Pubdate: Thu, 04 Aug 2005
Source: Outlook, The (CN BC)
Copyright: 2005 The Outlook
Contact:  http://www.northshoreoutlook.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1433
Author: Justin Beddall
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

HELP IS CLOSE TO HOME

In a telephone book-sized strategy paper produced by the North Shore Task 
Force on Substance Abuse in 2002, one of the stated goals was to offer 
local treatment for those struggling with substance abuse.

Soon, as a result of diligent work by the task force and Vancouver Coastal 
Health, youth and adults who are battling drugs and alcohol will no longer 
have to leave the North Shore for treatment. As early as November, a new 
daytime addiction treatment facility - known as "daytox" -will open at 15th 
and Lonsdale.

The facility will offer day addiction programs for youth and adult who are 
in stable living situations that enable them to return to their homes in 
the evenings after undergoing addiction treatment.

The centre, run by Vancouver Coastal Health, is expected to cost $750,000 
in a truncated 2005 fiscal year and $1 million the following year.

The new facility will offer detox, rehab and crisis response with medical 
and psychiatric support.

Programs at the new facility will include monitored drug withdrawal 
services and counseling sessions.

Those who understand the scope of addiction on the North Shore have long 
lamented the lack of drug treatment programs in North or West Vancouver.

Barnabas Walther, director of mental health and addiction services for 
Vancouver Coastal Health, said the facility is an important step for the 
North Shore.

"I think it's essential. The epidemiological information suggests that we 
would have a sufficient size of population in West Vancouver and North 
Vancouver and the surrounding areas to warrant addiction programs," he 
noted. "So if we don't have those things then those people are going to 
have to go downtown for appropriate programs services.

"But for some programs we don't have the critical mass to be able to 
reasonably provide those services on the North Shore.

Back in 2000, The North Shore Task Force on Substance Abuse was created to 
create a comprehensive substance abuse strategy for the North Shore. It 
includes representatives from North and West Van, Bowen Island, Lions Bay, 
Squamish Nation and Tsleil-Waututh Nation, both school districts and police.

One of the top priorities was to develop treatment "on or near the North 
Shore for adults and youth."

District of North Vancouver Coun. Maureen McKeon Holmes has been on the 
task force since it's inception. She says one of the biggest frustrations 
all along has been a dearth of funding for treatment .

"The big aspect of it was treatment and that was missing," McKeon Holmes 
noted. "Without the treatment aspect of it, you're not moving ahead at all. 
There's a myth that there isn't a drug problem on the North Shore.

The co-chair of the task force added the opening of a new facility in North 
Vancouver comes as welcome news.

"Our [residents] won't have to go somewhere else," she said.

The task force's other co-chair, West Vancouver Coun. Pam Goldsmith-Jones, 
is also pleased about the soon-to-be-opened facility in North Vancouver.

"There will also be a huge outreach component," explained Goldsmith-Jones. 
"This is a real breakthrough.

Staff from the new facility will spend time working at already existing 
agencies on the North Shore to maintain consistency when screening, 
assessing individuals for admittance into the facility.

While many have lobbied for a longer-term treatment facility for North and 
West Vancouver, the daytox is an important step on the North Shore, 
especially at a time when crystal meth has become so prevalent among youth 
and young adults.

"The thing you need right away is a daytox treatment when you're ready. We 
want to have no waiting time for people on the North Shore for that," said 
Goldsmith-Jones.

Currently, there is a formal agreement in place between facilities 
throughout Vancouver Coastal Health that allows clients who have finished 
receiving daytox to check into the next appropriate place for the next 
stage in their treatment, she said.

Added Walther, "If you're looking at long-term medical detox and programs 
like that we don't have the critical mass [on the North Shore] to provide 
sufficient enough people who have that need to keep something like that 
active the whole time.

He continued, "So it would be better for them to go to an existing program 
downtown and we've worked out protocols to allow that to occur so when they 
are finished at that phase of their program they can move smoothly into the 
day program that exists here rather than being engaged in a day program in 
Vancouver. When a person is ready to deal with their issue we need to be 
there for them."
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MAP posted-by: Beth