Ontario health minister helps homeless man who fainted during announcement on health care in shelters - Action News
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Toronto

Ontario health minister helps homeless man who fainted during announcement on health care in shelters

Ontario Health Minister Eric Hoskins rushed to the aide of a homeless man who fell down at a news conference on Tuesday where Hoskins was announcing a new program aimed at bringing health care services to Toronto shelters.

Eric Hoskins had just announced a new program for Toronto homeless people

Ontario Health Minister, centre, rushed to the aid of a homeless man who fell down at a news conference on Tuesday where Hoskins was announcing a new program that will bring health care services to homeless people at Toronto shelters. (Katherine Brulotte/CBC)

Ontario Health Minister Eric Hoskins rushed to the aidof a homeless man who collapsedat a news conference on Tuesday where Hoskins was announcing a new program aimed atbringinghealth care services toToronto shelters.

The man, a Toronto shelter resident,appeared to have fainted. Hoskins, a physician, crouched down to help the man. Toronto paramedics were called andthe man was taken to a local hospital.

Earlier, Hoskins said the program, to be run by provincial and municipal staff, is designed toimprove the access of homeless people to health care services, includingharm reduction, mental health and addictions supports, as well aswound care, foot care and chronic disease management.

Hoskins said the health care serviceswill be provided attheshelters themselves.

"We are developing a new program that will bring health services to shelter users instead ofthe other way around," Hoskins told reporters at New Hope Leslievilleshelter.

"We are going to make sure we get this right."

The program will take the form of pilot projectatfive shelters across the city:New Hope Leslieville, Runnymede, Birchmount, Kenny Roach and Warden.

According to an email from the Ontario health ministry, the program will provide more than 300 beds to vulnerable people who often have complex health needs.

Health care providers, shelter operators, city staff and the Toronto Central Local Health Integration Network will work together to develop a framework for "comprehensive, integrated and appropriate" health services for shelter clients, the ministry said.

The program will be implemented in the next few months, the ministry added.The network is made up ofcrown agencies thatwork with local health providers and community members to determine Toronto's health service priorities.

"The framework will be piloted in the five shelters and it will then be evaluated for its effectiveness prior to rolling out more broadly," the ministry said.
Health care providers, shelter operators, city staff and the Toronto Central Local Health Integration Network will work together to develop and implement the program to help homeless people over the next few months, the provincial government said in a news release. (David Donnelly/CBC)

According to the ministry, the program will change the way shelter users get health care services because services will be provided in a more coordinated fashion, usingcentralized referral and intake processes.

"Funding considerations and details of how this pilot project will be evaluated will be determined as the pilot project is finalized in the months ahead," the ministry added.

Hoskins declined to provide details on the program's cost.

Staff at shelters will also work toidentify the health services needed by the shelter users, then they will try to connect them to the agency or organizationthat can provide those services, according toOntario Housing Minister Peter Milczyn.

Mayor calls program a 'breakthrough'

Mayor John Tory said at the news conference that the program is a "breakthrough" because it is an example of governments working together to improve the lives of Toronto homeless people.

"There are things that need to be done to augment the shelter system," Tory said. "I think today is a breakthrough. We are working together to find solutions to what is a very complex problem."
Mayor John Tory said the program is a 'breakthrough' because it is an example of governments working together to improve the lives of Toronto homeless people. (John Rieti/CBC)

Tory said health professionals will be "embedded" in the homeless shelters.

The mayorsaid he regularly visits homeless people in shelters to better understand their needs.

Homeless people have told him about their health care issues, he said, and those issues often involve mental health problems and addictions. Tory went to a shelter in Scarborough on Sunday.

"It's not enough and we need to do a lot more."

Tory said many homeless people have suffered much trauma and supportive housing, not shelters, is the best place for them.

An influx of refugees to Toronto, many of whom have used the shelter system, has underscored the need for better access to health care services, he added.

An advisory committee of shelter operators, shelter users and health service providers has also been created to provide advice on improving access to health services for shelter users, the ministry said.

With files from Radio-Canada's Katherine Brulotte