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  • Tuesday, November 14, 2023 10:11 AM | Alan Jodoin (Administrator)

    Dementia Care for Clients and Families – A Palliative Approach
    Winter Lunch & Learn Webinar Series

    December 4, 5, 7, 8th, 2023
    12:00 – 1:00 PDT

    Each year, BCHPCA organizes two Lunch and Learn Series, providing a diverse range of educational sessions for both its members and the general public.

    Given the themes and topics covered, this webinar series can benefit not just the hospice palliative care community but also individuals working in charitable, non-profit, public, and private sector organizations, including staff, volunteers, and leaders. It offers a practical opportunity to develop transferable skills that can support their work and community involvement.

    Register



  • Monday, October 16, 2023 9:30 AM | Alan Jodoin (Administrator)

    Many people in Canada experience challenges in accessing palliative care when and where they need it early enough in their illness trajectory to get the support they need. These challenges have been further exacerbated by the disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic on policy priorities, programs and services related to hospice palliative care in Canada. As such, the Canadian Cancer Society (CCS) made it a priority to understand the state of palliative care across the country including progress made, enablers, barriers and gaps in care.

    To do so, CCS surveyed all provinces and territories, 4 departments of the federal government and 13 community organizations on the state of palliative care. Quebec and Manitoba are the only two provinces that did not take part in the survey. The survey aimed to provide an update on the findings published in 2017 by the Canadian Hospice Palliative Care Association as part of The Way Forward Initiative.

    The report details the state of palliative care in each surveyed jurisdiction. The report also includes the number of hospice beds in each province and territory. Based on the findings, CCS has provided a response discussing the ways governments can address the existing gaps and barriers identified in the report.

    Released By Cancer Society of Canada – October 2023

    View report

     

    Canadian Cancer Society Report: Analyzing Hospice Palliative Care Across Canada

  • Thursday, June 01, 2023 9:00 AM | Alan Jodoin (Administrator)

    Funding for the BC Hospice Palliative Care Association announced

    The BC Ministry of Health has provided the BC Hospice Palliative Care Association (BCHPCA) a grant of $140,000 to support the ongoing delivery of high quality palliative care by British Columbia hospice organizations.  

    “Ensuring that people nearing the end of their lives and their loved ones have access to quality hospice and palliative care services continues to be a priority for our government,” said Adrian Dix, Minister of Health. “The funding provided to BCHPCA will help them to continue their work in bringing together individuals and organizations that deliver these services to people in our province and foster meaningful collaboration, education and research in the sector.”

    The funding enables BCHPCA to significantly broaden its reach and better support its members and community. The association provides a wide range of services and programs, driven by education, research and stakeholder partnerships in hospice palliative care, grief and bereavement and community navigation to people in B.C. who are dying, their loved ones who are grieving, and caregivers.

    Access to hospice palliative care continues to be a growing concern as the aging population requires more end-of-life care and services, along with support for family caregivers.

    “By 2036, 240,000 of the provincial population will be over the age of 65, increasing demands on hospice palliative care,” said Kevin Harter, President of BCHPCA and CEO of Victoria Hospice Society.

    A palliative approach to care is required to ensure all people in B.C. live well until the very end, dying the way they choose and easing the challenges on family, loved ones and the primary health care system. Hospice societies in B.C. are uniquely positioned to help deliver person-centered hospice palliative care services in a variety of settings and bereavement supports.

    “B.C. hospices are expanding grief and bereavement services that are making a significant impact and allow for the implementation of new and effective supports. This important funding will enable us to connect with vulnerable populations, including structurally unhoused, BIPOC and 2SLGBTQIA+ and increase our reach to rural and remote communities,” says Pablita Thomas, Executive Director of BCHPCA.

    Together with the Canadian Hospice Palliative Care Association (CHPCA), BCHPCA recently celebrated the essential services and leadership the hospice palliative care community provides during National Hospice Palliative Care Week from May 7 to 13, 2023. In the month of May, the hospice palliative care community also celebrates Hike for Hospice, which is a national event that hospice palliative care societies in B.C. participate in. Connect with your local hospice society to learn more about the important hospice and palliative care work being carried out in your community.

    ###

    About the BC Hospice Palliative Care Association – The BC Hospice Palliative Care Association is a not-for-profit, charitable, public membership organization, which has been representing individuals and organizations committed to promoting and delivering hospice palliative care to people in B.C. and the Yukon for over 37 years. Our members provide a broad range of hospice palliative care programs and services to people in need across the province of B.C. and the Yukon territories with serious illnesses, their loved ones who are grieving, and their caregivers. The services hospice societies deliver are accessible to all, regardless of the type of illness, age, sex, sexual orientation, race, culture, and religious beliefs. Go to www.bchpca.org or visit us on FacebookInstagram and Twitter to learn more.

    For more information, please contact:
    British Columbia Hospice Palliative Care Association
    Christie Carrington, Communications and Projects Coordinator

    christie.carrington@bchpca.org

    See PDF version of this media release.

