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SOUND OFF

SOUND OFF: Transforming our system of substance-use care

Oct 20, 2021 | 10:30 AM

DECIDING TO SEEK CARE FOR YOUR MENTAL HEALTH OR SUBSTANCE USE is one of the best things you can do for yourself and your loved ones.

When you are ready to take that step, the care you need should be available when and where you need it, regardless of who you are, where you live, or how much money you make. That is why our government is making the largest-ever investment in mental health and substance use care in the history of B.C.

When New Democrats formed government in 2017, we inherited a patchwork system of mental health and substance use care that was fragmented, with big gaps between what was available and what people actually needed. The system – and the people who depended on it – had been neglected for far too long by the previous government.

Over the past four years, our government has been working to patch the holes in the system so that people can get the care they need. While working to fill in these gaps, we have also been working towards the larger, system-wide change that is needed.

The ongoing drug poisoning crisis and the impacts of the pandemic on mental health have heightened the urgency of transforming our mental health and addictions care system.

In Budget 2021, we made the largest-ever investment in mental health and substance use care in B.C.’s history. Last week, as part of that $500-million-dollar investment, we rolled out the new and enhanced treatment and recovery services that will be part of the transformation.

From harm reduction and withdrawal management, to transition and assessment, to treatment and aftercare services, we are increasing services across all regions of the province and across the continuum of substance-use care. This will include adding more than 130 new full-time staff and approximately 195 new substance use treatment beds to support people across B.C. to access quality and culturally safe services.

In Interior Health, we’ll be opening new outpatient withdrawal management services in multiple communities, to help people access the services they need to support them on their recovery journey.

We will be opening new transitional and stabilization beds to support people with care planning and connection to treatment after leaving withdrawal management. In the coming months, we’ll expand access to substance use clinics for aftercare in the Interior Health region. There will also be designated treatment beds for women in the Interior, so they can have equal access to the care they need in a safe environment.

These are just some ways in which we are working to make substance-use care more seamless and easier to access. We are working with each health authority to plan and implement these changes over the coming months and years.

We are steadily making progress, but we know there remains much more to do. It has never been more urgent to make systemic change in the way we deliver substance-use care for people. People who have mental health and substance-use challenges, the family members who care about them, and the communities they live in, deserve it.