Recently in Mental Health Category

 
Gerry Bellett
Vancouver sun

Thousands of Downtown Eastside residents have problems that aren't being dealt with, Police Chief Jim Chu says.
CREDIT: Bill Keay, Vancouver Sun files
Thousands of Downtown Eastside residents have problems that aren't being dealt with, Police Chief Jim Chu says.

Vancouver Police Chief Jim Chu is calling on the federal and provincial governments to create an agency to deal exclusively with the unmanageable social problems that afflict thousands of people living in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside (DTES).

Chu says the agency should be under the control of a "director for the most vulnerable," a civil servant with the type of power given to heads of Crown corporations and agencies.

It would be the director's job to oversee all the government programs that now found in the area and hold the agencies that deliver them accountable for producing measurable results.

The recommendation is contained in the 59-page document Project Lockstep, a united effort to save lives in the Downtown Eastside, to be released today.

Chu also called for the VPD to move back to the Downtown Eastside to aid in the area's rehabilitation.

The report argues that while there have been major efforts to improve the state of affairs in the Downtown Eastside, they have failed. It says "deliberate and unintended policies and changes have played significant roles in the continuation and, or, worsening of the problems that are concentrated in the area."


I don't know who Tom Sandborn is but this is so nicely done.

Motivation for an opera, a play, an installation? Anyone?

Tom Sandborn
Vancouver Courier

Friday, July 25, 2008

I have a file in my computer called "No Future for Satire." It is dedicated to news items that support my favourite literary theory, the proposition that satire is dead as a form of fiction in the 21st century. The basic assumption here is that it is impossible to make up anything as grotesque as the six o'clock news.

A little-noticed decision by city council last September is now a standout piece of evidence in that file. The folks we elected to conduct city business decided, in their infinite wisdom, to spend $5 million from the $20 million Olympics Legacy Fund on turning two downtown parking lots into enormous outdoor venues. Those of us who can't afford the pricey tickets for Olympic events can gather there and watch them on huge TV screens and enjoy live entertainment. Talk about pay per view!

 
Shelter plan is unfair to hard-pressed area
 
Beverley Bowes
Times Colonist

Friday, June 20, 2008

Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, Canada's poorest postal code, is the result of flawed policy and poor decision-making. Today, a Victoria neighbourhood is headed down the same slippery slope.

Practical, rather than moral, grounds were the order of the day in the early 1980s when prostitution was chased out of Vancouver's middle-class West End and Mount Pleasant districts into the Downtown Eastside. The same situation occurred in 2003 in Victoria when sex-trade workers were pushed out of the downtown core and into Rock Bay and Burnside Gorge. Along with The Stroll came the drug dealers and higher crime rates.

The neighbourhood managed to absorb the influx because it is a strong and diversified community. The area comprises light industrial, middle- to lower-income single-family dwellings and condos, transient accommodation offered by single-room-occupancy motels, pockets of executive condo developments, office buildings, subsidized housing complexes, residential drug and alcohol treatment facilities, housing for the hardest-to-house and housing for federal prison parolees.

This community is now teetering on the edge of an abyss, at the bottom of which lies a hell similar to the Downtown Eastside.
.

Exactly.....

Saturday » June 14 » 2008
 
Why do cellphone users condemn us to share their tiresome chatter?
 
John Martin
Special to The Province

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

One evening back in the dreadful '70s, four or five of us decided to venture from the bland cul-de-sacs of Richmond and check out the mean streets of skid row.

It was yet to be known as the Downtown Eastside, and was more pitiful than dangerous at the time.

True, there was a fair bit of heroin. But for the most part, Main and Hastings was a refuge for low-income pensioners who spent the bulk of their waking hours in the many beer parlours that lined the streets.

The first thing we noticed upon entering one of these watering holes was the staggering decibel level.

But there was no music -- and upon closer examination, almost everyone was sitting by themselves, babbling incoherently to no one in particular.

I was reminded of this image last week while riding the West Coast Express from Mission to the Waterfront Station.

It had been years since I rode the train and things were remarkably different this time.

Every second person was chattering on their cellphone the entire trip.

