Mobile medical unit on the Downtown Eastside to stop taking patients - Action News
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British Columbia

Mobile medical unit on the Downtown Eastside to stop taking patients

Paramedics will stop dropping patients off at the centre on Monday.

Paramedics will stop dropping patients off at the centre on Monday

The Mobile Medical Unit is set up at 58 West Hastings St., in the heart of Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. (Stephanie Mercier/CBC)

The mobile medical unit (MMU) on the Downtown Eastsidethat opened tohelp relieve overwhelmed emergency responders amid the overdose crisis will stop accepting patients on Monday.

People that would have gone to thefacility,essentially a "satellite emergency department," will be directed to nearby clinics instead.

The MMU opened at58 West Hastings St. in December as an alternative place to take overdose victims alleviating the burden on paramedics and staff at St. Paul's Hospital.

A training dummy lies in one of the beds inside a 'satellite emergency department' set up at 58 West Hastings St. in Vancouver. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Around 1,500 people visited the facility in the first two months. Vancouver Coastal Health (VCH) said only about 25 per cent went because of an illicit drug overdose, while the rest were there to seek treatment for their addiction.

Since then, the numbers have dropped even further.

Dr. Patricia Daly, chief medical heath officerwith VCH,said the facility is going to be phased out as a result of the lessened traffic.

"Because of other services in the Downtown Eastside like [pop-up] overdose sites where people who overdose can be treated right then and there we've actually had fewer people willing to be transported to the hospital or a medical unit."

Starting Monday, the facility won't be staffed with physicians or nurses anymore. Instead, outreach workers will direct people to nearby drop-in clinics specificallytheConnections Clinicnear OppenheimerPark.

At sites like these,people can drop in and get started on addiction therapies like suboxone and methadone.

An unprotected, used needle sits on a metal grate at Carrall and Hastings streets, around the corner from the overdose treatment facility set up at 58 West Hastings St. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

There are also five newoverdose prevention sites, where drug consumption is supervised, open in the neighbourhood in addition to Insite.

Sarah Blythe, who works with the Overdose Prevention Society, welcomedthe move to close the MMU.

"[Clinics] are long-term facilities, so it's a better use of resources," she said.

Earlier this month, VCH said the mobile medical unit had cost about $650,000 to date.

Overdose numbers in B.C. dropped in February, but the B.C. Coroners Service warned the risk is still high.

And in the City of Vancouver, the number of overdose-related deaths continues to rise.

With files from CBC's Farrah Merali