Garry has seen hard times in life, but today he is filled with gratitude.
“I'm grateful to have good people who have helped me on my journey,” he says. “Because everybody has a journey to go through, right?”
It’s why he feels strongly about the launch of a high-tech mobile health clinic in his home city of Victoria.
The Cool Aid Mobile Health Clinic, operated by the Victoria and its , began operations in July, following a new partnership with . The clinic’s main role is to deliver primary care to underserved people, meeting them where there are – on the streets, at other service providers, and in hotel sheltering sites.
For Garry, it means more lives will be enhanced.
He’s been a client at since 1999, when sharing a needle led to becoming infected with HIV. Sober now for seven years, he currently takes medication and has an undetectable viral load, meaning he can’t transmit the virus.
That feeling of being prioritized, without judgement or shaming, is what keeps Garry committed to the non-profit. It’s an experience he wants others in need to share.
“I call them my friends. They are a part of my little community,” he says of the nurses and staff.
“Who knows where I’d be in life if I didn’t have all these people helping me.”
Care and compassion
The mobile clinic is a timely extension of Cool Aid’s work to address homelessness and addiction in the capital region.
Victoria, like many urban communities in North America, is experiencing increasing challenges with homelessness and addiction – a situation that has deepened with the onset of the pandemic. A 2020 housing conservatively estimated some 1,500 people face homelessness nightly in the Capital Region. Many are also in need of health services including primary care, harm reduction, and mental health support.
Equipped with TELUS Health’s electronic medical record (EMR) technology, TELUS Mobility services, and TELUS LTE Wi-Fi network technology, the mobile clinic better enables Cool Aid staff to deliver primary care to people who cannot easily access traditional medical care, yet are in urgent need.
“This kind of outreach will ultimately lead to better patient outcomes,” says Mary Chudley, Cool Aid’s director of health and support services.
Wound care, for instance, may seem minor, but it’s an important function of the mobile clinic. Immediate, street-level intervention can help prevent future ER visits for more severe infection or sepsis, leading to better patient outcomes and taking pressure off the already strained medical system.
The clinic also offers harm-reduction kits, supplements, and other supports – all without judgement. As Chudley explains, “Some people that we have recently begun to see have not received any health services for decades because of negative interactions with the healthcare system.”
Every day, Karen Lundgren, Cool Aid clinical nurse leader, sees the consequences of those bad experiences.
“People have felt so judged and stigmatized when it comes to substance use, sexual orientation, race or religion,” she says.
91Ô´´ing one-on-one with people is key to bringing them into the system.
According to Candide Dias, coordinator of the organization’s Outreach Health Services, that connection has people approaching the van before its doors are even open. And though clients often come to the clinic for one reason, the keen eye of a nurse will notice that they need other care – often treating or dressing a wound, as well.
A need for kindness
In the past year, Cool Aid has logged more than 36,000 medical encounters at its Johnson Street community healthcare centre and has had nearly 20,000 patient encounters through outreach services, including at hotel sheltering sites.
The mobile clinic is expected to bolster these numbers, providing care to a greater number of people who previously may not have had any care at all. So far, the outreach team has been busy offering wound care, doing blood work, and requesting diagnostic tests, among other things.
Lundgren says the mental health intervention and outreach in the mobile clinic has already made an impact. Among their first mobile clinic clients was someone who hadn’t accessed any health services for over 20 years due to mental health issues and stigma. During that first encounter, she says, “The client was started on medications for anxiety and depression, and was connected to the counsellor at Cool Aid Community Health Centre. The client was also started on antibiotics for extensive infected wounds on his lower legs.”
Garry says his own experience reflects the Cool Aid ethos of helping people by accepting them for who they are. Compassionately addressing mental health is a big part of that equation.
“The community needs mental health workers on the streets trying to catch that one person who might want to clean their act up. Mental health needs to come to people – to talk and have a kind word,” he says.
The need for more kindness also drives Lundgren in her community health work.
“I am a very lucky human being who grew up in a family that was upper-middle class, and I had access to a great education, loving parents, protection. So many people do not come from a place like that,” she says.
“People would do well to reflect on their privilege and care more about their fellow humans.”