Pubdate: Fri, 15 Feb 2008
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Frances Bula and Lori Culbert

A NEW BREED OF THE MENTALLY ILL PUTS B.C. FACILITIES NEAR CHAOS

A Chorus Of Experts Sounds The Alarm On Cost To Society

B.C. is home to a new tribe of mentally ill people.

They're nothing like the people who lived in the Riverview psychiatric
hospital for all those years.

They are a new generation who are fractured by powerful combinations
of mental illness, drug use, homelessness and severe physical breakdown.

A wide variety of studies and surveys indicate that at least half the
people with severe mental illness in North America are also alcoholic
or, increasingly, heavy drug users. Some studies put it as high as 70
per cent.

B.C. appears to be at the high end. Homelessness, which experts say
acts like a corrosive agent on vulnerable brains, and widespread use
of psychosis-inducing drugs like crack and crystal meth are propelling
increasing numbers of the province's most fragile people into clinical
psychiatric territory.

Bev Gutray, of the B.C. chapter of the Canadian Mental Health
Association, says the estimate is that there are 12,000 people in B.C.
who are both mentally ill and drug-addicted.

That number is growing every year. That doesn't take into account the
people who don't show up in the statistics, because they've never been
diagnosed or even gone for help.

And a growing chorus of psychiatrists, police, housing providers and
health-care workers say that more of the same old solutions isn't
going to work for this new breed.

They are saying Vancouver can't fix this crop of the mentally ill by
just sending them back to traditional institutions. It can't cure its
plague of addiction by just adding more places to get drug treatment.

Nor can this city -- or any other town in B.C. -- hope to disperse the
ever-growing ragged armies of homeless, mentally ill and drug-addicted
people by just building them places to live.

The old systems aren't working for that group because they were
created to deal with people who had only one problem apiece, not
everything at once, say those who try to deal with them.

Some are in such a dysfunctional state that even the idea of making
and keeping appointments at clinics to get mental-health counselling
is ludicrous.

At places like the Strathcona mental-health clinic, staff are already
overloaded, seeing 125 people a day, almost every one of them with
both a psychiatric and an addiction problem.

At other mental-health clinics or treatment facilities, there's still
often a mindset from the past that sees addictions and mental health
as separate categories.

So people who call are are told by mental-health counsellors to get
off drugs before they can come in for psychiatric help. They're told
by treatment centres that they can't be admitted if they're taking any
kind of medication, including drugs prescribed for their psychosis or
anxiety or other psychiatric condition.

In all but a few places that provide social housing, they're thrown
out if their behaviour is too crazy or if they're using street drugs.

That means they're cycling constantly through city hospitals,
shelters, streets, and jails, draining emergency-room and police resources.

The answer, experts say: The city and province need to construct a new
form of care for the mentally ill of the 21st century.

"There's a cohort of hundreds, if not thousands, of people who are not
being served," says Geoff Plant, the former B.C. Liberal minister who
is now spearheading Vancouver's Project Civil City.

Plant, backed by the city's drug-policy coordinator, Donald
MacPherson, has decided to focus a considerable part of the project's
resources on this new, lost population. And even just getting them
housing is not going to solve it, he says.

"I think the province is making significant movement on the housing
front," Plant says.

But he added: "I am less confident that the extent of the health
crisis with respect to these people with concurrent disorders has
seized the attention of Victoria. Housing first is clearly a way of
creating the conditions for help, but it's not enough for the cohort
of the most egregiously ill."

At Vancouver Coastal Health, the two women who oversee the region's
mental health and addictions programs, Lorna Howes and Heather Hay,
say this new group is forcing the old systems designed for 30 years
ago into trying to adapt.

At St. Paul's Hospital, there's almost a cry of despair.

St. Paul's opened a 15-bed psychiatric unit specifically to deal with
dual-diagnosed people less than two years ago, but it is not nearly
large enough.

"We are always over 100-per-cent capacity," said Dr. Richard Pico,
chair of psychiatry at Providence Health Care, which oversees St. Paul's.

Pico said the hospital has plans to add 15 new beds soon, but added
what also is needed are more resources in the community.

Building a new, workable system in the community is especially
crucial.

Housing Minister Rich Coleman is making Herculean efforts these days
to buy existing low-income buildings and to get money for new social
housing -- all of it aimed at people with precisely these complex problems.

On Thursday, he announced the government's purchase of another six
hotels in the Downtown Eastside, with the total amount of housing in
Vancouver now targeted to the mentally ill and drug addicted standing
at 16 hotels and 12 new housing sites for a total of 1,800 units.

But the non-profit groups who are going to be put in charge say
there's a disaster in the making if 100 or even 50 people with complex
problems are herded into one building without a solid system of
mental-health care and staff who have the time to do more than just
tread water. They know that from past experience.

"Having had a chance to run the Princess and the Vivian projects,
we've been able to get a sense of where your tipping point is," says
Mark Smith, the manager of Raincity Housing (formerly Triage), one of
the few social-housing groups in the city that take on those
profoundly challenging people.

"You do hit a maximum number, after which you just can't manage the
chaos. Anything past that and you're just doing crisis work. You're
making sure they're not being hounded by dealers, that the pimps
aren't getting in to beat up the women."

That's echoed by Mark Townsend, Liz Evans and the people who work with
them at the Portland Hotel Society, which runs several hotels in the
Downtown Eastside that are seen as the housing of last resort for
people kicked out of everywhere else.

Four years ago, they were given the Stanley/New Fountain Hotel -- a
crumbling building between Blood Alley and the Army & Navy department
store -- to run, with 80 of the people who had been living outside
Woodward's in a tent-city housing protest as their new residents.

They were originally given no staff, then that crept up to enough
money to pay for one person 24/7 to monitor the door, run the
building, clean the toilets and keep a a lid on everything.

"It used to be absolute chaos here," says Erin Mathews, the petite and
irrepressibly cheery woman who has been the Stanley's manager for the
past four years. "Most people from agencies refused to come into the
building."

The Stanley became a blight for the whole community. Police logged 521
calls from the building in one two-month period.

Now, four years later, Mathews says there's a world of
difference.

There are more staff, so she's not doing everything by herself.
Vancouver Coastal Health just created a roving health team for the
Downtown Eastside hotels, which means there's a nurse in the building
several times a week.

St. Paul's psychiatrist Bill Mac-Ewan has made it his mission to come
into the Downtown Eastside three times a week, with the Stanley as a
regular stop.

The mother of one of the boys living at the hotel raised $70,000 from
friends and relatives to pay for lunch for everyone in the building to
be brought in each day, from the kitchen of another Portland-managed
building.

But it's all temporary, a patch job of charity and time-limited
funding and superhuman efforts from people like MacEwan, says Townsend.

And if Vancouver is going to absorb 30 more buildings and 2,000 more
people like the residents at the Stanley, there is going to have to be
a lot more.

Tomorrow: There are small experiments and ambitious plans percolating 
in many places for
how to treat this province's new generation of the mentally ill. 
There's a lot of hope
for them, but how far will they go?
- ---
MAP posted-by: Derek