Spotlight on Community Connectors: Windsor-Essex CHC celebrates 10 years with launch of new mobile unit

le Jeudi 7 Novembre 2019

[From left to right: Kathryn Hengl, president of the board, weCHC; Claudia den Boer, board chair, Alliance for Healthier Communities; Rita Taillefer, executive director, weCHC]

Every day across Ontario, Alliance members are connecting people to improve health and wellbeing. Staff at Alliance member centres work to connect people to services and programs, to each other, and to opportunities and resources in their wider community. To nurture connections and forge new ones, Alliance members work to meet people where they are, and partner with other community organizations to ensure they can meet changing local needs. In this series, we will spotlight Community Connectors, who are changing lives and building a more sustainable health system with every connection they make.

Windsor, ON -- On October 24, Windsor-Essex Community Health Centre (weCHC) officially launched its “weCHC on Wheels” mobile primary health care unit. It was quite a way to celebrate the CHC’s 10th anniversary!

The 38-foot mobile unit will eventually be in operation up to four full days a week, providing people in the downtown core and Essex County with primary care services wherever they are, as well as help navigating other aspects of the health system. Windsor-Essex CHC, which operates out of six physical locations, knew there were still gaps both in urban areas, and in rural areas beyond Windsor in Essex County, including Leamington, where seasonal farm workers are often under-served for health care. Given that the status quo wasn’t reaching some people, weCHC’s community-governed board and executive leaders realized that a way to do regular direct outreach was needed.

“We’ve realized that accessing health and social supports is the key to helping individuals manage their wellbeing,” said weCHC executive director Rita Taillefer. “We know that many factors prevent some people from accessing the care they need. Because of this we’re going to bring the care to them.”

Mobile and other forms of primary care outreach are integral to work of many Alliance members across the province, with other mobile units, outreach clinics and direct visits to people’s homes. Building trust in the health system, providing low-barrier services, and meeting people where they are at with their health and wellbeing allows staff at Alliance member centres to make connections that improve health and wellbeing and promote health system sustainability. Learn more about how Alliance members are making primary health care connections for people across Ontario.

Why connecting everyone matters

le Lundi 21 Octobre 2019

Human beings are social creatures – we need and seek out connections throughout our lives. These connections are essential for us to not only survive, but to thrive.

When we’re navigating unknown territory or facing adversity, good connections are what can get us through. That’s why a connected health system – comprised of connected teams of health and social care providers who encourage close bonds and cooperation in their communities – is the bedrock of a healthy society.

This week, Alliance members across Ontario and their partners are celebrating Community Health and Wellbeing Week by highlighting the work they do to help keep communities connected and to build new pathways where they are needed most. All well, we’ll be spotlighting their efforts to create spaces of belonging, provide empathy and trauma-informed care, combat oppression in all its forms, and better connect people on individual and organizational levels. You can follow along on social media: #CHWW2019.

As Ontario’s Chief Medical Officer of Health put it in his 2017 report, Connected Communities: Healthier Together: “Helping people and communities (re)connect is everyone’s business. To (re)build a sense of belonging — create connected communities — individuals, organizations, businesses, communities and governments must work together to foster a society that values social connection.”

We couldn’t agree more. In fact, as Centretown Community Health Centre in Ottawa marks 50 years since opening its doors, this fall we’re also celebrating a half-century of community-led health and social care in Ontario. Along the way, Alliance members have learned a lot from the people they serve in every corner of the province.

Alliance members know from years of experience that when people have real opportunities to connect with each other and to their community and its resources, good things happen. Trust forms. Relationships flourish. People feel a sense of ownership over their health and wellbeing. Building and maintaining strong connections with the people they serve enables the trust necessary to deliver health and social services tailored to a community’s needs. Building connections with local partners, such as the Canadian Mental Health Association, Public Health units, and other organizations in the health and social services system, ensures that people can count on seamless services that leverage the collective strengths of their community’s resources.

To make sure people can get and stay connected to the services they need, when they need them, Alliance members have embarked on a number of initiatives to build a better connected primary health care system. TeamCare and the Social Prescribing project, for example, are each building new pathways to connect providers, community resources, and the people that need them. Each is designed and built within their own communities, responding to local needs and partners.

As Ontario’s health system embarks on a period of change, we want to ensure that the voice of Community Health – your voice – is heard and is reflected in those changes. The voices and ears of large health system players such as hospitals are tuning themselves to community concerns. That’s why it matters a lot that each and every Alliance member is governed by community members like you. During this period, the Alliance for Healthier Communities is reinforcing our commitment to equitable services and programs for those who face barriers to good health, such as racism, homophobia, sexism, poverty, isolation, and homelessness. We believe that everyone has a right to a life of wellbeing, not just health care services when they get sick. That means we will continue to focus on issues such as systemic racism, food security, affordable housing, the overdose crisis, low income supports, pharmacare, affordable oral health care, and a host of other issues that we know impact people’s ability to be well.

We will be relentless in pursuing a healthier and more connected Ontario, and we will need your support to ensure that no one in our community falls through the cracks of big, systems-level change. This week, we encourage you to visit your local Community Health Centre, Community Family Health Team, Nurse Practitioner-Led Clinic or Aboriginal Health Access Centre. We know that while you’re there, you’ll learn more about how we can all work together to make sure everyone is connected.

To learn more about Community Health and Wellbeing Week and find events near you, visit https://www.allianceon.org/CHWW2019

 

Élections 2019 — Déclaration de l’Alliance sur le racisme

Date: 
le Mardi 24 Septembre 2019

L’Alliance pour des communautés en santé condamne vivement le sentiment raciste et anti-immigrant qui teinte les élections fédérales de 2019.

L’Alliance représente plus de 100 organismes communautaires des quatre coins de la province qui travaillent avec des personnes et des communautés confrontées à de multiples injustices sociales et à des inégalités en santé. Nous savons que le racisme a un impact tangible sur la façon dont les gens progressent et vivent dans le monde. Nous reconnaissons que la race est un important déterminant de la santé. En plus de causer des traumatismes, le racisme nuit à la santé et au bien-être. Les répercussions du racisme se font sentir dans des politiques qui renforcent un accès inéquitable aux soins de santé et qui mènent au dénuement et aux inégalités socioéconomiques. En ne dénonçant pas ouvertement le racisme, nous renforçons les torts et les préjudices et permettons à la suprématie blanche et à la domination coloniale de subsister au Canada. Il est impératif de s’opposer au sentiment raciste et anti-immigrant qui s’infiltre dans les discussions publiques et de le dénoncer avec vigueur.

L’Alliance réaffirme son engagement envers la justice sociale et l’équité en santé. Nous exhortons nos membres à faire de même. Voici des exemples de ce que peuvent faire les organismes :

  1. Reconnaître, nommer et dénoncer publiquement les points de vue racistes et anti-immigrants qui s’infiltrent dans la discussion dans le cadre des élections.
  2. Demander aux représentants du gouvernement d’appuyer des mesures et des politiques visant à éliminer les éléments et les structures qui engendrent le racisme.
  3. Faire progresser l’équité en santé afin de lutter contre les privations que subissent les Autochtones, les Noirs et d’autres communautés racialisées dans la province.   
  4. Appuyer la Charte pour l’équité en santé, offrir de la formation sur le leadership inclusif dans la gouvernance à leur organe directeur et offrir la formation sur la sécurité culturelle autochtone de l’Ontario aux professionnels de leur organisme.

Nous vous encourageons à consulter les ressources suivantes sur le racisme tout en envisageant des mesures que pourrait prendre votre organisme :