Sunday, May 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Innovative program helps B.C. patients with overdose-related brain injuries

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 May, 2023 12:00 AM
  • Innovative program helps B.C. patients with overdose-related brain injuries

British Columbia is eyeing the expansion of a first-of-its-kind program in Canada that aims to help patients living with mild to moderate overdose-related brain injuries.

Addictions Minister Jennifer Whiteside says her ministry has earmarked $1.2 million toward the Cognitive Assessment and Rehabilitation for Substance Use program, which is offered by Vancouver Coastal Health through a multidisciplinary team at Richmond Hospital.

Whiteside says the program has already helped more than 40 people, and the new funding will evaluate it further to see if the model can be expanded to other health-care facilities in the province.

The Cognitive Assessment and Rehabilitation for Substance Use program provides specialized supports for people who use substances including opioids and alcohol.

The ministry says that, by working with psychiatrists, neuropsychologists and occupational therapists, a patient can grasp their new needs and limitations, improving their quality of life while increasing their opportunities for mental health and substance use therapies.

Whiteside says the new funding is part of the province's overall efforts to increase support for people with substance-induced brain injuries, and the ministry has also made a $4.5-million, three-year investment for the Brain Injury Alliance to help B.C. patients coping with post-injury challenges, including those resulting from toxic drug poisoning.

"There is increasing concern about the impacts of overdose, and so there is much more attention being paid by government, by health authorities in looking at the impacts of what they call anoxic brain injury for individuals who have survived an opioid overdose," Whiteside told a news conference Thursday.

The new funding, she said, demonstrates the province's commitment to make those expansions to support more people affected by the ongoing opioid crisis.

"We will be really closely watching this program, evaluating and looking for opportunities to scale this up," Whiteside said. 

Karen Barclay, Vancouver Coastal Health's Richmond director of mental health and substance use, called the new service "innovative" and said patients typically work with the program's team for about six months to achieve a certain level of results.

Barclay said patients in the Vancouver Coastal Health region can speak with their health-care provider to access the program or they can self-refer by calling the Richmond Mental Health and Substance Use Services central intake line.

"We have an open referral policy," she said. "We are actually serving anyone across Vancouver Coastal Health, so not just in Richmond."

MORE National ARTICLES

Interest rate hiked to 3.75% due to inflation: BOC

Interest rate hiked to 3.75% due to inflation: BOC
In Canada, the economy continues to operate in excess demand and labour markets remain tight. The demand for goods and services is still running ahead of the economy’s ability to supply them, putting upward pressure on domestic inflation. 

Interest rate hiked to 3.75% due to inflation: BOC

Record share of Canadians are immigrants

Record share of Canadians are immigrants
Previously, the majority of immigrants to Canada came from Europe, but now most immigrants come from Asia, including the Middle East. One in five people coming to Canada were born in India, the data shows, making it the top country of birth for recent arrivals. 

Record share of Canadians are immigrants

B.C. park reopens after pandemic closure

B.C. park reopens after pandemic closure
Peace Arch Provincial Park, the nine-hectare park that straddles the B.C.-Washington state border south of Vancouver, reopened Monday after being closed more than two years ago amid pandemic-related border closures.

B.C. park reopens after pandemic closure

Feds reject Rogers-Shaw deal, leave door open

Feds reject Rogers-Shaw deal, leave door open
Shaw's ownership of Freedom Mobile has widely been seen as the main obstacle to the deal's approval, and Montreal-based Videotron earlier this year agreed to buy it for $2.85 billion. But Champagne said before he would approve the Videotron deal, he requires additional concessions.  

Feds reject Rogers-Shaw deal, leave door open

Freeland stresses Bank of Canada's independence

Freeland stresses Bank of Canada's independence
The central bank is expected to raise its key interest rate by half or three quarters of a percentage point on Wednesday in an effort to clamp down on decades-high inflation, making it the sixth consecutive rate hike this year.

Freeland stresses Bank of Canada's independence

New information links homicide of Dhindsa brothers to multiple Lower Mainland shootings

New information links homicide of Dhindsa brothers to multiple Lower Mainland shootings
On March 19, 2021, Richmond RCMP officers responded to the 22000-block of Rathburn Drive to assist with a structure fire. The deceased were identified as brothers, Chaten Dhindsa, 25 and Joban Dhindsa, 23, both of Richmond. The injuries sustained by the Dhindsa brothers were consistent with a homicide. 

New information links homicide of Dhindsa brothers to multiple Lower Mainland shootings