Pubdate: Sun, 30 Mar 2008 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Cindy E. Harnett, Times Colonist Taking It to the Streets VICTORIA'S STREET NURSES HELP THE PEOPLE SOCIETY IGNORES When Victoria's street nurses trek down the city's urine-doused and blood-speckled back alleys or underneath its musty bridges, they don't see the prostitutes, druggies or the crazies that many people in society do. They see people -- individuals like any other -- trying with their own sense of dignity to survive the best they can. "Those are not terms we use -- druggies, junkies or hookers -- because people are people," said Tanya, a street nurse for more than four years with the Vancouver Island Health Authority. But she hears the derogatory terms all the time. "They're just trying to survive, to get by to live another day and we're trying to make that a little easier for them," she said. Loaded down with backpacks, soft-sided cases, vaccine coolers and sometimes rolling suitcases, Victoria's three female street nurses -- referred to here on a first-name only basis for VIHA security reasons - -- take to the pavement in teams of two, five days a week. The nurses, two full-time and one part-time, find, test, and treat people who often won't seek health care until it's too late. Some live under bridges, in parks and in doorways, while others are tucked away in shelters, rooming houses, motels or cheap apartments. If the nurses can't find them on the streets, they find them during regular rounds to shelters, drop-in centres, recovery houses and needle exchanges. They can be found sitting in the PEERS mobile home for sex-trade workers or the YW-YMCA's youth outreach van. On the spot, the nurses are equipped to: take blood tests for HIV, hepatitis A, B, and C; swabs and urine tests for sexually transmitted infections such as gonorrhea or chlamydia; administer vaccines such as those to prevent pneumonia or tetanus; give out antibiotics for obvious infections; and take sputum samples for tuberculosis. A tough-talking Rhonda Campbell, eating a piece of pork with two knives at the Our Place drop-in centre on Johnson Street, says she's seen a street nurse treat a man covered in weeping abscesses -- a man others wouldn't go near. "She just looked after him as if he were her child," Campbell said. According to VIHA, the nurses see up to 40 clients a week and administer about 11,600 different types of services a year. Weldon Lee, 39, said he often just needs something as small as an Aspirin. In extreme situations, the street nurses can administer the drug narcan to reverse or prevent an obvious drug overdose. "Our street nurses take the service to the client," said Audrey Shaw, VIHA manager of communicable disease programs. The mandate of the program is to deliver harm-reduction and prevention health-care services to marginalized populations that would be at high risk for infection or transmission of HIV, hepatitis C and other blood-borne diseases. Murray Fyfe, VIHA medical health officer, said the street nurses prevent diseases and serious infections in a "really hard to reach" population. "The cost of three street nursing salaries [is nominal] compared to the hundreds of thousands or millions associated with care in hospital or the emergency room for problems once they get out of hand," Fyfe said. In a lifetime, one person with HIV costs the health-care system about $250,000 in drug, hospital and physician costs, according to VIHA. A hepatitis C patient costs about the same, said Fyfe. There are about 50 new HIV cases and up to 600 new hepatitis C cases on Vancouver Island each year, Fyfe said. VIHA has a plan in place to cut that number of new infections in half. However, before street nurses can immunize or test people who partake in high-risk activities, they must first establish trust and develop relationships. "Some people have never known what it's like to be cared about," said Janice, a VIHA street nurse for the last 10 months. She's worked in hospital intensive care units and as a public health nurse, but it was her most recent stint in a primary care clinic in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside where she developed a calling for "taking care of people who don't take care of themselves. "The work we do is not about getting them to that one day that the person lives in a house, has two children and a job," Janice said. "It's about giving these people a reason to live ... to say 'we in society care about you.' " If she convinces a sickly person to receive medical treatment, treats a superbug infection before it gets into the bloodstream, gets an addict a spot in a detox program or simply convinces someone to get a vaccine or a blood test, "to be honest, that's a big success." However, Janice admits the sad stories outweigh the happy ones. It's the individual tales that bother her as much as the totality of all the deaths. "It's very rare for a week to go by where one of our people haven't died," Janice said. "That part is very difficult for me -- the amount of death in our population, people usually younger than 55." Rev. Al Tysick of Our Place, which houses and serves the street population, said about 1.5 street people died on average every week in 2007, up from about one person each week the year previous. "I bury them, I know," said Tysick. He presides over their services and keeps records of every death. The average age of the dead is dropping to the mid-30s from the mid-40s, he said. The pain for the street nurses, and all front-line workers, said Tysick, isn't even so much counting deaths, as watching the dying. "The street nurses have more intimate knowledge of that, what their records are and what the person is dying of," Tysick said. "It's hard on them." Also upsetting, said Janice, are the judgments from the public. Some critics question why the health authority seems to care more about drug addicts than law-abiding citizens. But Janice, with a masters degree in nursing, said no one is more or less deserving of her health know-how. She would no more judge or turn away a wound-infested person in need of antibiotics on the street than she would turn away an obese smoker in need of emergency bypass surgery in hospital, she said. "I don't think it's ethical to ignore human suffering," Janice said. "I don't like to wake up cold so I can't imagine what it's like to wake up on the streets and being hungry and having to find food and be worried about just surviving." But despite the sometimes desperate circumstances of this population - -- some who have been sexually or physically abused or fell in life and didn't get back up -- many would rather go without help than trust a stranger offering it. Dan MacDonald, 50, living on a disability benefits for mental health issues, doesn't mince words about the health-care system: "It sucks. It fails miserably." MacDonald said he would rather seek out a peer's health advice first than be looked down upon by the city's doctors and nurses in hospitals and clinics, whom he says discriminate against the homeless and drug users. "Royal Jubilee is the worst," he said. "People are hesitant to go there. They're too professional, too official," he said, mocking what he perceives as their snobbery. "They are part of the enemy." But MacDonald's been poked and prodded, without complaint, by street nurses administering vaccines or testing for diseases. "The street nurses out here are pretty good," he admits. Campbell agrees. She has empathy for the nurses. "They see more bodily fluids and don't look twice at anyone," she said. "Others, they don't want to smell us or deal with us or look at the clothes we can't afford." The nurses know they're appreciated. They say they receive more thank-yous on the street than they ever received working in hospitals. [sidebars] THE COSTS ADD UP Every time a street-entrenched person is prevented from having to visit a hospital emergency room or receive treatment in hospital, the cost savings, based on what the province bills a foreign visitor, the only figures available, are: acute care or maternity ward bed: $3,000 per day acute care intensive care unit bed: $4,300 per day ER or treatment room visit: $500 per visit additional cost of physician for ER visit: $200 ambulatory clinic visit: $500 per day FINDING A NEW WAY Sometimes street nurses must be creative in their ways to get people on the street -- many of whom are extremely vulnerable to infection - --into clinics for prevention services such as immunization and testing. On March 12 the street nurses hosted a testing night for infectious diseases, followed by a vaccination night on March 25. On April 18 they will host a women's night at AIDS Vancouver Island where the street nurses will provide testing for sexually transmitted diseases and adult immunization for a host of diseases, while other agencies will volunteer massage, hairstyling, makeup, manicure and other services and activities. INFECTION BY THE NUMBERS (From a 2005 survey of 250 people living on the streets in Victoria) 12.5 per cent, or 30 people, tested positive for HIV 74 per cent, or 177 people, tested positive for hepatitis C 12 per cent tested positive for both HIV and hepatitis C On Vancouver Island each year there are about 50 new HIV infections, from a mix of unprotected sex and injection drug use, and up to 600 new hepatitis C infections, mainly from injection drug use. Source: I-Track survey, a national program conducted with VIHA - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake