Times Colonist

Hospital worker swims for seniors

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Lucas Gentina is again taking the plunge into chilly local waters. He is raising money to buy high-end wheelchair­s designed to expand the horizons of bedridden residents he sees every working day.

This will be 23-year-old Gentina’s second money-raising venture this year.

In January, he swam across Elk Lake and raised $11,700 to buy specialize­d wheelchair­s, which cost a minimum $4,000 each, for Saanich Peninsula Hospital. Now, he hopes to raise enough money to buy at least six more of these special wheelchair­s, bringing the total at the hospital to 12.

On May 15, Gentina aims to swim across the Saanich Inlet from Mill Bay to Madrona Drive and Wain Road in Deep Cove. A boat from Frank Whites Dive Store will accompany him.

Gentina will put on his wetsuit and enter the water at 10 a.m. and hopes to finish in 60 to 90 minutes.

He has been training at a pool in the ocean with a friend nearby on a paddleboar­d.

The wheelchair­s make a profound difference in the lives of bedridden patients, Gentina said.

Some patients are unable to sit in traditiona­l wheelchair­s and end up spending their days in bed. But the wheelchair Gentina is raising money to buy can be adjusted to suit individual­s.

“It makes a huge difference when you have something comfortabl­e to sit in,” he said. “The chair allows users to enjoy different aspects of our life that you probably couldn’t do if you’re not sitting on something enjoyable.

“When people still have their mental abilities but are unable to sit up unaided, there is more to their life than lying in bed all day.”

Gentina, who earned credential­s as an occupation­al therapist assistant and physiother­apy assistant, has worked as a rehabilita­tion assistant at the hospital for nearly three years, helping people to walk and maintain their range of motion.

“I want to get them out of bed and into situations where they can socialize and join in the activities that are planned in long-term care,” he said.

Jan Buehler, director of philanthro­py for the Saanich Peninsula Hospital & Healthcare Foundation, said Gentina believes in being positive.

“He loves to chat and nothing gives him greater satisfacti­on than seeing elders respond when he chats with them,” Buehler said. ”He encourages them to share their life story and is constantly amazed at what some people have done over the years.”

>>> Award winners highlight mental health, homelessne­ss

• To donate to Gentina’s campaign, go to sphf.ca.

A teenager who started a foundation to raise awareness about homelessne­ss and a college student whose recovery from mental illness was documented in a film are the winners of Island Health’s 2022 Community Service Awards.

Marjike McDonald and Cameron Webster were presented their awards on Tuesday by the Mental Health and Substance Use South Island Advisory Committee during Mental Health Week.

In 2020, at age 16, McDonald started the charity Home Is Where The Heart Is, over concerns about growing homelessne­ss. “The feeling of just not being able to help was really frustratin­g for me,” said McDonald, a student at St. Margaret’s School. “The unhoused community in Victoria is a vital part of our community, and I really wanted to get to know that side of Vancouver Island.”

An initial project to collect donations for a dozen care packages drew such a strong response that more than 50 packages were created. Today, McDonald and her foundation colleagues as well as other high school students are planning an event where people, unhoused and otherwise, will be encouraged to share stories and make connection­s.

“Something that’s really stood out to me is that everyone just wants to be heard,” says McDonald. “That’s one of the biggest things I’ve learned — we will find the most success when we finally start to listen to each other.”

Webster showed courage and vulnerabil­ity in Follow My Brain, a 2019 film that documents his journey with, and recovery from, mental illness. In 2014, Webster had psychosis, and then with schizoaffe­ctive disorder, diagnosed. The latter has symptoms of schizophre­nia and mood disorders. “The main goal in doing the film was just to instill more hope, to tell a more auspicious story of recovery,” said Webster, 26. “I wanted to kind of change that narrative if I could.”

He is nearing completion of his studies in mental health and addictions at Camosun College. An avid athlete, Webster is also a peer support worker with Island Health’s Early Psychosis Interventi­on Program.

“There’s so many things you can do. As well as just time and effort — things get better,” said Webster. “It takes time, but you know you can get there. The person who moves mountains starts by carrying away small stones, right?”

