The Province

Child mental health unit coming

Much-needed crisis facility set to open at Surrey Memorial Hospital at the end of May

- Jennifer Saltman jensaltman@postmedia.com Twitter.com/jensaltman

Help is on the way for children and youth in crisis in the Fraser Valley.

In late May, a special unit for young people between the ages of six and 17 suffering from acute mental health issues will open at Surrey Memorial Hospital.

The 10-bed Child and Adolescent Psychiatri­c Stabilizat­ion unit has been built in the hospital’s old emergency department and will be the first mental-health unit of its kind in Fraser Health. There is only one similar unit in B.C. — the sixbed Child and Adolescent Psychiatri­c Emergency unit at B.C. Children’s Hospital in Vancouver.

Children and youth will be brought to emergency rooms, where they will be assessed by an emergency physician and psychiatri­st, then referred to the stabilizat­ion unit if it’s appropriat­e.

The unit is meant to treat patients for a short time — up to a week. They will then be referred to child and youth mental health services in the community, most of which are provided by the provincial government.

“It’s very intensive support over a short period of time,” said Stan Kuperis, director of mental health and substance abuse services for Fraser Health. “The focus is really on crisis stabilizat­ion.”

Currently, children and youth who show up at the Surrey hospital in a mental health crisis will be assessed and referred to the unit at B.C. Children’s Hospital if appropriat­e. If there is no space, they will often end up in a pediatric ward or adult psychiatri­c unit at a local hospital.

“That certainly is far from ideal,” Kuperis said. “The intent of this unit is to provide that highly specialize­d child and youth mental health service. This is a highly specialize­d team. The whole environmen­t and the team is really geared toward children and youth with mental health needs.”

The unit will be home to a Snoezelen room, a multi-sensory environmen­t used to help reduce agitation and anxiety and stimulate and encourage communicat­ion. It’s often used as a therapy for people with autism and other developmen­tal disabiliti­es. The room will be the first of its kind for children and youth in a hospital psychiatri­c unit in Canada.

There will also be a “parent-in-residence program,” with a parent who has lived the experience of having a child with mental illness available to support parents of patients.

Manjit Sidhu was among those Friday who spoke to the need for services such as the new facility. Her daughter Sharon graduated from the University of B.C., worked fulltime with Fraser Health, volunteere­d, and was in her 20s when she died.

“She had many friends and a very loving family — but Sharon also struggled with mental illness and this was very devastatin­g,” Sidhu said.

“Mental illness does not just affect some sorts of individual­s, it can affect anyone. Mental illness can come as a shock to a family and the stigma of mental illness is so loud, it’s deafening.”

Money to fund the unit came from a variety of sources, including Cloverdale Paint’s $1-million donation to the Surrey Hospital & Outpatient Centre Foundation’s fundraisin­g campaign, which raised a total of about $2 million.

The provincial government provided $2.2 million and Fraser Health contribute­d $820,000 in capital costs and will pay $4 million annually to operate the unit.

“It’s very intensive support over a short period of time. The focus is really on crisis stabilizat­ion.” STAN KUPERIS DIRECTOR OF MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES FOR FRASER HEALTH

 ?? FRANCIS GEORGIAN/PNG ?? The Child and Adolescent Psychiatri­c Stabilizat­ion unit at Surrey Memorial Hospital set to open at the end of May includes a Snoezelen room, a multi-sensory environmen­t to help reduce agitation and anxiety and stimulate communicat­ion.
FRANCIS GEORGIAN/PNG The Child and Adolescent Psychiatri­c Stabilizat­ion unit at Surrey Memorial Hospital set to open at the end of May includes a Snoezelen room, a multi-sensory environmen­t to help reduce agitation and anxiety and stimulate communicat­ion.

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