liv poz mag.qxd - Positive Living BC
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liv poz mag.qxd - Positive Living BC
Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 1 I N S I D E GIRL TALK Come to terms with depression 5 FIGHTING WORDS Mental health in the BC correctional system 7 NUTRITION The role of food in harm reduction 10 SHADES OF GREY HIV, aging, and mental health 11 NEW FLU VACCINE Q&A Dr. David Moore answers your questions about flu shots 13 GAY POZ SEX Taking a holistic approach to sex 14 COVER STORY Healthy heads: addressing the challenge of living with depression and HIV 15 HCV & DEPRESSION A personal take 18 PHYSICIAN’S PROFILE The doctor will see you now 21 LET’S GET CLINICAL Updates on current clinical trials 23 LAST BLAST Happy optimism day, Dr. Strangelove 28 HEALTH PROMOTION PROGRAM MANDATE & DISCLAIMER In accordance with our mandate to provide support activities and facilities for members for the purpose of self-help and self-care, the Positive Living Society of BC operates a Health Promotion Program to make available to members up-to-date research and information on treatments, therapies, tests, clinical trials, and medical models associated with AIDS and HIVrelated conditions. The intent of this project is to make available to members information they can access as they choose to become knowledgeable partners with their physicians and medical care team in making decisions to promote their health. The Health Promotion Program endeavours to provide all research and information to members without P5SITIVE LIVING 1 judgment or prejudice. The program does not recommend, advocate, or endorse the use of any particular treatment or therapy provided as information. The Board, staff, and volunteers of the Positive Living Society of BC do not accept the risk of, or the responsibility for, damages, costs, or consequences of any kind which may arise or result from the use of information d i s s e m i nated through this program. Persons using the information provided do so by their own decisions and hold the Society’s Board, staff, and volunteers harmless. Accepting information from this program is deemed to be accepting the terms of this disclaimer. MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 2 think 5 opinion &editorial The Positive Living Society of British Columbia seeks to empower persons living with HIV disease and AIDS through mutual support and collective action. The Society has over 5,600 HIV-positive members. Positive Living editorial board Wayne Campbell - chair, Neil Self, Romari Undi, Ross Harvey, Elgin Lim, Jason Motz, Adam Reibin Managing editor Jason Motz Design / production Britt Permien Copyediting Katherine Ackley, Robin Schroffel Proofing Ashra Kolhatkar Contributing writers Denise Becker, Wayne Campbell, Heiko Decosas, Paul Goyan, Murray Hart, Suzan Kreiger, Meenakshi Mannoe, David Moore, Jason Motz, Lynden Neufeld, Chrystal Palaty, Jonathan Postnikoff, Marc Seguin, Shelly Tognazzini, Romari Undi, Rani Wangsawidjaya Special thanks Brendan Kergin Photography Britt Permien Director of communications and education Adam Reibin Director of programs and services Elgin Lim Treatment, health and wellness coordinator Shelly Tognazzini Subscriptions / distribution Leah Giesbrecht, John Kozachenko Funding for Positive Living is provided by the BC Gaming Policy & Enforcement Branch and by subscription and donations. Positive Living BC 803 East Hastings Vancouver BC V6A 1R8 RECEPTION 604.893.2200 WWW.POSITIVELIVINGBC.ORG EDITOR 604.893.2206 EMAIL living@positivelivingbc.org © 2015 Positive Living Permission to reproduce: All Positive Living articles are copyrighted. Non-commercial reproduction is welcomed. For permission to reprint articles, either in part or in whole, please email living@positivelivingbc.org A special issue for a special cause By ◆ Wayne Campbell ◆ M ental health is a daunting concern for people living with HIV (PLHIV) in our province. That is why we gave this issue a cheeky title. Sometimes, when circumstances are exceptionally dire, it helps to smile. “Dire” is a word many PLHIV might use to describe the availability of mental health services in BC. While conditions like anxiety, low self-esteem, and poor sleep are commonplace amongst PLHIV, professional support can be hard to find and is not always easily accessible. The picture of mental health painted by our cover story (pages 15-17) is realistic, but not very pretty. When you read this article, I advise you to do so through a lens of hope. Things can get better, especially if PLHIV are committed to fighting for their cause. The Society’s Positive Action Committee is a great place for us to get started. If you have a specific matter you think the Society needs to spearhead (whether or not it is related to mental health) please contact pac@positivelivingbc.org. When planning this issue, the editorial board realized that there are certain themes among our community’s many concerns. We determined that— beyond mental health—many of the story ideas we were discussing could be categorized under umbrella terms like “sex and HIV”, “women and HIV”, “HIV history”, etc. The end result is that P5SITIVE LIVING 2 MAY •• JUNE 2015 “Check Your Head” is the first in a series of themed editions of Positive Living magazine. Next up is our “Kinkformation” issue. Readers can look forward to a lot of sexy reading care of Positive Living BC during the long, hot summer nights to come. Members can also look forward to a summer filled with fun, free, and informative events, courtesy of the Society and our community partners. Please visit our new website (positivelivingbc.org) to view our up-to-the-minute events calendar and to design a schedule of activities tailored to your needs. I’ve already set aside August 20 in my schedule for attending the Society’s Annual General Meeting and the catered community forum directly afterward (see ad on page 12 for more information). Your participation at the AGM is essential to Society operations—this is where board directors are elected and the Society’s major business is addressed. Board directors serve as representatives of the entire membership. We can only act on your behalf if you make your voices heard. 5 Wayne Campbell is Chair of Positive Living BC. Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 3 Pharmacare could save billions A report released in March by the Canadian Medical Association Journal could change the political discussion about Pharmacare in this country, and in so doing, make the dream a reality. The report claims that implementation of a long debated Canada-wide prescription drug coverage plan could save the country billions. An estimated $7.3 billion could be saved on prescription drugs. The report estimates that the private sector could save anywhere between $6.6 billion and $9.6 billion. Government costs could increase by as much as $1 billion, defined in the report as a $5.4 billion net increase or $2.9 billion net savings. (Any such increase would stem from a “small number of drug classes.”) The report’s authors contend that “the long-term barrier to the implementation of universal Pharmacare owing to its perceived costs appears to be unjustified,” adding that a universal plan would be a positive boon that would “yield substantial savings to the private sector with comparatively little increase in costs to government.” The report further argues that “reducing the need for work-related private drug insurance plans would also reduce administration costs and eliminate the need for the tax subsidies currently given to encourage employers to offer such plans.” In 2012/13, Canadians spent $22 billion for their prescription drug needs. This report suggests that under the umb rella of a universal prescription plan, expenditures over that same period could have totalled a more palatable $15.1 billion. First recommended (but not promised, as that is not within the domain of Commissions) by the 1964 Royal Commission on Health Services, Pharmacare has been a political hot potato for decades, moving in and out of favour with a tax-weary nation. Under the current scheme, prescription drug funding comes from