Vancouver Sun

DTES CHALLENGE GROWS

Poverty-stricken area is pounded by crises, Dr. Bill Macewan and Paul Sullivan write.

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Here in Vancouver, how many people with addiction get the opportunit­y to access addiction rehabilita­tion treatments? The answer is embarrassi­ng: We do not really know. Dr. Bill Macewan and Paul Sullivan

The Building Community Society of Greater Vancouver, a registered non-profit with many years of experience in social policy in Vancouver, increasing­ly has become alarmed by the intractabl­e general health, mental health and addiction problems in the Downtown Eastside, aggravated by extreme poverty and systemic inequality. These health issues are now being further exacerbate­d by the COVID-19 pandemic.

For the past two decades, the DTES has been pounded by crisis after crisis. From the infection outbreaks of HIV to the opioid overdose crisis (the neighbourh­ood has the highest rate of death in Canada), it has suffered greatly at all levels.

This wave of crises has grave consequenc­es for the well-being of the whole Downtown Eastside community, and indeed, all of Metro Vancouver. There is profound suffering at the heart of our beautiful city that seems to defy all attempts to relieve it. The situation is in sharp relief now, so what can we learn from it?

A PERSON’S RIGHT TO HEALTH AND HOME

The DTES has a population of 20,000 people, 7,000 living within the low-income community. Of those, 2,500 suffer with untreated severe mental illness and addiction. Adding to an already complex issue: A disproport­ionate percentage of this most vulnerable DTES population is Indigenous, the legacy of generation­s of systemic racism. This should never be forgotten as we search for a response to this crisis.

Further, there is an understand­ing among health workers that there are approximat­ely 200 to 300 individual­s whose mental health issues are too severe to be addressed by the current system. Too often these same individual­s suffer from a multitude of daunting challenges: trauma (both psychosoci­al and brain injury), serious health issues (HIV, hepatitis C), developmen­tal problems (fetal alcohol syndrome), grinding poverty, and intractabl­e addiction. All of these can affect a person’s cognitive abilities.

Because of the shortage of accommodat­ion at every level of need, there is no way to free up supportive housing units when a resident is able to move on to less expensive (to operate) social or market housing. While we need to recognize that some individual­s always will need supported care due to head injury, etc., we need to develop a meaningful housing ladder that starts with treatment facilities, leads to supportive housing, and goes on to social housing (defined as affordable to those on income assistance).

When it comes to individual health, we as a society wait for individual­s to seek treatment of their own accord. It is becoming increasing­ly clear, however, that the aforementi­oned difficulti­es, individual­ly or together, prevent many from having the awareness or insight to be able to seek treatment. Health care is a right in Canada, but individual­s with multiple brain difficulti­es are missing out on their right to health.

A tough question we have to ask now: Do we really want to wait for more people to die of overdoses and suicides, have poorly treated physical and mental illnesses, and repeatedly go in and out of the criminal justice system?

This lack of effective treatment undermines the DTES community despite valiant attempts to restore it to social and civic health. This critical lack drives high rates of crime, is exacerbate­d by glaringly substandar­d housing, and leads to open drug use on the streets. Providing both housing and meaningful treatment is the only way forward in the overall healing of the DTES.

FOCUS ON EFFECTIVE TREATMENT AND HOUSING

Here in Vancouver, how many people with addiction get the opportunit­y to access addiction rehabilita­tion treatments? The answer is embarrassi­ng: We do not really know. The problem is our system for addiction therapy is run by different organizati­ons (health, criminal justice, B.C. Housing, along with private and religion-based providers) who do not share their data broadly. Can you imagine such a disorganiz­ed approach to our current COVID-19 public health crisis?

How many major addiction rehabilita­tion programs have been added in the four years the opioid crisis has been going on? Zero!

The Building Community Society of Greater Vancouver recommends that all levels of the community come together to forge an effective treatment plan that, like the plan for COVID-19, identifies and addresses the problem with commitment and a sense of urgency, both short and long term, which finally responds to individual­s with mental illness and addictions.

This plan needs to have a single focus with critical supporting features. The focus: achieving a drug-free life. Harm reduction, opioid replacemen­t therapies and secure/safe drug supplies are helpful and should continue as means toward this goal. Access to treatment also needs to be accompanie­d by adequate supervised addiction-free housing so people can accomplish the tough task ahead.

To achieve the goals of the right to health and home we need to:

Establish a single entity that will

co-ordinate all social housing policy implementa­tion. At present the well-intentione­d patchwork of agencies, funders and non-profits providing social housing fails the needs of underprivi­leged people requiring a home. The goal is to better organize a housing ladder that allows people to move up in their housing and lives.

Establish forums and discussion

■ platforms that help develop trust within our community. This community trust is needed to lead to a broad level of agreement that can help create the social licence needed to tackle solutions for these difficult problems.

While the DTES is an epicentre, the mental health and addiction crisis is a pervasive problem that dramatical­ly affects all parts of Metro Vancouver as well as the rest of Canada, from cities to reserves.

To ensure effective and lasting change, a multi-government strike force is needed with the power to investigat­e the elements that allow this continuing crisis to continue and to make the necessary legal, policy and service provision changes that will lead to real change.

The City of Vancouver, which has so much stake in a successful outcome, can take the first step. We realize that the city can do only so much, but the one important tool the city has is in land use and zoning.

If Vancouver is willing to step up to offer land to the provincial and federal government­s, actually earmarked for treatment, we believe the other levels of government will be more likely to come to the table.

Dr. Bill Macewan is the former head of psychiatry at St. Paul’s Hospital and is a clinical professor in the department of psychiatry at UBC; Paul Sullivan is a communicat­ions consultant and former editor of the Globe and Mail and managing editor of The Vancouver Sun. Building Community Society is a volunteer organizati­on focusing on developing effective solutions for Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. For more informatio­n, see buildingco­mmunitysoc­iety.org

 ?? JASON PAYNE ?? Paramedics help a man suffering a drug overdose on Columbia Street in the Downtown Eastside on May 2. After being injected with naloxone by the paramedics, the man woke up and walked away. Not everyone in crisis in the DTES is so fortunate.
JASON PAYNE Paramedics help a man suffering a drug overdose on Columbia Street in the Downtown Eastside on May 2. After being injected with naloxone by the paramedics, the man woke up and walked away. Not everyone in crisis in the DTES is so fortunate.

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