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Nova Scotia

'Community dream' of Halifax hospice rising in south end

Construction on Hospice Halifax started in fall 2017 and CEO Gordon Neal says the building is scheduled to open Oct. 1.

Hospice will provide home-like setting for people in palliative care

Hospice Halifax is hoping to raise about $7 million and has asked Halifax Regional Municipality to contribute $1 million. (Patrick Callaghan/CBC)

Nova Scotia's first palliative care home is under construction and should open this year.

Gordon Neal, the CEO of Hospice Halifax, said construction started in fall 2017 and continuedthrough the winter. The foundations are all in and the structural steel is going up, soon to be followed by framing.

"We're planning [to open] on Oct. 1," he said.

The 10-room, two-storey hospice will be located in south-end Halifax on Francklyn Street. (Hospice Halifax)

It will be a 10-bedroom facility and the organizationexpects to welcomeover 400 people and their families within the first three years of operation.

"The focus on having a residential hospice is to maintain a home-like settinginstead of an institutional setting," Neal said.

The10 suites will haveprivate baths and a room for the residents, with a pull-out sofa and chairs for family and friends.

Construction started in fall 2017 and continued through the winter. The foundations are all in and the structural steel is going up, soon to be followed by framing. (Anjuli Patil/CBC)

The upper floor will have a kitchen and a "great room," offering living and dining space with a large terrace giving views of the Northwest Arm.

Hospice Halifax has yet to finalize the admissions criteria, but it will likely involve referrals fromnurses and doctors. Fuller plans will come out in May.

Neal said the organization is hoping to raise about $7 million and has asked Halifax Regional Municipality to contribute$1 million.

Focus on homey comfort

Dr. Stephanie Connidis of the the Canadian Hospice Palliative Care Association said the facility will be a valuable option for people wishing to die at home, but who are unable to do so.

She said Nova Scotia has no residential hospices and the province needs about 70 beds. The 10 beds in Hospice Halifax will be a step in that direction.

"It's a community dream," she told Information Morning Monday.

The hospice held public sessions at the Halifax Central LibraryMonday to learn what the community wants in the hospice.

"What we will have are rooms that can be made homey so they won't look like a hospital room," Connidissaid. "People can then bring things that are important to them in the room. We have a philosophy that we're going into your space,you're not coming into our space."

She said in palliative care, the focus is on the person's emotional and spiritual well-being andpain management.

"We will all die. What we're trying to change is what that looks like," she said. "What does it look like to be dying in Nova Scotia? It doesn't need to look like a hospital room in an acute-care setting."

The hospice held public sessions at the Halifax Central Library Monday to learn what the community wants in the hospice. (Patrick Callaghan/CBC)

Clarifications

  • An earlier version of this story said the hospice will serve about 400 people a year. In fact, it will serve about 400 people in the first three years of its operation.
    Mar 28, 2018 9:22 AM AT