a hodgepodge of provincial plans, both private and public. Universal coverage would kibosh bureaucracy and give all Canadians access to their prescription medication. Under the current format, many Canadians are denied access to their drugs by economics. The report dismisses the commonly held criticism that a universal drug plan would require a draconian tax increase. Rather, implementing this type of blanket coverage would “achieve access and equity goals while also achieving considerable economies of s cale that stem from better pricing and more cost-conscious product selection under a single-payer system.” Source: http://www.cmaj.ca/content/early/201 5/03/16/cmaj.141564.full.pdf+html Vatican adopts BC-based HIV treatment model In another sign that he is the most radical pope of the past thirty years, Pope Francis has tapped a Vancouverbased HIV/AIDS treatment model for wider use. This March, while in Geneva, Vatican off icials met with Dr. Julio Montaner, of the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS (BCCfE), to discuss how Treatment as P5SITIVE LIVING 3 MAY •• JUNE 2015 Prevention (TasP) could be rolled out to regions where HIV/AIDS infections are at critical mass—specif ically, a tria l project in Tanzania involving some 140,000 patients. (As of this writing, the specif ics of the plan were still being drafted and are likely some ways off from being publicly announced.) With 35 million PLHIV all across the globe, the f ight against HIV/AIDS requires powerful, global forces. With, conservatively, over a billion members in the Catholic Church, adoption of TasP by the Pope would be a monumental movement towards the United Nations’ 90-90-90 target by 2020 (ED. NOTE: for more information see issue 17.2, March/April 2015 for the article, 9090-90: Insights and implications by Dr. Hasina Samji). Dr. Montaner emphasizes that the Vatican’s backing could result in “impor tant implications for the expansion of [TasP] around the world.” TasP relies on early aggressive treatment, administering a cocktail of three drugs that suppress the virus to the point that it is undetectable. Since 1997, there has been a 67 percent reduction in new HIV diagnoses, an 87 percent drop in AIDS-related deaths, and, perhaps most heartening, an overall increase in the longevity of PLHIV. Source: http://www.cfenet.ubc.ca/news/ in-the-news/vatican-adopts-hivaidstreatment-model-developed-bc continued on next page Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 4 Newly approved drugs will fight hepatitis C In late March, the BC government announced the public coverage of two hepatitis C curative drugs effective immediately. The new drugs are Sovaldi and Harvoni, first approved for sale by Health Canada in 2013 and 2014 respectively. However, it is still up to participating jurisdictions whether or not to cover these drugs as part of their public drug plans. Solvaldi, which treats hepatitis C genotypes 1, 2, and 3, and Harvoni, which treats genotype 1, join Galexos (simeprevir) as the third hepatitis C agent to meet approval in the past six months. Unlike some older treatments, like peginterferon, both Solvaldi and Harvoni are taken in pill form. The two new drugs could go a long way to helping the roughly 80,000 residents of BC who have hepatitis C. BC Health Minister Terry Lake expects 1,500 people will be covered by treatment in the first year. This is a significant number considering the number of British Columbians who received medical treatment for hepatitis C in 2013-2014 was approximately 1,200. In a press release, Lake declared that “these two new drugs can utterly change the lives of people with hepatitis C for the better.” He added that both drugs “represent a significant advance in the treatment of chronic hepatitis C, and more British Columbians affected by this virus now have significantly better odds of becoming free of the disease.” Several prominent health officials, including Daryl Luster, president of the board of the Pacific Hepatitis C Network, echoed Lake’s confidence: “This is incredibly welcome news for people living with hepatitis C in BC and their families,” he said in the same release. “As a person who was treated with interferon and ribavirin, I know how difficult those older therapies are. The hepatitis C community is excitedly anticipating the change these new gamechanging medications will bring to thousands of people living with hepatitis C in British Columbia.” According to the release, “PharmaCare will cover Sovaldi or Harvoni for people who meet certain criteria. For example, people who have never before been treated for hepatitis C or who have failed treatment with older drugs may be eligible for coverage.” As a component of their coverage, PharmaCare will keep a close watch on the efficacy of the new drugs as well as the treatment results. Source: http://www2.news. gov.bc.ca/news_ releases_2013-2017/2015HLTH0014000386.htm Out-of-country health care In general health news, BC’s Fraser Institute released a revealing study in March that shows that rising numbers of Canadians are leaving the country for medical care and other treatment options. Neurosurgery and oncology are the two types of health care that best illustrate where the exodus is being recorded. Neurosurgeons reported the highest proportion of patients (in a specialty) travelling abroad for treatment at 2.6 percent, while the largest number of patients (in a specialty) travelled abroad for internal medicine procedures (6,559). Although the Fraser report does not indicate treatment for HIV-related illnesses, the report is a sobering comment on the country’s ability to provide affordable, timely, and quality care and services. In 2014, according to the report, 52,000 Canadians P5SITIVE LIVING 4 MAY •• JUNE 2015 received non-emergency medical treatment outside of our borders. The report suggests prolonged waiting times as a major factor in the outflow of Canadians. The report states that “patients could expect to wait 9.8 weeks for medically necessary treatment after seeing a specialist,” a sharp contrast to the 6.5 week waiting period physicians consider to be clinically “reasonable.” The report’s conclusion is a clear indictment of the overall health care system: “Clearly, the number of Canadians who ultimately receive their medical care in other countries is not insignificant. That a considerable number of Canadians travelled abroad and paid to escape the well-known failings of the Canadian health care system speaks volumes about how well the system is working for them.” Sources: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/estimated-52-000-canadianssought-medical-care-outside-canada-fra ser-institute-says-1.2997726; http://www.fraserinstitute.org/research -news/display.aspx?id=22339 5 Mea culpa from the editor In the March/April issue of Positive Living magazine, we neglected to give Pacific AIDS Network (PAN) their share of credit as being one of four signatories, not the three w e reported, on a letter to Minister Rona Ambrose. [See item Will the Minister pony up the dough?] We regret this slight to PAN and offer this correction to set the record straight. Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 5 Girl Talk Come to terms with depression By ◆ Denise Becker and Romari Undi ◆ I often wonder how many women with HIV have suffered mental illness in silence. Never telling their friends with HIV, their family, or their doctors—perhaps not even admitting it to them selves. The stigma of HIV is bad enough without it being compounded with the stigma associated with mental health. An HIV diagnosis is an overwhelming and emotional trauma. So much so, that it may hinder a patient from mentioning any underlying mental health issue or concern to their doctor or specialist. Yet people living with HIV (PLHIV) are much more vulnerable to other illnesses, especially those dealing with mental well-being. Given that HIV can cross the blood brain-barrier, resulting in memory loss, difficulty with concentration, and clear thinking, mental illness is obviously a secondary diagnosis. