Pubdate: Wed, 14 Nov 2001 Source: Maple Ridge Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2001 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc Contact: http://www.mrtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1372 Author: Joanne MacDonald MAN PITCHES CENTRE FOR TREATING ADDICTIONS He Wants To Help People With Addictions Get Their Lives Back On Track. So Rock Chalifour, a Port Coquitlam man who works as a nurse at Royal Columbian Hospital, is lobbying local municipal councils for their support in his drive to set up a hospital-based addictions treatment program within the Simon Fraser Health Region. Chalifour, who will be making a presentation tonight before Maple Ridge council, said he wants "some place to send people when they come to emergency so they don't just get sent back out to the street...There's no such hospital in this province." He said he works in the RCH emergency department and is "frustrated with the fact that I have these people who come in and seek help but there's no place to send them. If they go to a detox centre, they can only handle the detox issues there, not the psychoses or medical problems. In a hospital, they can handles psychoses, seizures or other medical problems, but not addictions." Chalifour said he's been working on his project for three years now, and has liaised with a group of people who advise him from time to time. "We loosely call ourselves the Addictions Treatment Advocacy," he said. What he and the group envision is a treatment facility with 50 beds dedicated to people with addictions that would be located either within an existing hospital or, down the road, a stand-alone facility. It would be staffed by doctors who specialize in addictions treatment and ideally financed by Health Canada. Additional funding might also be applied for from the provincial Ministry of the Attorney General or the Ministry of Children and Family Development. "We're not looking at the Ministry of Health for funding. Private funding is not outside the realm of possibility because currently most health care recovery programs beyond detox are, in fact, managed in the private sector," Chalifour said. He intends to make presentations to all of the municipal councils within the SFHR. To date, he's received letters of support from councils in New Westminster and Port Coquitlam, and is waiting to receive a letter from Coquitlam council. Besides funding, Chalifour said he also wants to focus on under serviced groups with addictions, namely the working poor. He noted such people often don't qualify for treatment in many facilities because they're either making too much money to go on welfare, which would cover such treatment, or they don't receive extended medical benefits for addiction treatment at their places of employment. What could cover that group of people, and others, would be a hospital modelled after the Homewood treatment hospital in Guelph, Ont., which he said specializes in addictions treatment and psychiatry. Chalifour said he believes Homewood's treatment can be covered by provincial health care. "There's no question that the federal government is looking to generate an organized strategy on drug treatment at the national level," he said. "So we have to look at Homewood, a holistic program that looks at the medical, the psychiatric, the psychological and the social wellbeing of the patient, and reintegrating them into society with a full set of skills to live as a sober person." In the meantime, he plans to continue lobbying local governments for their support. "I've had excellent support so far," Chalifour said. "Maybe it's just good timing, but I believe society is ready to look at addictions as a disease not as a social problem." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart