The Telegram (St. John's)

Making a hotel feel like home

- ALANNA SMITH

CALGARY - The lobby of a Calgary hotel is now home to a makeshift pharmacy, a temperatur­e check station, whiteboard­s with details about COVID-19 patients and masked workers aiding the city's vulnerable population.

It's like a clinic with more carpet, where private patient spaces have been swapped for unassuming hotel rooms in the facility's surroundin­g building. The hotel, which Postmedia agreed not to identify, has been transforme­d into the city's only assisted self-isolation site to house individual­s facing homelessne­ss who have tested positive for the deadly novel coronaviru­s, are symptomati­c or have been in contact with a positive case.

On Thursday morning, 46 clients were self-isolating on site. At last report, 12 people from Calgary's homeless shelters — six from Alpha House, five from the Dropin Centre and one from the Salvation Army — have tested positive for COVID19 and some are currently at the undisclose­d location.

The facility is equipped to safely isolate 100 people and Dr. Kerri Treherne, medical director of The Alex, said the number of clients is growing daily, as is the team's effort to make the space feel more like a home. The Alex, alongside Alberta Health Services and CUPS Calgary, provides medical support for the site.

“When this program originally started, it was just a patient in a hotel room,” said Treherne about the April 6 launch. “I feel much better about what we are trying to do now. We are trying to make it more human, more happy, so they can have more dignity.”

Treherne said the segregated rooms used to mitigate health risks can feel like “jail,” where people aren't allowed to socialize with their neighbours or leave for extended periods.

“The patients are just so alone when they're in the room. They walk in, close the door behind them and can't really go out,” she said. “It's just a weird feeling. Loss of autonomy, loss of control and complete isolation — loneliness.”

The hotel rooms are modest with a bathroom, bedroom, living area and kitchenett­es in some. The walls are bare, choking hazards and sharp items have been removed and the utilities are, for the most part, switched off since clients are provided three meals a day and checked in on by medical and support staff.

Clients are allowed to go for co-ordinated walks and borrow donated books or electronic devices. But the majority of their two-week isolation period is spent inside, alone. Even when they leave their room, the hallways are sobering: there are people sanitizing the space, along with security guards and signage reminding guests to follow proper safety measures.

It's the outdoors that people crave, said Treherne, which is why her team is working to increase the amount of exterior activities available for clients, including wellness areas and a designated smoking zone.

It's a fine balance between safety and community.

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