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is quite common in PLHIV. PTSD is the sensation whereby someone feels as though his or her life is threatened and that there is a real chance of death. Following the trauma of their diagnosis, the support of newly diagnosed HIV-positive people can influence whether or not they develop PTSD. Many PLHIV are afraid that divulging their diagnosis will leave them even more socially isolated. PTSD can cause sufferers to re-live the trauma over and over in nightmarish exactness to the original event. (Many of us with HIV can remember the precise moment we received our diagnosis.) Nightmares of impending doom or bouts of insomnia can disrupt concentration. Most depressive illnesses can result in risky behaviours, like careless medical adherence. Research has shown that those most at risk of depression after an HIV diagnosis are those who have not disclosed their status, who have lost loved ones, or who have experienced advanced stages of the illness. However, it is difficult to measure the number of people who suffer depression as a result of HIV because other underlying factors may be at work. An individual might misdiagnose depression because the symptoms can appear to be similar to those of HIV: exhaustion, loss of appetite, malaise, anger, and sadness. As a result, PLHIV may be slow to report to their doctors that they are feeling depressed. Depression is an important consideration for specialists when deciding on appropriate medication for their patient. Some medications used by PLHIV cite depression and anxiety as potential side effects. Psychiatrists should ensure that any medication they give to a patient does not interfere with the HIV medication the patient is taking. If a patient is unsure, he P5SITIVE LIVING 5 or she needs to ask for clarification about the potential drawbacks to any medication. The March 2001 Yale School of Medicine’s findings on “Chronic Depression Among Women with HIV,” as printed in the Journal of the American Medical Association, found that depressed HIV-positive wome n are twice as likely to die than HIV-positive women who experienced limited or no depression symptoms. A study by Johns Hopkins University found that women with HIV are seven times more likely to be depressed than non-HIVpositive women and are more often affected by depression compared with men at every stage of the disease. The same study revealed that nearly one-third of women with HIV reported suicidal thoughts. And, women with HIV showed a greater risk for having a majo r depressive disorder (MDD) than men with HIV. The picture this study paints is grim. Women with HIV, particularly those vulnerable to depression (family history, domestic issues, drug/alcohol problems, or financial burdens) should be asked if they have ever felt depressed or suicidal. Women need to be aware that the symptoms they are experiencing might be associated with depression, and should consider self-reporting to a physician, counselor, or other trusted resource. Diagnosing and treating depression early is crucial because, for at risk women, chronic depression needs investigation and close monitoring. 5 Denise Becker (I) is a former board member of Positive Living BC and an accomplished public speaker. Romari Undi (r) is a member of ViVA, a board member of Positive Living BC, and a volunteer with Vancouver Island Persons Living with HIV/AIDS Society. What is mental health? Mental health refers to your emotional, psychological, and social well-being. Your mental health affects how you think, feel, and act, and it also determines how you handle stress, relate to others, and make choices. Some people already have a mental health issue when they are diagnosed with HIV, but others develop serious issues only after their diagnosis. Encountering stigma, hiding your condition, and changes to their social life are common barriers to sound mental wellness. MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 6 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 7 Fighting Words By ◆ Meenakshi Mannoe ◆ Mental health in BC’s correctional system “ If you wish to accept t his call, please stay on t he l i n e . O t h e r w i s e h a n g u p . Yo u c a n l e a v e a m e s sage for t his inmate by calling... Please go ahead wit h your call.” Callers from a provincial institution hear t he preamble ever y time t hey call t he Pr ison Outreach P r o g r a m ( P O P ) . A h o t l i n e f o r i n c a r c e r a te d Po s i t i v e L i v i n g BC members, t his call is a lifeline. POP suppor ts incarcerated members across t he province. Last year, we received over 500 calls on t he POP line. Many of t hese calls revolve around suppor ting members as t hey deal wit h day-to-day living in a cor rectional centre. I am one of many recovering addicts, struggling time and time again. In my case, my mental health is related to where I’ve come from. I had a rough up-bringing: sexual, alcohol, and drug abuse all took a toll on my innocent soul. I’m now faced with the realization that I cover up my anxiety, depression, and my fear of being alone or rejected. At sixteen, I lost my mom to a heroin overdose, so I covered that up with a needle, the fastest way the soul will numb. Not to mention the addictive lifestyle itself. For t hose incarcerated, accessing basic healt hcare is a str uggle. Compounding t hings are issues wit h mental healt h, substance use, HIV, and hepatitis C to name a fe w. For people living wit h HIV (PLHIV) who are involved wit h t he cr iminal justice system, incarceration has been demonstrated to negatively impact ability to access HIV/AIDS care. The attendant layers of incarceration represent t he abundance of P5SITIVE LIVING people living wit h mental healt h issues who are being funnelled into t he cr iminal justice system. A recent ar ticle by Dr. Thomas Ker r and Jade Boyd in t he jour nal Cr itical Public Health descr ibes “t he blendi n g o f c r i m i n a l j u s t i c e a n d m e n t a l h e a l t h p o l icy in Canada.” This blend has become apparent as local police forces become frontline responders to a “mental healt h cr isis” (VPD 2013). Many of our members who are working with POP cycle in and out of corrections, only tangentially receiving healthcare while in custody or on t he street. According to BC Cor rections, which is responsible for eight provincial institutions, 56 percent of offenders likely have a substance abuse and/or mental health disorder: “In addition to their involvement in correctional sy stems, individuals wit h mental healt h problems and/or mental illnesses exper ience a compounded stigma t hat creates barriers in their ability to obtain ser vices, and also inf luences the types of treatment and suppor ts received, reintegration into t he community and t heir general recover y (“Mental Health Strategy for Cor rections in Canada, 2012”). 7 Using needles and being careless about myself l contracted HIV. I was doing coke all the time and at one point I thought I already had it, which led me to be even more careless. It was during this time that I actually got the virus for real. At eighteen, I was flush with cash after a settlement, but eventually the money ran out. After that, the theft, B&Es, and robberies were just to get money so I could resume an emotionless life. And now, I’m institutionalized. MAY •• JUNE 2015 continued next page Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 8 The members we suppor t in pr ison have a range of experiences. What many of them share is a personal histor y that includes trauma. These traumas range from persecution dur ing war and genocide, childhood wit hin t he foster care system, sexual abuse, and incarceration in general. S o m e h a v e h a d a c c e s s to c o u n s e l l i n g , s u p p o r t , a n d p s y chiatr ic care while in t he community, while ot hers have led chaotic lives t hat rarely intersect wit h suppor tive healt hcare and community-based resources. I feel that the system does not want offenders to ever get fully better. We, as addicts, employ millions–jail guards, judges, lawyers, cops, probation officers, welfare workers, pharmacists, and advocates. They don’t want us to understand that all of our drug and alcohol suffering comes