  • Monday, May 15, 2023 10:36 AM | Alan Jodoin (Administrator)

    Download the 2022 fact sheet.

    This document is a collection of current statistics and knowledge of hospice palliative care in British Columbia, and Yukon. Whether you are receiving care, are a healthcare professional, a caregiver, researcher, policy maker or are interested in learning more about hospice palliative care in BC, and Yukon. We’d like to acknowledge CHPCA, whose fact sheet we referenced in creation of this backgrounder. BCHPCA hopes this document is helpful. 



  • Monday, December 12, 2022 9:00 AM | Alan Jodoin (Administrator)

    Pablita Thomas talks with Global News about BCHPCA and hospice societies and the role they play in the community to make sure British Columbians have access to hospice and palliative care.

    Watch on Global News

     

  • Wednesday, September 21, 2022 9:00 AM | Alan Jodoin (Administrator)

    With the Municipal Election coming up, the UBCM 2022 Convention was well attended and more important than ever. At this year’s convention, the Town of Gibsons submitted a request to adopt EB21 – Hospice Services; a letter from Mayor William Beamish, click here.

    EB21 was endorsed and adopted at the convention on Wednesday, September 14, 2022, with amendments. Please read the endorsed recommendation here on page 45 of the UBCM Resolution book.

    BCHPCA sees this as an opportunity for growth and support from municipal electors and an excellent opportunity to engage with the community about supporting community hospice services within our regions.

    Please stay tuned for our advocacy Action Plan and Key messaging to help support the growth and capacity of Hospice palliative Care in BC.

    For more information, see the Union of BC Municipalities and the 2022 UBCM Resolutions Book.

  • Monday, September 19, 2022 9:30 AM | Alan Jodoin (Administrator)

    This year, the BCHPCA collaborated with VIFOH, CCS – BC, CMHA – BC on this year’s budget committee submission; focussing on the need for funding support for bereavement care.

    Pablita Thomas, ED at BCHPCA worked with Canadian Cancer Society, Charles Aruliah (CEO) and the Canadian Mental Health Association, Jonny Morris (Advocacy Manager), to develop common recommendations about funding and recognizing the need for grief and bereavement care.

    Good news is that the Budget committee is recommending that bereavement care be funded. (Page 63)

    There are several references to hospice bereavement care throughout the report, but here is the recommendation:

    Hospice and Palliative Care

    138. Increase funding and adopt a provincial approach to providing culturally respectful grief and bereavement supports to build capacity for community hospices across the province.

    Also of interest:

    Community Social Services, Not for Profit Sector, and Social Policy

    202. Provide increased, predictable, multi-year funding to the community social services sector, including administrative funding and supports to address compensation challenges.

    203. Expand social service delivery and the continuum of care to improve response to mental health, addictions, and other complex social issues.

    Although these recommendations do not automatically roll into government policy, they provide important indicators of public priorities as budgets are developed and Ministers’ mandate letters with more specific recommendations are developed.

  • Friday, June 10, 2022 10:53 AM | Alan Jodoin (Administrator)

    This year we were honoured to have Parliamentary Secretary Elmore as an opening speaker for our Townhall event. The event introduced the new board of the BCHPCA, highlighted key achievements of the Association this past year, and what to expect moving forward with Hospice Palliative Care in BC and the BCHPCA.

    The 2022 Townhall event was held on June 9th.


  • Thursday, March 10, 2022 8:30 AM | Alan Jodoin (Administrator)

    Bc Hospice Palliative Care Association Statement

    A provincial approach to grief and bereavement services surrounding illicit drug toxicity deaths 

    VANCOUVER, BC — March 10, 2022 | The BC Coroners Service – Illicit Drug Toxicity Deaths in BC 2021 Report launched on February 9, 2022, highlights the desperate need for special attention not only on drug overdose but supports services around illicit drugs as a whole. The toxicity in British Columbia caused an average of 6.1 deaths per day, greater than the number of deaths of all other unnatural causes combined. 2021 saw 2,224 suspected deaths from illicit drug toxicity, a 26% increase from 2020. Given that each death directly impacts nine people on average (1,2), approximately 20,016 British Columbians suffered from grief and bereavement due to illicit drug use.

    In response to the recent BC Coroners Service Illicit Drug Toxicity Deaths in BC 2021 Report, the province’s Chief Coroner is calling for an end to old prevention measures that have failed, highlighting the need for a significant shift in how we treat people who use drugs and their loved ones who support them. Additionally, the BC Hospice Palliative Care Association (BCHPCA) is calling for a provincial and community approach around grief and bereavement services supporting those needing direct care and families of loved ones who have died from illicit drug use.

    “While the Government of BC has announced pandemic and opioid-related investments in regards to mental health, grief remains outside the mandate of the Canadian Mental Health Commission and mental health associations. To date, there has been no acknowledgement of unresolved or complicated grief as an additional mental health crisis by the Government of BC, no planning to address the severe shortage in grief services, nor recognition of the long range impact that failing to act will have on our communities and the economy”, says Pablita Thomas, BCHPCA Executive Director.

