Pubdate: Thu, 05 Nov 2009 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Lora Grindlay, The Province Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) ONCE, THERE WAS NOWHERE TO GO For those who are addicted and mentally ill, Burnaby has a haven - but beds are limited Cancer patients would not be discharged and denied medical treatment because they smoke cigarettes, says Dr. Michael Krausz. But it's that attitude, one of denying care to difficult and complex patients, that many of the clients he sees at the Burnaby Centre for Mental Health and Addiction have come up against. "They are banned from treatment due to bad behaviours. It's seen as a moral issue. They are thrown out of their housing. They are thrown out of emergency rooms," said Krausz, the centre's medical director. "If you look at the clients we see in here, more than 50 per cent have psychotic symptoms and 20 per cent have bipolar symptoms. We are talking about people who are facing major, major problems in their life and severe, persistent mental illness." Opened in June 2008 and operated at an annual cost of $14 million, the centre provides longterm treatment for those whose lives have been virtually destroyed by mental illness, addiction and other problems. At least 72 per cent of the 201 people admitted so far have also been homeless. About 45 per cent of the first 400 clients referred to the centre had experienced trauma and abuse, a major factor in developing severe addiction issues. "Often substance use is part of their coping mechanisms. If you live in a single-occupancy room in the Downtown Eastside with a bipolar disease, you would start to use stimulants in a week," said Krausz. "And there is no psychiatrist to see them there. There is no hope; no light at the end of the tunnel. "Our main philosophy is to serve people, to understand what their needs are and then reorganize ourselves along their needs instead of forcing people to meet the needs of the health-care system." So the made-in-B.C. approach is to find the strengths in each person and to treat the illnesses and the person at the same time. And that has meant a wholesale change in the way the 140 staff perceive the clients. It's a far cry from the typical medical model. Krausz said even if someone is hearing voices or having delusions, it's important to his recovery to maintain connection to peers and family, to build relationships and to restore lost self-esteem. "A lot of the treatment we are providing . . . has nothing to do with addiction or with psychosis or with bipolar," he said. Obviously those are treated, he said, but a key part of recovery is stabilization of the person and reintegrating them into the community. The centre provides acupuncture services, art therapy, music classes, yoga and outings to the local library and swimming pool. Clients are helped in learning how to structure their days, a skill they will need upon "transitioning" out of the centre. More than 60 per cent of the current clients are enrolled in education programs. The average stay is from nine months to a year. "It becomes unique . . . that we are ready to commit ourselves to the most challenged clients instead of excluding them, being really committed to work with them on a long term," said Krausz. "People come here with a chaotic life - fights every day, a lot of threats, nearly no income and involved in all kinds of deviant behaviours - and to adapt and really change direction takes time." Unlike most treatment centres, this one tolerates relapses into drug use. It's seen as a part of recovery and as an opportunity to explore the triggers that led to using. All of this comes at a cost of $340 per person per day. The per diem at an acute-care hospital is more than $1,000 a day, while supported housing in the Downtown Eastside averages between $50 and $70. Heather Hay, Vancouver Coastal Health's regional director for complex mental health and addiction populations, said the cost is equivalent to that of a seniors' residential-care home and is far cheaper than treating people on the streets. "When this client population is left untreated on the street, we're using policing resources, ambulance resources. [There's] inappropriate use of our emergency department, inappropriate use of our inpatients' beds in acute care and many of the clients . . . have been 30-, 40-time visitors per year to our emergency department," said Hay. "So, from a health-care perspective, $14 million is a drop in the bucket compared to the overall cost to the system of this client group, which is huge." A 2008 Simon Fraser University study found that the average homeless person - more than half of this group also suffer from mental illness and drug addiction - uses nearly $55,000 a year in services. On the day the Burnaby centre opened, staff found someone waiting at the door to get a bed. Ever since, demand for the 100 beds has far outweighed capacity. There are 600 people on a "referral list" waiting to get in, a number that isn't acceptable to Dr. Krausz. The first assertive community treatment (ACT ) team to be struck in Vancouver is responsible, along with the centre's outreach team, for supporting those waiting to get in and those already discharged. At least 113 clients have left the centre, all with community care supports in place. St. Paul's Hospital psychiatrist Dr. Bill MacEwan, who also provides outreach psychiatric services in the Downtown Eastside, said it's great to see the combination of mental illness and drug addiction become inclusionary criteria. "The difficulty we've had is that anyone who has a major drug problem often doesn't get the appropriate treatment at a psychiatric ward - and anyone who's got a major psychiatric problem has not been able to get the appropriate intensive treatment at a recovery facility," said MacEwan. He is pleased that staff at the centre are willing to alter the program, for example when policy was changed to restrict movement in and out of the firstphase treatment area, where clients are often detoxifying. No one sees the centre as the "whole answer," he said, but his hope is that spin-offs from the facility, such as the ACT team, lead to the complete integration of mental-health and addiction services in the community so that people don't lose touch with treatment options. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D