from conflict within our minds. I wish we could abandon our guilt and shame–it’s all normal. Once we can understand why it is we hurt, then we can learn to fix it. But anything that’s easy in life is not serving a purpose; chances are if it seems uncomfortable it will be the right way to go. Nobody ever got sober by doing what they’ve always done. As an addict, I always wanted things now. Today I’m glad I only want one day at a time. Stressing about tomorrow is silly; we may not even make it that long, and so my advice is to only make plans for today. I’m thankful that I‘ve been blessed with a gift of seeing into a person’s soul, whether they are hiding behind a bottle or a spoon or a pipe. I‘m still trying to figure my shit out, and somehow trying to heal people through my wounds. Alt hough t here is g rowing recognition of t he institutionalization of people wit h mental healt h issues in correctional settings, what are the conditions of t heir daily lives? For individuals wit h a mental healt h disorder, t he cur rent model of ten leaves t hem isolated and fur t her punished by t he lack of robust programs and ser vices. One member of Positive Living BC told me t he challenges of getting his psychiatr ic P5SITIVE LIVING 8 medication while on remand earlier this year—he was advised by the institutional doctor t hat “paranoia is par t of being in pr ison.” Responses such as t his discourage individuals from disclosing t heir mental healt h needs. Our members car r y a burden of shame, related to t he inter woven exper iences of mental illness and living wit h HIV. Simply doing one ’s bit is impossible when p r i s o n e r s f e a r re t a l i a t i o n f o r b e i n g o u te d a s HIV-positive or labelled as “mentally disordered offenders.” Anyt hing t hat deviates from t he “nor mal inmate” sets people apar t and may have material consequences on their daily living. Or sur vival. An awareness of stigma has helped trauma-informed care gain traction in the helping professions as of late, but how do we build this philosophy into worki n g w i t h o f f e n d e r s ? T h e 2 012 p u b l i c a t i o n “ M e n tal H e a l t h St ra te g y f o r C o r re c t i o n s i n C a n a d a ,” a c o l l e c t i ve re p o r t t h a t re f l e c t s t h e e x p e r i e n c e s of staff, stakeholders, and offenders across Canada, contains no mention of trauma, although it emphasizes the recover y model. The recover y model is described by the Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA) as a personal process to gain control, f ind meaning, and develop purpose in one’s life. These values, optimistic and lofty, are diff icult to weave into correctional settings. B y t h e i r ve r y n a t u re , c o r re c t i o n a l s e t t i n g s l i m i t i n d i viduals’ autonomy and self-determination. I asked Tyler, currently on remand, to descr ibe the obstacles he faces. Like many members who have become institutionalized, Tyler f inds it dif f icult to balance his health, and social needs upon release. Of those lucky enough to walk away from the razor wires of a correctional facility, many will carr y an internalized fear of suppor t and a deep distr ust of Justice system professionals. For outreach workers like myself, repatriating people into supportive healthcare becomes more challenging when one considers the minimal amount of suppor t former pr isoners walk out to. For so many members who have become institutionalized, it’s hard to imagine anything different for those like Tyler, who are forced to live in the moment. 5 M e e n a ks h i M a n n o e is a prison outreach worker with Positive Living BC. MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 9 By ◆ Mick Mancave◆ Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 10 Food feeds harm reduction By ◆ Rani Wangsawidjaya ◆ As a dietitian, I am resolved to finding the best and anxiety might occur without a balanced diet. Not use for food and nutrition education to having enough carbs can lead to low serotonin levels, promote the principles of harm reduction. Harm which can make one irritable, depressed, and can reduction is a popular topic of discussion with policy cause sleeping problems. Amino acids, the building makers across Canada, especially here in British blocks of protein foods like meats, eggs, fish, or beans, Columbia, which has been at the forefront of harm are needed to make dopamine. Low levels of dopamine reduction since the first needle-exchange pilot project can also lead to aggressive and irritable behaviour. was delivered in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. Any dietary def iciencies in iron, vitamin B6 or Harm reduction is a set of strategies and principles vitamin B12 can also inspire spells of depression, that can help reduce harm cau sed by drug use. fatigue, poor attention, and poor sleep. Having people Harm reduction came into vogue in 2007 when Drs. attend a harm reduction program in this state can Thomas Kerr and Evan Wood of the BC Centre for make the environment hostile and uncomfortable Excellence in HIV/AIDS (BCCfE) published a document for all parties involved. By providing food in the reporting that safe injection sites, needle-exchange same location as the harm reduction program, programs, and methadone and heroin therapy are this environment can feel less threatening and effective strategies in reducing more secure for negative consequences associated the community. Providing a space with injection drug use. One of the principles of for drug users to eat Safe, high quality, and harm reduction is active together encourages nutritious foods heal and involvement and decisionsocialization and nourish the body. Drug use making from drug users. empowers them can negatively affect how Food can be a positive to feel a sense people eat, leading to vitamin way to engage with the of belonging. and mineral deficiencies. community. Providing Drug users may replace dietary a space for drug users to nutrients with drugs, forget to eat, eat unsafe and eat together encourages socialization and empowers poor quality foods, or have poor eating patterns. them to feel a sense of belonging. This, in turn, Drugs can affect the body’s ability to absorb or use can develop a community of peers who, with their service providers, could determine the best care and the nutrients consumed. Drug abuse is associated plan to reduce harm from drug use. with deficiencies in vitamins and minerals including Every person has the right to be free from hunger. thiamine, niacin, vitamins B6 and B12, calcium, The food that frees peo ple from hunger should be zinc, iron, and potassium, just to name a few (this clean, safe, and nutritious. By integrating food and according to guidelines laid out in Dietitians of nutrition into a humane and altruistic strategy, we are Canada, 2012). It is important to resolve these nutrient respecting the basic human dignity and rights of people deficiencies to reduce harm caused by a weakened who use drugs. This is not a new approach, however, immune system, digestive problems, brittle bones an increased awareness of how food plays a role in a and teeth, and muscle loss. successful harm reduction strategy has nothing short Nutrition plays a key role in brain chemistry. of positive implications. 