ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT Date: November 20, 1995 Dept. File #: CC 28/95 TO: Vancouver City Council FROM: Medical Health Officer SUBJECT: Proposed Dr. Peter Centre INFORMATION The General Manager of Community Services submits this report for INFORMATION. COUNCIL POLICY There is no applicable Council Policy. PURPOSE The intent of this report is to inform City Council of the need for and interest in developing an AIDS Day Centre with AIDS residential care beds included and to provide information regarding collaboration with the Dr. Peter Foundation to accomplish this goal. BACKGROUND Of the approximately 8,500 to 9,000 British Columbians infected with HIV, 85% of them live in Vancouver. In August 1995, 1523 Vancouver residents had CD4 counts (a surrogate marker indicating the stage of their illness) of 500 or less which indicates they could have moderate to severe symptoms of HIV/AIDS and often require treatment. The capacity of Vancouver to provide adequate AIDS care will be increasingly challenged as a result of the increased number of individuals projected to yet become ill with AIDS in the next few years . The problem is compounded by the fact that those infected are living longer, and those impacted most are the already more marginalized residents of the city. An AIDS Day Centre would provide to those ill with AIDS nutritious meals and healthy supplements, nursing care, IV and other complementary therapies, physical rehabilitation therapy, psychiatric support, substance abuse and harm reduction counselling, support and respite for personal caregivers, individual counselling, social events and gatherings, and a warm, caring environment. AIDS Day Centres currently operate in Seatle, New York, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. Seattle's Baily-Bouschay House after which the proposed Dr. Peter Centre is modelled reports that an individual attending their Day Centre is four times less likely to be hospitalized. Vancouver with the largest HIV/AIDS population in Canada has no such health care centre. The number of HIV infected individuals seeking inpatient care at St. Paul's and Vancouver Hospital continues to grow. On any one day at St. Paul's Hospital, there are now 30+ HIV/AIDS patients. There is a three month waiting list for Normandy House AIDS residential care beds. Many of those are waiting in acute care beds, some of whom unfortunately die in acute care before getting an opportunity to move to Normandy House. By 1998/99, just three years from now, it is estimated that 26,000 bed days will be needed in B.C. for HIV/AIDS patients, 4,000 more bed days than projected for 1995. The - 2 - overwhelming majority of those bed days will be required in Vancouver. Those providing AIDS care and AIDS organizations have been asserting for a number of years that an AIDS Day Centre in Vancouver to provide health care to persons ill with AIDS was a necessary part of the continuum of health care services. In 1993 the Dr. Peter Foundation expressed interest in undertaking such a project. A Steering Committee with representatives from the Dr. Peter Foundation, Vancouver Health Department, St. Paul's Hospital, B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, AIDS Vancouver, B.C. Persons with AIDS Society, Greater Vancouver Mental Health Services, and Lower Mainland Region Alcohol and Drug Program have been working together to further the concept. An extensive needs assessment during the fall of 1993 confirmed a need for and support of an AIDS Day Centre. Since then the Dr. Peter Centre proposal has been expanded to include 20 AIDS residential care beds. Those 20 include a proposed transfer of the already existing 10 AIDS beds at Normandy House, a wing of Normandy Private Hospital near Arbutus Village. AIDS organizations and user have consistently expressed a desire to have the current 10 beds geographically nearer the communities most affected by AIDS. The Vancouver Strategic Plan for AIDS Care (1995 - 1998) developed through a broad consultation process identified as high priority the objectives of establishing an AIDS Day Centre and more residential care beds. DISCUSSION The Nelson Park Site, just across Thurlow Street from St. Paul's Hospital, is an ideal site for the proposed Dr. Peter Centre. St. Paul's provides most of the province's AIDS care, and the surrounding communities (the west end and downtown) contain the vast majority of Vancouver's AIDS residents and general practitioners specializing in AIDS. The proposed design of the Dr. Peter Centre is consistent with the residential and heritage content of the Nelson Park Site. Seattle's Baily-Bouschay House is also in a residential neighbourhood. ENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATIONS The Nelson Park Site would minimize the transportation necessary for individuals going from their place of residence for treatment and meals at the Centre; minimize the amount of transportation required to take individuals from the Centre for tests at St. Paul's and to nearby doctor's appointments; provide easy access for caregivers and friends, and for out of town AIDS patients who could stay at the Centre while undergoing tests at St. Paul's. SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS The proposed Dr. Peter Centre on the Nelson Park site supports a number of social and health care goals: - establishing such a centre responds to the collective input of a broad base of consumer and community organizations and health care providers; - it is consistent with the direction in health care to provide wherever possible care outside of a hospital, in a non- institutional setting, and as close as possible to the community needing the care; - 3 - - its proximity to St. Paul's has the potential for operational efficiencies in shared services; - it is consistent with a model of AIDS health care delivery in other major cities affected by AIDS but will be a first for Canada. CONCLUSION In summary the Vancouver Health Department in collaboration with the Dr. Peter Foundation, other health care providers and AIDS organizations have been working towards the development of an AIDs day health and residential care centre in the vicinity of St. Paul's Hospital. The Nelson Park site is considered ideal for such a centre. It is important for council to be aware of the planning to date as part of making decisions in relation to the Land Use Study Report and the future of Nelson Park. * * * * *