    It is well known that traumatic events, including losses and grief, increase the risk of substance use and addiction in an attempt to reduce tension and the complexities of grief. Compounding the matter, individuals who abuse substances are less able to cope with traumatic events, consequently complicating grief.

    We not only see grief as potential causation of illicit drug use but also as an outcome experienced after the death of a loved one resulting from drug toxicity. Friends and family of those using substances often experience many losses throughout the course of their loved one’s addiction: the loss of the person they knew before their addiction took hold, the anxiety and anticipation of their possible death by overdose, the heartbreak of not being able to help their loved one heal, and the unacknowledged grief by others due to the stigma of drug use. 

    The BCHPCA supports the position of the BC Chief Coroner, in calling for measures that support those suffering from drug use, but would also like to ensure measures around grief, bereavement and family supports are all-encompassing in a service delivery model that based on education, training and awareness on the complicated and complex grief associated with traumatic loss around deaths incurred by drug overdose.

    The grief surrounding illicit drug use is multi-dimensional and in a time filled with crisis and loss, there is an overwhelming need for grief and bereavement support. Continuing on from the Grief, Bereavement & Mental Health Summit held in the fall of 2021, the BC Hospice Palliative Care Association will be continuing conversations and education on grief by hosting a four day virtual educational series on the Complexities of Grief in our Communities. Focusing on Traumatic Loss and Prolonged Grief Disorder, the sessions will explore how grief and bereavement services can support community members who are impacted by a death due to overdose. 

    • Support for loved ones who have experienced traumatic loss from death due to overdose and the stigma associated with this type of death.
    • Preventative measures dealing with one of the root causes of drug addiction and grief due to losses (including losses other then death) that can transform into a stress-related disorder, Prolonged Grief Disorder.
    • Practical tips on how to support people experiencing complicated grief and self-care practices to  allow practitioners to continue to provide this type of intensive work.
    • Education about PEACH (Palliative Education and Care for the Homeless) program and how they help to support people experiencing structural vulnerability in their community with harm reduction, trauma informed care, and an anti-racism approach.

    Both the public and professionals are invited to join the BCHPCA Spring Lunch & Learn Webinar Series: Complexities of Grief in our Communities. Sessions will be held virtually March 14th to 17th, from 12 pm to 1 pm Pacific Standard Time.  

    The distinguished speakers will catalyze conversations on supporting vulnerable populations through traumatic loss and prolonged grief disorder with a hospice palliative care perspective. Hospice Palliative Care organizations in BC are uniquely positioned to support the complexities of grief in our communities, but continuing education and government funding play a crucial role in increasing their capacity to deliver these valuable services; services that will help support the illicit drug crisis in British Columbia.

    Reference:

    1. BC Center for Disease Control. British Columbia (BC) COVID-19 Situation Report

    Week 25: June 20 – June 26, 2021. 2021, July [cited 2022 March 7]. Available from:

    View Report

    2. Canadian Grief Alliance. Addressing the deficit in grief services: A response to

    pandemic-related grief. Written Submission to the Pre-budget Consultations for

    the 2021-22 Federal Budget. 2020, Aug 1 cited 2022 March 7]. Available from:

    View Report
  • Monday, March 07, 2022 9:00 AM | Alan Jodoin (Administrator)

    News Release – Vancouver, BC

    The 2021 Hospice Society Provincial & Territorial Grief & Bereavement Report explores the socioeconomic impact of COVID-19 on grief and bereavement in B.C. and the Yukon, particularly focusing on the adverse effects on the mental health of its residents, including vulnerable populations who are disproportionately hit the hardest. The data obtained in the Grief and Bereavement Survey (2021) that provided insights around hospice society funding, capacity and demographics of those accessing grief and bereavement supports, show how current grief and bereavement services being offered by hospices across B.C.and the Yukon, could significantly help mitigate the mental health sequelae of COVID-19 if sufficient resources were allocated to expand capacity within these organizations.

    Hospice Palliative Care societies have been supporting their communities for over 40 years around end of life, palliative and grief and bereavement services; serving over 10,000 clients monthly, with a volunteer force of over 3600. In addition, in 2019 hospice societies in B.C., saved the province over $40 million in added value services alone.

    View the complete Press Release (PDF).

    View the Report



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BCHPCA represents its members: individuals and organizations that deliver hospice/palliative care and bereavement services and programs across British Columbia and the Yukon Territory.

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The BC Hospice Palliative Care Association (BCHPCA) recognizes the traditional land of the First Nations, Métis and Inuit peoples who have walked before us and minded the lands we now call home for time immemorial. Hospice Societies have been able to support, aid and care for many people on these same lands.

The BCHPCA Offices are located on the ancestral, traditional, and unceded lands of the Coast Salish Peoples, including the territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and TsleilWaututh Nations.


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