5 Proper nutrition can normalize neurotransmitters, like serotonin and dopamine, and improve mood. For example, someone who doesn’t get enough carbohydrates in their diet, the sort found in grains, Rani Wangsawidjaya is a vegetables, and fruits, will find that their brain cannot Nutrition Services Coordinator at the function as required. Blood sugar levels become unstable Dr. Peter AIDS Foundation in Vancouver. without an intake of carbohydrate. Feelings of frustration “ P5SITIVE LIVING 10 MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 11 Mental health for aging survivors By ◆ Chrystal Palaty ◆ People 50 and over who are living with HIV are more profoundly affected by the diseases of aging, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, chronic kidney disease, osteoporosis, and cognitive impairment. Researchers believe that HIV causes accelerated or premature aging. This series aims to explore different health aspects of aging with HIV, one body part at a time. Mental health: who’s at risk? The Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA) says 20 percent of Canadians will experience mental illness in their lifetime. An aging HIV-positive population is even more vulnerable to mental health disorders. US Center for Disease Control and revention surveillance data says, “people over the age of fifty with HIV…account for fifty percent of total infected population…and will predictably rise to more than seventy percent by 2020.” The most common mental health challenge for people living with HIV (PLHIV) is depression, which can affect people at all phases of the infection, ranging from mild to severe. PLHIV may experience mood, anxiety, and cognitive disorders disproportionate to non-HIV-positive people. HIV infection can cause inflammation of the central nervous system, which can lead to HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HANDS). Opportunistic infections may impact the nervous system, leading to changes in function and behaviour. Aging is a risk factor for many forms of neurocognitive impairment and mental health disorders in PLHIV. One reason people may not have their mental health treated properly, is that these disorders are not always recognized in older PLHIV. A number of conditions can mimic depression, including hormonal imbalances, anemia, substance abuse, liver disease, dementia, and the side effects of efavirenz and interferon. There are gaps in research for depression an d aging with HIV. Indeed, virtually every article consulted on the subject of mental health suggests the lack of qualitative and quantitative understanding of mental health. In the context of HIV and older populations, this terrain is even muddier. During the P5SITIVE LIVING 11 research for this article, few relevant clinical trials or studies were underway in this area. Science is playing catch up. A positive mental state is essential to all aspects of aging. Depression in PLHIV is associa ted with higher rates of disease transmission, increased distress, reduced treatment adherence, and a lower quality of life. In contrast, positive mental health promotes resilience, improves adherence to antivirals, and supports healthy lifestyle choices. Handling the stigma Poor mental health can affect anyone. Yet, mental health carries a pervasive stigma. The use of the term “mental health” as an alternative to “mental illness” is commonplace, but this has not eliminated the stigma. Fear of discrimination leads many to hide or ignore their mental health issues rather than getting treatment. Two critical factors for optimal mental health are being aware of your feelings and speaking to a doctor. Discuss changes in the way you are thinking or feeling about yourself: decreased sex drive, disrupted sleep, loss of appetite, feeling sad, withdrawing from social interaction, memory impairment, fatigue, panic attacks, excessive worry, the impulse to hurt yourself or others, or inexplicable rage. Speak to your doctor if you are having issues with alcohol or prescribed medications. Depression often presents as somatic symptoms, so mention if you’ve been having headaches or gastrointestinal disturbances. PLHIV already know all too well about painful, isolating stigmas. Society is opening up to the conversation about mental health. As awareness of, and treatment for, mental health emerges as a health initiative, can an HIV-positive specific approach be far off? 5 Chrystal Palaty is a Vancouver-based technical writer. MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 12 PO POSITIVE SITIVE LIVING S SOCIETY OCIETY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA COLUMBIA THURSDAYAUGUST THURSDAY AUGUST20 FIRST mail-out sent not later than Nominee information and the text of any special resolutions to be received by the Returning Officer by SECOND mail-out sent not later than JUNE 2 25 5 JULY JULLLY Y 17 JULY JULLY 23 23 IMPORTANT IMPOR TANT DATES D ATES 22015 015 Voting for the Board of Directors and any Special Resolutions is done by mail-in ballot. The results of the voting will be announced at the AGM by an Independent Returning Officer, who will also count the votes. All members who accept mail from the Society, and for whom the Society has current mailing addresses for, will receive two mail-outs, one in June and one in July. The first mail-out (in June) will include: information about the AGM; an invitation to members to submit special resolutions for consideration by the membership; and an invitation to members who want to run for the Board of Directors to submit the necessary nomination materials. The text of any special resolutions and the information provided by members who want to run for the Board must be received by the Returning Officer by July 17, 2015. AT THE CHATEAU GRANVILLE HOTEL 1100 Granville St. Vancouver Pick up of ballots (from the Society’s Reception Desk) by individuals who do not receive mail starting on JULY JUL LY 27 27 Completed ballots to be received by the Returning Officer by 4PM on AUGUST AUGUST 17 The second mail-out (in July) will include: the ballot to vote for the Board of Directors; the statements and biographical information of those candidates for election to the Board who have supplied them; if applicable, the ballot required to vote for or against any special resolution(s) submitted; and a postage-paid return envelope. All mail-in ballots must be received by the Returning Officer no later than 4PM on August 17, 2015. SIX two-year term positions on the Board of Directors of the Society are to be elected for the period 2015-2017. If you have any questions or would like to receive a copy of the Society’s Annual Report, please call Keith Morris, Secretary, at 604.893.2214 (1.800.994.2437 x 214) and leave a confidential message. All documents relating to the AGM will also be available on the Society’s website at: www.positivelivingbc.org REGISTRATION•••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 5:30 –6:00PM MEETING••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••6:00 •6:00 –7:00PM 7:00 –7:30PM ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••7:00 DINNER•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COMMUNITY FORUM ••••••••••••7:30 ••••••••••••7:30 –8:30PM If you require ASL interpretation at the AGM, please contact the Secretary of the Society. Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 13 A shot of truth Understanding your vaccinations By Dr. David Moore HIV treatment is complicated. The last thing you need is an illness that could make it even more difficult. That’s why the BC Centre for Disease Control (BCCDC) has updated their vaccination recommendations for people living with HIV (PLHIV)—to help you manage your treatment and keep yourself healthy. One of the new recommendations addresses bacterial pneumonia, which continues to be a cause of illness—and in extreme cases, death—among PLHIV. As of April 1, 2015, PVC13 ( brand name Prevnar 13) will be available free for PLHIV. This vaccine will provide you with added protection against bacterial pneumonia, and is an important addition to your vaccination schedule. In Positive Living BC’s community engagement campaign, you had questions about vaccinations, so we asked Dr. David Moore, physician lead of BCCDC’s HIV program, about vaccinations and HIV. Q: Why is this vaccine being recommended for people living with HIV now? Are there any r isks associated with it? A: Even though the risk for acquiring pneumonia has decreased substantially since effective anti-retroviral treatment (ARV) was introduced in the mid-1990s, PLHIV are still at higher risk of contracting pneumonia than the general population and bacterial pneumonia continues to be an important cause of illness and, occasionally, death among PLHIV. The reasons for this are not entirely known, but likely relate to an incomplete restoration of i mmune function even after effective treatment, as well as the higher prevalence of cigarette smoking and other risk factors for pneumonia among PLHIV. For many years, a vaccine for pneumococcal disease, known