Pubdate: Fri, 21 Dec 2007 Source: Kamloops Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Kamloops Daily News Contact: http://www.kamloopsnews.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/679 Author: Michele Young Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) MINISTER STANDS BY KIWANIS DECISION B.C. Health Minister George Abbott stands by Interior Health's decision not to fund Kiwanis House's residential treatment program for people with drug or alcohol addictions. Speaking from New Zealand Wednesday, Abbott told The Daily News the health authority has looked carefully at what addiction services it needs locally in Kamloops as well as regionally. "I'm advised they have 53 addictions treatment beds in Kamloops, which is 12 more than one year ago," he said. Last week, Kiwanis House executive director Murphy Kennedy announced the 37-year-old facility's 15 staff had been given layoff notices. The residential treatment centre is $400,000 in debt and a switch from publicly funded beds to private pay didn't have enough time to get off the ground. Interior Health did ask Kiwanis if it was interested in putting in a proposal for a contract for supportive housing beds, but that was rejected because it was a downgrade from the current treatment program being offered. Instead, that contract has seen New Life Mission and House of Ruth offer 30 longer-term recovery beds, as opposed to Kiwanis' 33-day intensive therapy program. But Abbott was clear he won't step in to save Kiwanis. "I am supportive of the leadership which has been taken by Interior Health on this issue. I have reviewed the file on this. I have discussed the issue with the MLAs. I have discussed it with officials at Interior Health and I believe the right course of action has been taken. So I won't be intervening with respect to this. I think IH has made a decision and I support that decision," he said. "Nothing's going to change in the short-term here." Abbott said he would be willing to talk to representatives from Kiwanis House. "I'm sure Kiwanis House has made an impact in lots of people's lives over time. The question here is not whether Kiwanis House lives or doesn't live. It's about what Interior Health believes they need to have successful addiction programs and where they believe they can most effectively use the addiction dollars they have." While Kiwanis is based on an abstinence model that sees clients leave the program if they use drugs or alcohol during treatment, there is a move within addictions services toward a harm-reduction model that allows re-entry to programs even with lapses. The loss of Kiwanis House, which graduates its last clients today, leaves the nearest residential treatment program at Crossroads in Kelowna where a harm-reduction approach is followed. "Interior Health have looked at that question carefully. They have concluded a harm-reduction model is most effective for our region," said Abbott. The minister said addictions services are always evolving and he expected the current configuration won't be the last. There are strong views on both sides - harm reduction and abstinence, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath