ID: HR19-1066
Presenting author: Elaine Polflit
Elaine Polflit
Issue
Access to adapted healthcare is an important obstacle facing people who are homeless and living with a drug addiction in Montreal. Cognitive decline and chronic health issues often go undetected and untreated in this aging population, which leads to frequent visits to the emergency room, poor contacts with healthcare providers and the absence of adapted follow-up. In return, many PWUD living in homelessness have developed a distrust of healthcare services, creating the need to develop services that operate outside the traditional bounds of the healthcare system.
Setting
The CIUSSS Centre-Sud, located in the downtown core of Montreal, offers health services to the largest population of PWUD who currently identify as homeless or in residential precarity in all the province of Quebec.
Project
With funding from the provincial government and in partnership with some of Montreal’s busiest emergency shelters, the CIUSSS Centre-Sud has pioneered outreach clinics offering on site in five emergency shelters medical clinics and follow up services. Combined with ease of access to specialized evaluations, these clinics can not only address basic health needs but also detect more complex neurological needs linked to advanced age that necessitate specialized evaluations. These clinics combine counselling from a social worker, healthcare from a nurse and global health care from a general practitioner, allowing for access to detox, MMT, access to housing and stabilization of chronic health issues among other things.
Outcome
The outreach clinics have proven instrumental in reaching aging PWUD who do not use traditional health services and present complex health needs. The clinics bridge the gap between the streets and the healthcare system, allowing hundreds of emergency shelter users to access health services or adapted housing. A more specialized geriatric service offer is being created to further support aging homeless PWUD.