It didn't matter what car or level I moved to, I didn't detect a single, normal conversation between two passengers seated side by side.

Instead, people were literally screaming into their phones and had zero apprehension about how public their conversations were.

Somewhere along the line -- and cellphones are not the sole reason -- we have collectively opted to forfeit any semblance of personal space.

Recall in the days of phone booths how we'd always glare at the next person waiting to make a call if they stood too close?

Everyone closed the door and typically cupped the receiver to minimize the possibility of strangers eavesdropping.

Similarly, when we would use the row of pay phones in malls or hotel lobbies, we'd move as far away from the next person as the cord would allow, to maintain some privacy.

And those in line fully understood the etiquette of the day to stand several feet away, much as we tend to do with ATM machines in modern times.

But now there is absolutely no concern over who hears our conversations, no matter how personal.

Given that most people talk two or three times louder than they need to on a cell, it would seem we actually want the world to listen in on our business.

This isn't simply about being rude and annoying.

It's also about people having delusions of self-importance and insisting on sharing their life stories.

Unfortunately though, most people aren't nearly as interesting as they apparently think they are.

And given all the blather I had to endure on the train last week, I'd say many aren't even as interesting as, well, the old rummies in that beer parlour on Hastings Street 30-odd years ago.

Contact John Martin, a criminologist at the University of the Fraser Valley, at John.Martin@ucfv.ca
© The Vancouver Province 2008


Copyright © 2008 CanWest Interactive, a division of CanWest MediaWorks Publications, Inc.. All rights reserved.
CanWest Interactive, a division of CanWest MediaWorks Publications, Inc.. All rights reserved.
 

A Welfare 'Savings' Boomerang

| | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)

A Welfare 'Savings' Boomerang

| | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)
Original here

Doctors to visit poorest Vancouver residents to free up hospital beds

Wednesday, April 30, 2008 | 10:06 AM ET

CBC News

In a bid to reduce the number of hospital beds being taken up by the homeless and drug addicts in Vancouver, doctors will soon be making house calls to those who live in single room occupancy (SRO) hotels in the Downtown Eastside. Many residents of the Downtown Eastside are seriously ill, often the result of drug use and hard living on the streets, said Lorna Howes, the director of acute and community mental health for Vancouver with the Vancouver Coastal Health authority. By the time they get to a hospital, she said, they often need long-term care.


Downtown Eastside News Digest mid-April 2008

| | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)

Expose Canada's perfidy, too - The Kingston Whig-Standard

The Kingston Whig-Standard, Canada

Further, Vancouver's rundown Downtown Eastside neighbourhood is being gentrified, and police intimidation of the homeless population is intensifying as the ...


Restoring a landmark, reviving a neighbourhood - Globe and Mail

Globe and Mail, Canada

VANCOUVER -- On a troubled block of Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, where bars cover doors and windows and drugs are injected openly, members of the ...


From the CBC 'Sounds like Canada' website, below are two links to the first and second  parts of recordings of the show.

You can also get a Podcast of the show here:

CBC SLS Podcast:

Latest Show: Friday April 11th

Part 1 - The Portland Hotel:
Shelagh visits with Dr. Gabor Mate, the staff physician at the Portland Hotel. It's an addiction treatment centre and residence in Vancouver's downtown eastside. Mate introduces Shelagh to some of his patients. And he talks about his new book, "In the Realm of the Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters With Addiction" which presents some controversial ideas on the roots of addiction and ways to treat addicts.


Part 2 - The Portland Hotel, cont'd: A continuation of the discussion at the Portland Hotel.

Psychiatry Confuses Distress with Disorder

| | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)
'The Loss of Sadness: How Psychiatry Transformed Normal Sorrow into Depressive Disorder'

by Allan Horwitz and Jerome Wakefield

This review from the Vancouver Sun raises some excellent points. Of especial interest is the distinction between Freudian psychoanalysts and their involvement in social change and politics and the current absence by most counsellors (with a few exceptions - Gabor Mate here in Vancouver for example) in any political debate and the way they are able to treat symptoms without addressing socio-economic causes.