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Interior Health expands downtown 琉璃神社 outreach health centre

The goal is to provide wraparound services for the area鈥檚 vulnerable population

Interior Health鈥檚 expanded downtown clinic will open in phases starting on Monday, March 29.

The new Outreach Urban Health Centre will move from 455 Leon Avenue to 1649 Pandosy Street and will combine the services offered there as well as those offered at IH鈥檚 community health and services centre at 505 Doyle Avenue.

The Leon location provides a range of primary care services to those who may not have access to doctors or care outside of downtown and includes checkups, access to physiotherapists, pharmacists as well as public health nurses. Health care staff also provide harm reduction supplies and services at this location.

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The centre located on Doyle provides mental health and substance use services, including opioid agonist treatment (OAT).

Donna Jansons, with IH鈥檚 clinical operations, said the goal of the new location is to make wraparound care and services much easier to access for the city鈥檚 vulnerable population, especially residents experiencing homelessness who can only access downtown locations.

The new location features a supervised consumption site for those who need to use and want to do it at a secure place. Due to delays in shipping some of the materials, the site won鈥檛 open in full on Monday, which means IH鈥檚 mobile overdose prevention site will continue to operate until the centre is ready.

The centre鈥檚 primary care manager Luke Brimmage added the facility will prevent patients from having to be referred from one location to another.

鈥淐ombining the two sites is important and part of that is because a lot of the same patients and clients are accessing those services,鈥 he said.

鈥淪o it helps bring those services into one building so that they don鈥檛 have to go to multiple buildings in the city.鈥

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Safety, both for staff and clients, is top of mind which is why consultation rooms and washrooms were designed so people don鈥檛 feel claustrophobic or have a way to harm themselves. Patients who don鈥檛 feel ready to come through the front doors but who need treatment are able to access bandages and medications through 鈥減ass-through鈥 doors.

Workers are still putting finishing touches at the centre, but starting on March 29, the Leon and Doyle centres will operate out of the new location.

The centre is open from Monday to Saturday, 8 a.m to 4 p.m. Once fully open, the hours may change.

READ: 155 overdose deaths in B.C. marks deadliest February on record


Twila Amato
Video journalist, Black Press Okanagan
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Twila Amato

About the Author: Twila Amato

Twila was a radio reporter based in northern Vancouver Island. She won the Jack Webster Student Journalism Award while at BCIT and received a degree in ancient and modern Greek history from McGill University.
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