as PNEU-P-23 (brand name Pneumovax 23), has been recommended and publically funded for HIV-positive individuals in BC. However, Pneumovax 23 does not provide complete protection against pneumonia and Prevnar 13 will provide HIV-positive individuals with add itional protection than being immunized only by Pneumovax 23. The main side effects that patients may experience from the vaccine are a sore arm or redness at the site of injection. Dr. David M. Moore is a research scientist at the British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, and an associate professor in the Department of Medicine, Division of AIDS at the University of British Columbia. He is also the physician lead of the Provincial Health Services Agency HIV Program at the BC Centre for Disease Control. P5SITIVE LIVING 13 Q: Many HIV-positive people change doctors multiple times in their lives. Do you think it’s important for people to track their own vaccinations and proactively ask their care providers for them? A: Having patients actively participate in their own health care is quite valuable, and asking your care provider if your vaccines are up-to-date at each visit is a great way to ensure that this is being monitored. Most clinics or practices have developed some sort of tracking system to assist care providers in tracking vaccinations and other preventive healthcare interventions, but it is very helpful if patients ask about this as well. Q: Should someone still be vaccinated even if they’re not immune-compromised or undetectable? A: Absolutely. Even though your risk for acquiring pneumonia increases as your CD4 count drops or the level of your virus increases, those with HIV are still at a higher risk for acquiring pneumonia than the general population, even if they are receiving effective HIV treatment. Of course, even people without HIV can become infected with pneumonia and the risk increases as people age. PCV-13 requires only one injection and no booster is required. Q: Can someone with HIV get sick by receiving the f lu vaccine? A: Getting vaccinated once per year against influenza is recommended for everyone—especially for PLHIV. While some people may feel that the flu vaccine gave them a cold or flu, this is actually not possible. There are no live organisms in the flu vaccine, only chopped-up bits of the virus that cannot replicate and cause infection. Q: Is a shingles vaccination recommended for people who live with HIV? A: There is some concern about using the shingles vaccine in people with immune system problems. Certainly the shingles vaccine should not be given to anyone with very low cell counts, as the vaccine contains a live virus, which can actually cause illness in some people. Whether the vaccine is safe and effective for people with high CD4 counts is currently an important area of research. This vaccine is not publically funded in BC, meaning that people who want it have to pay for it themselves. BCCDC has created resources to help you understand your vaccinations—what you need and when. To find out more, visit www.immunizebc.ca 5 MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 14 Gay Poz Sex Taking a holistic approach to sex It’s not very often that gay and bisexual HIV-positive men get a chance to look at the role sex plays in their lives. Usually when we talk about our sexual escapades we like to focus on how hot the guy was, or how ‘big’ he was, but what we don’t often acknowledge is the affect of these experiences on our lives; how that event left us feeling days, weeks, even months after. The Gay Poz Sex (GPS) program works with guys to find answers to these questions from each participant’s perspecti ve so they can keep what’s good, get rid of what’s not so good, work on strategies surrounding any challenges to change, and ultimately move in the direction of what they hope for their sexual health. This project has now been in the randomized control trial for over a year in Vancouver and Toronto and we have had some great results. Guys who have completed the program report more confidence when disclosing (telling someone of their HIV status), an increased capacity to talk to s exual partners about HIV, and in some cases increased connection to other members of the HIV-positive community. Following each eight-week GPS program, participants complete three online questionnaires and one qualitative, face-to-face interview. While the online questionnaires are more quantitative in nature–asking questions ranging from depression and HIV to sexual health and practices–the qualitative interview offers participants the opportunity to provide the GPS team with feedback. This feedback is important for improving the program, assessing individual-level program impacts, and evaluating whether or not participants benefitted from the social aspect of the GPS group. From these qualitative interviews the one critique of GPS is that the eight week-period is not long enough and guys would like the program length to be increased. Unfortunately, because we are a research project we are limited to those eight weeks, but there is hope that this program, or some variation thereof, will continue on at Positive Living BC after the research has concluded. In Vancouver, we have just randomized our third cohort of guys. Participants come from a variety of backgrounds and experiences. Because we have created a safe space for them, they feel P5SITIVE LIVING 14 By ◆ Jonathan Postnikoff ◆ comfortable disclosing their personal information, sometimes for the first time, out loud. As facilitators we are always overawed by how much guys are willing to share. Evidently, these conversations need to be had and doing so allows us to address some of the major stressors in our lives. Facilitator Michael Crate says, “there is no better feeling than watching one of our participants find clarity around an issue that has had a significant impact on his life. It truly is the best part of my job.” According to Toronto facilitator Scott Simpson, the impact of the program is similar to what we are seeing in Vancouver. “GPS continues to respond to the social, legal, and medical dynamics within the gay men’s community. Each group echoes their appreciation of a safe space to talk meaningfully about what it’s like to be a gay man living with HIV. They talk about the importance of unpacking their issues, the similarities with other gay, poz men and validating their lived experiences with stigma, disclosure, and isolation.” Often we feel alone in our experiences but this group allows guys to see that gay, HIV-positive men often have more in common than we may think. We see this several times in each group where one guy feels isolated in an experience and when we ask the group who has had a similar occurrence, usually everyone raises their hands, including us facilitators. We realize that for many guys even the thought of opening up to a group of strangers is a real barrier and to those who may be interested but share this sentiment, we are here and ready when you are. There is clearly a need for this type of group and we are hopeful that it will continue on to help more and more people find their way to their sexual health goals. Whatever those may be. For more information, contact me, Jonathan Postnikoff, GPS Facilitator. Visit our website (www.gaypozsex.org), call us at 604.240.7205, or email gps@positivelivingbc.org. 5 Jonathan Postnikoff is Positive Living BC’s treatment outreach coordinator. MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 15 By ◆ Murray Hart ◆ My family would whisper to each other when they talked about people who had depression. They did not regard it as a sickness—it just meant that the person was lazy, a loner, or working the system. My father had a brother who committed suicide because of his depression, P5SITIVE LIVING 15 but this was rarely discussed among the extended family and never with outsiders. I adopted my family’s view of depression, which hindered me from getting help as a young adult. Each time I became depressed, I found it harder to fight back. continued next page MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 16 When I was diagnosed