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

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   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;

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   -    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.

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