Community Comes Together To Save Downtown Hospital


SAVE-ST-PAULS-HOSPITAL-VANCOUVER



ST-PAULS-HOSPITAL-VANCOUVER

Save St. Paul’s Hospital Coalition co-chair Aaron Jasper will appear live on Rafe Mair’s morning talk radio show on CKBD 600 AM this morning (July 27) from 8:40 – 9:00 a.m. The show is available live, and archived, on the web at 600am.com.
Providence Health Care, a faith-based health care provider, operates five hospitals across Vancouver, the largest of which is St. Paul’s, located in downtown Vancouver. Providence Health Care proposes to close the current West End site and move the hospital three kilometres east, to False Creek Flats, just southeast of the Prior Street exit of the Georgia Viaduct. A thriving community resource widely acknowledged as one of the finest acute care teaching and research hospitals on the continent, St. Paul’s Hospital serves the largest downtown urban core population anywhere on this continent, outside of New York City.
Rick Barnes, at Politics in BC, and Steve Wansleeben at Panorama, provide further insight into St. Paul’s Providence Legacy Project.
The home of the British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, and the designated heart centre for the province, St. Paul’s Hospital treats more than 116,000 patients every year, many of whom are members of the majority elderly and gay and lesbian population of the West End / Coal Harbour / Yaletown downtown core.

“What people need is access to the site,” Vancouver Burrard MLA Lorne Mayencourt recently told the Vancouver Courier. “There are seniors in the West End that need to be close to where they get services. There’s a gay population that accesses the hospital’s Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS. The plan leaves me with a great deal of concern for health care in my community.”


The West Ender recently also ran a story on the possible move of the 111-year-old hospital, although the West Ender failed to adequately report on the utter lack of community consultation — by Providence Health Care, the City and the province — involved in the proposal to move the hospital. The lack of consultation is particularly egregious given that more than 90,000 residents live within a 10-block radius of St. Paul’s, and another 50,000 work in the downtown core each week day — significantly more than the 20,000 people who live within 10 blocks of the False Creek Flats site.
By moving St. Paul’s Hospital away from the population it serves — should the move come to pass — there is little doubt lives will be lost and health care jeopardized, not least because of the distance of the proposed site from the West End and the relative inaccessability of False Creek Flats.