Vancouver Sun

Reopening of Riverview Hospital not the answer

- BEV GUTRAY AND MARINA MORROW Bev Gutray is CEO, Canadian Mental Health Associatio­n, B. C. Division. Marina Morrow is Associate Professor and Director, Centre for the Study of Gender, Social Inequities and Mental Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon F

The B. C. government recently rejected the recommenda­tion of the Union of B. C. Mayors to reinstate Riverview Hospital. Our government has made the right decision. The debate and media coverage over recent weeks has revealed a number of important issues that have reframed questions about Riverview Hospital, and the premier is correct in her comments that there are “a new set of problems we need to deal with.”

Surprising­ly, the idea of reopening Riverview garnered a good deal of public support, at least in online and radio comments attached to media coverage. However, we question the logic that reopening the hospital would have solved complex problems like homelessne­ss or poverty for people with mental illness. We also wonder about the assertion made by many commentato­rs that Riverview would somehow be a “compassion­ate solution.”

Reopening Riverview would not be a compassion­ate solution to homelessne­ss or poverty in our province. The truly compassion­ate solution would be to take an honest look at how we treat people with severe mental illness in B. C. and change our course of action. We need to deal with these issues head- on.

For starters, we should ensure that people who have disabiliti­es can afford basic costs of living. Poverty can cause a great deal of stress, which can in turn, worsen symptoms of mental illness. In other words, if we make it easier for people with disabiliti­es to afford to make ends meet, we will have less demand on our mental health care system. The Canadian Mental Health Associatio­n ( CMHA) has been advocating for the government to increase the persons with disability benefit and index it against cost of living increases. This would mean that even low- income people with mental illness could be elevated out of poverty.

Additional­ly, we need to address the lack of affordable, safe, and supportive housing options in our province. Many British Columbians with mental illnesses cannot access safe and reliable housing. To address this in the short term we suggest that the government implement a rental assistance program for people who have low income and mental illness. A longerterm goal would be to invest in building a variety of housing options across the province with varying levels of mental health treatment and supports. This would allow people at all stages of recovery to live in, and contribute to, their communitie­s.

There are significan­t gaps in our community mental health care system that need to be addressed. For example, many people don’t realize that most community mental health services operate only during business hours.

It is important that we create programs that are available to respond to situations that arise at any time of the day, 24/ 7. As the Vancouver Police Department outlined in their recent mental health report, Assertive Community Treatment ( ACT) is an example of this kind of program. We support these kinds of initiative­s so long as they are embedded alongside income and housing supports. We also need to ensure that there are places that people experienci­ng distress from mental illness can go, to receive care, where they can’t be turned away. We should not and cannot rely on our police department­s, emergency rooms and family members to provide this type of care on their own.

There are certainly some who will argue that these solutions fail to address the immediate needs of people with severe mental illness in our province. They might argue that we need to provide an institutio­nal setting to care for people who have severe symptoms now. We don’t deny that there are people on the street, experienci­ng profound distress, without resources to help.

However, people in institutio­nal care eventually leave institutio­ns, often returning to ill- equipped and underresou­rced communitie­s. Internatio­nal research has found that patients with severe mental illness do better in communityb­ased settings when provided with the right supports. We need to provide our communitie­s with the supports to ensure that patients can leave facilities and that when they do there are places for them to go and flourish.

In short, a broad continuum of community- based supports is the foundation of responsive mental health care — this is the compassion­ate solution. It allows people with differing levels of need to access support and live fulfilling lives within their communitie­s, not hidden away in institutio­ns.

Finally, places like Riverview are expensive. We estimate that operating 300 long- term secure beds would cost at least $ 45 million per year. It is probably more. The ultimate question in this debate is how we choose to spend our money. If we choose to spend it on facilities like Riverview, that’s money that we will not have to spend on implementi­ng the solutions that could potentiall­y help thousands.

Rather than asking our government to reopen Riverview Hospital we should be asking them to invest in programs that ensure that people with mental illness and substance use problems can live in dignity within our communitie­s. We can do this by directly addressing big issues like poverty and housing and through ensuring that a robust system of appropriat­e and timely mental health care is available for all British Columbians within their communitie­s.

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