with clinical depression, my therapist and I started looking at patterns, events, and habits that have occurred in my life. When life became too difficult, my response was to f lee. I moved to various provinces in Canada, then London, England to escape, hoping that a fresh start would solve my problems and make me happy. Things would go well for a time, but old habits, feelings, and thoughts would creep into my psyche, and, once again, I would lapse into depression. While living in London, the same patterns, events, and habits soon reemerged. I would work long hours, go home to sleep, and then go back to work. I had a nice apartment and a good job, but I was unhappy. With few friends, I relied on the gay baths for my sexual relief. I allowed myself to get into situations where I chose not to have safe sex. The week I tested positive for HIV, I learned that my best friend had died of cystic fibrosis and that my father’s prostate cancer had spread to his bones, leaving him with about 18 months to live. Months later, another close friend of mine would drink himself to death. I used these events as an excuse to flee. I moved back to my childhood town and began to care for my ailing father. My f ather died a month after I returned home. Soon after, I had a falling out with my sister and I fell into another deep depression. I then made a serious attempt to end my own life. While saving my life, the staff at the hospital told my family that I was HIV-positive—my sister spared no time in telling our family and her friends. A few months after my father’s death, I reasoned that there was no safety o r anonymity in the community and contemplated suicide again. I resorted to the habit of flight instead and moved to Vancouver. Once here, things started out well. I had a small pension and savings and could afford to take some time to settle. I registered at the Immunodeficiency Clinic (IDC) at St. Paul’s Hospital and got to know the city. I also began to meet people on the Internet and soon learned what the initials PNP (party and play) meant. Within a very short time, I discovered that the highs were not quite high enough and that there was no bottom to the lows. My money began to dwindle, and old Understanding “ The week I tested positive for HIV, my best friend died of cystic fibrosis and my father’s cancer spread to his bones, leaving him with about 18 months to live. I wish that controlling clinical depression was as easy as controlling my HIV. I am on a one-a-day tablet regime, my viral load is undetectable, and my CD4 count is above 500. For my depression, I take four different tablets a day and, some days, still find it almost impossible to get out of bed, never mind getting out of the house or cleaning dishes. There is no easy fix. I have had to come to terms with my own stigmas about mental health and HIV. My depression left me vulnerable to getting HIV and having HIV made me more depressed. I need to control my depression as I do my HIV and other health issues. It seems like a long struggle but I a m taking steps and moving forward one day at a time. your mental health HIV is difficult enough to handle alone, but the added burden of poor mental health exacerbates an already challenging health concern. People with HIV (PLHIV) are more vulnerable to mental health emergencies than people who are not HIV-positive. The vulnerability stems from the high-risk activities (unsafe sex and intravenous drug use) PLHIV often engage in. Risky behaviour often results from an HIV diagnosis and its resultant stigma. Anyone can experience short peri ods of sadness from time to time. Some people develop recurrent states of sadness, P5SITIVE LIVING habits and feelings began to flood back. I wanted to run, but I didn’t have the energy or the finances to escape. My doctor referred me to a social worker at IDC, who referred me to the mental health nurse, who in turn referred me to a psychiatrist. My journey to control my depression began. I was connected with a therapist and started attending various groups. IDC offers a program called Changeways that helps people like me to understand what depression is and how to make cognitive choices to change the way I think. Today, I understand better how thoughts can feed depression. I have discovered tools to help change my thought patterns for the better. Getting help for my mental health has been the hardest and, at the same time, the most rewarding thing I have done. 16 helplessness, and the inability to enjoy things for long periods of time. These states are often accompanied by lethargy, somnipathy (sleep disorder), loss of appetite, and—in rare cases—suicidal impulses. This is depression. And it is a common emotional health concern for PLHIV. “All of the people we see are individuals living with HIV,” says Maxine Davis, Executive Director of Vancouver’s Dr. Peter Centre in Vancouver, BC “who are also coping with multiple other health issues such as mental health conditions.” Davis says the reality of concurrent health problems is dire. “When MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 17 these conditions and issues are co-occurring, they can have the impact of magnifying and complicating each of the individual conditions.” The contributing factors to depression are manifold: family history, survivor’s guilt, social isolation, or drug addiction. Depression may seem concurrent to being diagnosed with HIV/AIDS, but it is a separate illness that should be treated as such. “Managing ones mental health, in particular, can become very challenging when a person has other health and social conditions. This in turn can complicate engagement in HIV care and adherence to HIV treatment,” Davis adds. One common treatment for depression is cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)—“talk therapy”—a process that assists people in altering negative thought and life patterns. However, therapy alone is no cure for depression, and it may not be suited in all cases. (Ed. Note: for more on the good and bad of doctor-patient relationships, see this issue’s Last Blast, on page 28). Drugs are another option. Antidepressant cocktails of Celexa, Zoloft, and Prozac or Effexor and Cymbalta are common but neither is a cure. Drug treatment can be quite effective; anyone who is HIV-positive and suffering from depression should speak with their doctor. Medications can take several weeks to work, may only work in conjunction with ongoing talk therapy, or may require adjustment to minimize side effects. The measure of a successful treatment is based on a person’s ability to take medication exactly as directed. “Medication alone is totally insufficient,” said Edward L. Machtinger, director of the Women’s HIV Program at University of Ca lifornia San Francisco, in 2014. Machtinger was speaking about a UCSF study on the “expressive therapy” model initiated by The Medea Project. “Over 90 percent of our patients,” Machtinger said in a UCSF news item at the time, “are on effective antiretroviral therapy but far too many are dying from suicide, addiction, and violence.” Our bodies and minds are intricately connected, allowing for stress and a nxiety to affect our physiology in equally positive and negative measures. HIV, a major stressor, impairs emotional health. Emotional fitness allows us to enjoy life despite a difficult period. There are many supportive community counselling and support services that you can turn to, usually free of charge: hospitals, clinics, AIDS service organizations, or telephone help lines. You can meet with other PLHIV through these services, where peer support and social events bring the HIV community together. Meeting other survivors can help you develop a positive outlook, improve your self-esteem, and build a social network you can rely on for companionship and support. PLHIV often have an unf lattering body image or poor self-esteem. This negative perception can be compounded by weight loss associated with HIV or by lipodystrophy, a common side effect of HIV medication. Exercise is effective for treating mild to moderate depression and for reducing anxiety by counteracting the withdrawal, inactivity, and despair that