

    Vancouver Police Chief Jim Chu and Mayor Gregor Robertson have called for an additional 300 long-term care beds saying they are needed to treat people suffering from mental health challenges and substance abuse.

    The government moved to establish the programs at Riverview after extensive public consultations by B.C. Housing.

    Coquitlam Mayor Richard Stewart said the city is pleased with the government's decision to establish new services on the historic site, and he believes the site's mental-health role will continue.

    "It really, I believe, is the beginning of repurposing the site for health care, and I believe that a big component of that will be mental health," he said.

    The announcement came on the same day that Island Health said it was investing $12.3 million to expand support for people with mental-illness and substances-use issues by opening 28 new substance use beds and 14 mental health care beds next year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    One in seven people lived in low-income families in 2012: Statcan

    One in seven people lived in low-income families in 2012: Statcan
    OTTAWA — Statistics Canada says 13.8 per cent of the population lived in low-income households in 2012.

    One in seven people lived in low-income families in 2012: Statcan

    From dark concrete to glass: National Arts Centre to get major facelift

    From dark concrete to glass: National Arts Centre to get major facelift
    OTTAWA — Nearly 50 years after the National Arts Centre was opened to celebrate Canada's centennial, it will undergo a major facelift to mark the country's 150th birthday.

    From dark concrete to glass: National Arts Centre to get major facelift

    Magnotta's lawyer asks jury to find his client not criminally responsible

    Magnotta's lawyer asks jury to find his client not criminally responsible
    MONTREAL — Luka Rocco Magnotta's lawyer has asked jurors to find his client not criminally responsible in the slaying and dismemberment of Jun Lin.

    Magnotta's lawyer asks jury to find his client not criminally responsible

    Oil tanker adrift off coast of Nova Scotia after loss of steering

    Oil tanker adrift off coast of Nova Scotia after loss of steering
    HALIFAX — An oil tanker is adrift off the coast of Nova Scotia due to a loss of steering.

    Oil tanker adrift off coast of Nova Scotia after loss of steering

    Rape, Referendum, Climate Change Among Topics Of B.C. Non-fiction Finalists

    Rape, Referendum, Climate Change Among Topics Of B.C. Non-fiction Finalists
    VANCOUVER — A first-person account of a rape, a look at the 1995 referendum and a study of climate change are among the finalists for the B.C. National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction, worth a whopping $40,000.

    Rape, Referendum, Climate Change Among Topics Of B.C. Non-fiction Finalists

    Hungry polar bear cubs shot after entering Nunavut town

    Hungry polar bear cubs shot after entering Nunavut town
    TALOYOAK, Nunavut — Residents in a remote Arctic hamlet are baffled by the number of hungry polar bear cubs that have wandered into their community since the fall and have had to be shot.

    Hungry polar bear cubs shot after entering Nunavut town