Pubdate: Thu, 03 Sep 2009 Source: Alberni Valley Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Alberni Valley Times Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouverisland/albernivalleytimes/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4043 Author: Quintin Winks Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) ADDICTS MISSING OUT ON TREATMENT The number of Port Alberni clients being sent to a nearby drug and alcohol addictions clinic has dropped to zero, sparking concerns that funding has been chopped in a city where it's needed most. For Jane Worth, administrator at the Comox Valley Recovery Centre, the sudden drop in clients, from an average of 20 annually, is strange. She wants to know what's happening to them. The recovery centre isn't the only facility offering live-in addictions treatment on Vancouver Island, but it has been the facility used by Port Alberni clients for that specific treatment for as long as three decades. Now the Port Alberni branch of B.C. Mental Health and Addiction Services, under the Vancouver Island Health Authority, has ceased sending clients to Comox. Worth said it's because its budget for residential care has been cut. "We are getting clients from other mental health and addiction offices, and they seem to still have a residential care budget," Worth said. "It just seems to me to be an injustice to the clients served in Port Alberni." Worth is so frustrated that she approached Alberni Pacific Rim MLA Scott Fraser, who sent a letter of complaint to the health minister. "At the beginning of VIHA's 2009 budget year they eliminated the residential support budget for Port Alberni," Fraser said. "This is for people who need drug and alcohol rehabilitation." What that means for local addicts, and whether it leaves them walking the streets, is unclear for Worth and Fraser. But Janet James, manager of Mental Health and Addictions for Oceanside, Port Alberni and the West Coast, was very clear that there was no funding cut for residential care by VIHA, and there will be no increase of addicts unable to find care. Instead, she said VIHA has changed its assessment techniques and refined them to better match client needs with available services. "The fact there's a treatment program on your door step doesn't mean it would be the one that would meet your needs," James said. "It's about doing a really good and detailed formal assessment of the individual's full needs and problems and working out what's going to be the best package of care." The new assessment techniques mean that clients that were historically sent to Comox to overcome their addictions are now being sent to other facilities that deal with addictions as well as accompanying mental illnesses. That includes two beds at Port House and three more at Garnett House in Port Alberni. Both are residential facilities where Mental Health and Addictions can support a client through a period of stabilization and support to set them up for independent living in the community, James said. Neither Worth nor Fraser are convinced. They say that Mental Health and Addictions has been sending Port Alberni clients to appropriate facilities for years and this is nothing new or different. What has changed is that the agency is no longer sending clients to nearby addictions-specific facilities where they're housed throughout their treatments. "The money we're talking about is $12.40 per day," Worth said. "It's not like it's a gazillion dollars. It's not like we charge $10,000 to $15,000." Fraser said attempts to rationalize making clients travel further to VIHA-supported facilities that offer similar services to those in Comox are misguided. "It's been determined that Port Alberni exceeds Qualicum and Parksville in spending for this budget," Fraser said. "So they've chosen not to fund it, which is ridiculous. Port Alberni is a different community than Parksville/Qualicum. We've see a lot of socio-economic problems in Port Alberni and therefore statistically the needs are greater. If the needs are greater, you don't shut them down. They're doing exactly the wrong thing." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom