The Guardian (Charlottetown)

CARE CLOSER TO HOME

Province rolls out details of its five-year, $100-million plan to modernize the system

- BY DAVE STEWART Dave.stewart@theguardia­n.pe.ca Twitter.com/DveStewart

Province rolls out details of its five-year $100-million plan to modernize the system

Four new community access centres or hubs will be operationa­l by 2020 as part of a $100-million plan to improve care for Islanders who experience mental health and addictions challenges.

Government announced the investment two weeks ago as part of its 2019-20 capital budget but revealed its many highlights during a press conference on Tuesday in Charlottet­own.

The idea is to reduce the wait times in acute care hospitals and bring care closer to the homes of Islanders. The wait time for mental health care at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital is about 30 hours, slightly less in Summerside.

Health P.E.I. announced four community access centres/ hubs will be operationa­l sometime in 2019-20. These centres will provide robust collaborat­ive community-based mental health and addiction services, treatments, rehabilita­tion and supports. They will be located in Charlottet­own, Summerside, West Prince and Kings County.

“We’ll be assessing what our current infrastruc­ture is and may look at leasing or renting depending on what we see when we do that assessment,’’ said Verna Ryan, CAO of mental health and addictions for the province. “We have a concept of 12-hour, seven-day-a-week hubs where people can have access to community mental health staff to online supports.’’

Dr. Heather Keizer, psychiatri­st and Health P.E.I.’s chief of mental health and addictions, said ideally they want these hubs to be places where people

can go, have access to more than one service, have a coffee and make contact with a social worker who can fill out their paperwork.

“They might be able to see their family doctor as well as their mental health worker,’’ Keizer said. “So, we reduce stigma but increase accessibil­ity.’’

There will also be a new structured housing unit and adult day treatment program site operationa­l in 2020-21. It will be an eight-bed structured housing facility on the grounds of the current Hillsborou­gh Hospital providing care for patients with complex needs as they transition from hospital to the community and day treatment for patients who don’t require hospitaliz­ation.

“This may be an idea for people in crisis but don’t want to stay in hospital,’’ Keizer said. “They could go to an outpatient day program from 9-5 every day, get checked for their medication­s, have intense programmin­g and get really appropriat­e treatment but not have to be admitted to hospital.’’

There will be a new dedicated mental health and addictions emergency department and

acute stabilizat­ion unit that will be operationa­l in 2021-22. It will be a 12-bed dedicated department (eight emergency treatment spaces and a fourbed stabilizat­ion unit) to be co-located at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Charlottet­own. It will provide dedicated and timely access to trained mental health and addictions clinicians.

Mobile crisis units will also be put in place. Health P.E.I. is working on a model now involving stakeholde­rs from police, 911, Island EMS and other partners. The teams should be in place sometime next year. Keizer said these teams could reduce visits to the emergency room by 60 per cent.

Long-term housing with community mental health supports for people living with mental illness is also part of the plan and should be in place by 2021-22 and 2022-23.

“If we were able to provide them with housing in the community they’d have a better quality of life,’’ Keizer said.

Ryan said beginning next year they’ll look at expanding some of their transition­al housing

and possibly infrastruc­ture on the grounds of the Hillsborou­gh Hospital.

In addition, a new provincial acute mental health and addictions hospital will be constructe­d to replace the aging Hillsborou­gh Hospital. It’s slated for completion by 202425.

Already available is e-mental health solutions such as rural tele-mental health services, online self-scheduling, virtual therapies and peer counsellin­g.

Government is investing about $450,000 this fiscal year to carry out infrastruc­ture planning for new program sites and facilities in regard to the entire five-year plan. The more detailed infrastruc­ture plan will include specific locations, proposed designs and budgets for each component. New infrastruc­ture will be phased in over the next five years appreciati­ng that some components, such as the mental health and addictions emergency department and hospital, will take longer to build.

“We have a concept of 12-hour, seven-day-aweek hubs where people can have access to community mental health staff to online supports.’’

Verna Ryan

 ??  ??
 ?? DAVE STEWART/THE GUARDIAN ?? Dr. Heather Keizer, left, a psychiatri­st and Health P.E.I.’s chief of mental health and addictions, and Verna Ryan, CAO of mental health and addictions for the province, deliver details in Charlottet­own on Tuesday about the province’s $100-million investment in mental health and addictions over the next five years.
DAVE STEWART/THE GUARDIAN Dr. Heather Keizer, left, a psychiatri­st and Health P.E.I.’s chief of mental health and addictions, and Verna Ryan, CAO of mental health and addictions for the province, deliver details in Charlottet­own on Tuesday about the province’s $100-million investment in mental health and addictions over the next five years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada