Mental Health: Moving into the Community
©Kathy
Smith: March 1994 - Health Care News
A model mental health project will soon
allow twelve Riverview patients to go home to their Vancouver Island
community: a true reflection of the spirit of 'closer to home'.
"Of all the projects I've been involved with, this one gives me the
most personal satisfaction," says Wendell Coady, director of the Victoria
Mental Health Centre. A number of years ago, it was determined
Riverview hospital would be replaced with community facilities around
the province, and mental health directors from every region were solicited
for their input. Coady was asked to identify patients at Riverview from Vancouver
Island, and assess what was needed in order for them to have care in
their home community.
The Blenkinsop Project, which addressed every level of community in
its formulation, was born in April of 1993: consumers, family members,
and mental health professionals were all included in the planning. Many
of Coady's colleagues predicted that a program of this undertaking would
be two or more years in the making. But after only nine months, the
groundwork for his pet project was completed, and by April of this year,
phase one will be initiated.
Completion of the first phase entails moving the patients from the security
of an institution, which is no easy task. Coady is very aware of the
difficulties to be faced. He is determined that this will be a gradual
process: the emphasis will be on making the transition as cushioned
as possible.
In the weeks to come, the clinical/medical staff assigned to the patients
will be travelling to Riverview to familiarize themselves with their
new clients. As well, the patients themselves will travel to Vancouver
Island to visit their new home before the final move is made.
For the staff involved, the role of caregiver will take on a new definition.
Coady is instructing support staff in the bio-psycho-social model, which
takes the who person into account. Instead of caregivers consistently
doing for clients, the client will be encouraged to do for him or herself
as much as possible. From past experience, Coady has found that this
holistic approach, provided within a well-designed living environment,
is a very positive influence.
Home for these people will be a semi-isolated, sixteen-acre site in
the Blenkinsop Valley. Located near Victoria, it is surrounded by rural
farmland. Riverview patients need this kind of setting because they
have persistent mental illnesses, and too much contact from others will
exacerbate their sensitivities.
Patients will find freedom in this new environment. In an institution,
everything is controlled: rooms are locked, meals occur at prescribed
times each day, and life is regimented. Not so here. The Blenkinsop
site is not an artificial setting. The lodgings are homey, and the atmosphere
supportive.
There are two six-bed cottages on site. Inside, the cottages are visually
open and accessible, and not as antiseptic as rooms found in a hospital.
Patients will be able to observe the basic living skills performed by
staff, and become involved as well.
Tailoring this program to the individual is of utmost importance to
success. Every effort is being made to help these people increase their
functioning as human beings. As part of helping patients to connect
with the outside world, the usual amenities are purposely not situated
on site. Patients will have to access community services just like everyone
else, which will broaden their lives, and increase their confidence.
This project is just the beginning. "I'm proud of the things we've done
in mental health," says Coady. "We have the ability to put one of the
best mental health systems into operation, connecting all branches of
community together, and above all, respecting one another."
Back
to articles index