>>> Exhibit explores impact of pandemic in long-term care

Megan Davies, a health historian and professor at York University, has brought her travelling art exhibit, COVID in the House of Old, to her hometown, honouring the thousands of seniors who died or endured months of isolation as the pandemic spread through long-term care facilities across the country.

The exhibit opened on Monday and will be at the Greater Victoria Public Library’s Central Branch in downtown Victoria throughout May.

Davies uses seven wooden chairs, sound and speakers to tell the story of residents, survivor-residents and workers from British Columbia and Ontario whose lives were altered by the rapid spread of COVID through long-term care facilities. Each chair represents the hundreds or thousands of Canadians who faced similar circumstan­ces. The exhibit is accompanie­d by an audio-visual compositio­n created with aggregate death statistics projected on the wall in the library entrance.

Davies worked with audio engineer and composer Kohen Hammond to craft the chair audios. Elegy was composed by musician and composer Hiroki Tanaka. Davies said she sees the exhibit as an opportunit­y to honour and inform and generate conversati­on about the future of elder care, as highlighte­d by the devastatin­g impact COVID-19 has had on vulnerable elders.

The exhibit, located in the rotunda at GVPL’s Central Branch, is linked to a website by QR codes with alt texts and online transcript­s of the audio, allowing visitors to amplify the sound. The project is supported by a Jack and Doris Shadbolt Fellowship in the Humanities and the Department of Gerontolog­y at Simon Fraser University and York University’s Faculty of Liberal Arts and Profession­al Studies.

>>> Sooke hands out community grants

Sooke council has awarded community grants worth nearly $80,000 to 19 nonprofit organizati­ons.

“The commitment from numerous organizati­ons to support our community is truly remarkable,” said Sooke Mayor Maja Tait. Council appreciate­s the organizati­ons that enhance the community’s “inclusivit­y, vibrancy and community well-being,” Tait said.

The groups receiving $7,000 grants included Amber Academy Fine Arts Society, Harmony Project Sooke, KidSport Greater Victoria, Sooke Boxing Club, Sooke Family Resource Society and Sooke Shelter Society.

The Choral Evolution Society, Take a Hike Foundation and South Island Performing Arts Society each received $5,000, and Steps to the Future Childcare Society received $5,500.

Other recipients included Caravan Stage Society ($3,400), Edward Milne Community School Society ($4,100 Youth Engagement, $500 Sooke Literacy Project), FED Urban Agricultur­e Society ($1,000), Sooke Fall Fair ($2,000), Sooke Festival Society ($3,000), Sooke Tennis and Pickleball ($4,800), Victoria Brain Injury Society ($1,000) and Capital Bike ($1,140)

>>> Peninsula concert aids Ukrainians

Help for the victims of the war in Ukraine comes from all over — including a private concert on the Saanich Peninsula.

An event at the home of Dr. Michael Quinlan and Teresa Quinlan raised $11,000 for Doctors Without Borders’ efforts to alleviate the suffering. The concert featured the band Cowboy Celtic, including North Saanich residents David Wilkie and Denise Withnell, plus three musicians from Alberta.

Supporter Virginia Watson-Rouslin reports Cowboy Celtic, who play an amalgam of country and Celtic music, kicked off the show with a Ukrainian polka.

The band was getting back in the saddle prior to three appearance­s with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra this month.

 ?? SAANICH PENINSULA HOSPITAL & HEALTHCARE FOUNDATION ?? Saanich Peninsula Hospital patient Ruth Elliot and Lucas Gentina sit together in wheelchair­s.
SAANICH PENINSULA HOSPITAL & HEALTHCARE FOUNDATION Saanich Peninsula Hospital patient Ruth Elliot and Lucas Gentina sit together in wheelchair­s.
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 ?? ANNE-MARIE SORVIN, ISLAND HEALTH ?? Marjike McDonald and Cameron Webster, winners of an Island Health 2022 Community Service Award.
ANNE-MARIE SORVIN, ISLAND HEALTH Marjike McDonald and Cameron Webster, winners of an Island Health 2022 Community Service Award.

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