A clinic on wheels: St. Joe's goes mobile to serve patients living with schizophrenia - Action News
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Hamilton

A clinic on wheels: St. Joe's goes mobile to serve patients living with schizophrenia

Front-line nurses from the West 5th campus use a special vanto meet patients with mental health problems primarily those living with schizophrenia and treat them by doing their blood work.

Front-line nurses use a mobile clinic to meet patients and provide them with medical injections

Van driver Jim McGuire stands to the left of Robert Biba and Terry OConnor, registered nurses at St. Joe's. The van acts as a mobile clinic to serve patients, mainly people living with schizophrenia. (Submitted by St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton)

Not all patients are able to get treated at hospitals during COVID-19, so St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton is bringing the hospital to them.

Front-line nurses from the West 5th location are usinga small, accessible busto get out in the community to treat patients with mental health problems, primarily thoseliving with schizophrenia.

The medical staff normally do their blood work and give them medical injections.

Alycia Gillespie, a manager at the West 5th mental health and addictions unit, said the mobile clinicoperates each week from Tuesday to Friday.

"It kind ofworks both ways in terms of our nurses not having to go into a communal setting where lodging home operators really want to limit the number of people coming into the home and at the same time it is helping to negate clients' needs to take public transportation," she said.

Robert Biba and Terry OConnor, both registered nurses at St. Joe's, sit inside the mobile clinic that has served roughly 70 patients. (Submitted by St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton)

The clinicdid its first runat the end of April. The hospital network pays an hourly rate to Voyager to rent the vehicle.

Roughly 70 patients have boarded the bus.Most patients live in the east end,on the Mountain and in Brantford, but the clinic can also serve patients in Niagara and Halton.

Gillespie hopes with public donations the mobile clinic will become permanent.

"It's a good example of how sometimes these difficult circumstances can lead to innovation."