characterize depression. In some cases, exercise P5SITIVE LIVING 17 may also reduce anger and anxiety, leading to clearer thinking. Outdoor activity has the added bonus of giving your body the much-needed vitamin D sunlight offers. There are stigmas attached to seeking professional help but a trustworthy and supportive doctor can help you navigate your way back to fine emotional health. Vancouver’s IDC is one place to start. “The IDC offers comprehensive HIV care which includes mental health and addictions services,” says Mary Petty, of the IDC. “A mental health team [of] psychiatrists, social workers, a psychologist and a psychiatric nurse” is open to “PLHIV [who] can work with the professionals on this team to address mental health problems through assessment, treatment, and ongoing support.” “ As a person living with HIV, you may at times feel lonely or isolated. Your feelings of loneliness may become even more pronounced. The research community has been working to unlock the doors to mental illness, as it relates to HIV. A 2001 study concluded that, “Although the majority of HIV-positive individuals appear to be psychologically resilient, this metaanalysis provides strong evidence that HIV infection is associated with a greater risk for major depressive disorders. Future research should focus on identifying pathways of risk and resilience for depression within this population.” (This study, by Jeffrey Ciesla and John Roberts, can be accessed online from The American Journal of Psychiatry.) Yet as recently as 2014, similar conclusions and recommendations were still being sounded. Matthew Mimiaga of Harvard Medical School told Reuters in December 2014, “Future research should also examine whether these mental disorders and behavioral risk factors create barriers to men getting treatment for HIV once they are infected.” The intersection of mental health and HIV is still under construction. Hope is infinite—even if you feel like you have no room for hope. By maintaining a healthy mind in a healthy body, you can look forward to not only a long life, but also a fulfilling and meaningful life with HIV. You may feel lonely or isolated. Your feelings of loneliness may become even more pronounced. And though it can be difficult to do so, now is the time to seek out friends, family, and peers who can help you explore your options. And that is the key takeaway—you have options. 5 Murray Hart is a former schoolteacher who is new to the Vancouver area. MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 18 Hepatitis & depression: A personal take By ◆ Suzan Krieger ◆ F or months, I had not been feeling well. Food was unappealing and my energy was gone. After convincing my doctor I was not a hypochondriac, she ran me through a gauntlet of tests. I can still recall the day my doctor told me I tested positive for hepatitis C (HCV). Without applying, I had joined approximately 80,000 other British Columbians in the HCV club. I was angry, and more than a little scared. I felt faint, and could not believe it happened to me. How? Why? And who is to blame? A fter the first few weeks of depression, I picked myself up and demanded to know how to fix this. I went to the first clinic recommended to me and started six months of anemia creating, stomach churning, and lifethreatening treatment. I got through it with the help of friends, but no support from the medical community. Many days I stood in a hot shower trying to scald the chills out of me. There was nausea and appetite loss from the treatment of interferon and ribavirin. My hemoglo bin was so low I could not walk more than a block. My dog Charlie was ready to start advertising for a new owner, one who would take him for walks and play soccer. My hair was thinning. I developed a rash all over, including on my face. I felt alone and scared that the treatment would kill me rather than cure me. But in the end, it did neither. Sometimes I get stuck on the diagnosis and don’t know how to move forward, or how to see the treatment through. So, I decided just to live with the hepa titis C. After all, we’re all going to die of something—right? A few years later, I went to a workshop put on by Positive Living BC that featured Dr. Brian Conway, the medical director of the Vancouver Infectious Diseases Centre (VIDC) and a Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal honoree. At the close of the workshop, I spoke with Dr. Conway and explained how I had tried and felt I had lost on my treatment. He gave me his card and with a confident voice said, “I can help.” The VIDC uses open discussion about feelings—treating one with respect and dignity and providing stellar medical care in as comfortable a surrounding as possible. The team’s approach can be thought of as holistic medicine (a form of healing that considers the whole person)—body, mind, spirit, and emotions—in the quest for optimal health and wellness. P5SITIVE LIVING 18 Dr. Conway helped me find Dr. Patricia Howitt, who is now my primary physician, while Shawn Sharma, a registered nurse, set up a conf erence call with Gilead and my healthcare insurance company, clearing the way for treatment with the new drug, Sovaldi (sofosbuvir) and ribavirin. The cost of the combination treatment is around $93,000 per year. Sharma also started me on a vitamin program and made himself available to me throughout the three-month treatment program. “ My hair was thinning. I developed a rash all over, including on my face. I felt alone and scared that the treatment would kill me rather than cure me. But in the end, it did neither. The new treatment had side effects like fatigue, moodiness and irritability, but was only three months long. Charlie remained with me. After all, he could not pay the advertising bill he was sure to run up looking for a new home. The VIDC did everything from blood testing to ultrasound scans. Dr. Conway met with me and explained my new treatment and, week by week, he kept my spirits up and encouraged me that this treatment—this time—would work. VIDC’s waiting room is a wonderful, chaotic haven filled with patients waiting for their turn to be cared for. The staff provides TV, coffee, snacks, information, and supp ort for the waiting room folk. Four months after my treatment ended, I am no longer infected with HCV. My health has improved and I have nothing but a great future to look forward to. The biggest lesson I learned is that for me to see treatment through, it requires a team that includes doctors, specialists, nurses, receptionists, cohorts, family and friends. And of course, a dog named Charlie. 5 Suzan Krieger has been employed at Positive Living BC for 19 years. What motivates her is the love of family and faithful companion Charlie, a blind dog rescued from the New Orleans Katrina crisis and flown to Vancouver to a new home and loving owner by the charitable and kind Drew Barrymore. MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 19 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 20 My name is Lynden Neudorf, and I hold a Master’s degree in Clinical Social Work from the University of Calgary. My previous clinical experience includes working with adults at a community mental health agency, both as a therapist and as an assessor. I also have experience working with gay men and the LGBT community, as well as local and international work in the field of HIV. My areas of practice include grief and loss, trauma, sexuality and questions of personal identity, depression, anxiety, and problematic substance use. I use a gay affirmative and strengths based approach, while also utilizing various therapeutic tools as appropriate. This January, I began a new counselling role with the STOP HIV/AIDS Team at Vancouver Coastal Health. This role was created for gay/bi men and other men who have sex with men (MSM) as a way to provide mental health support to a group of people with specific needs. People have asked me why we need a gay men’s counselor, and what makes gay men’s counselling different from other kinds of counselling. I, too, sometimes wonder what exactly makes gay men’s counselling different from any other counselling. In the end, we all share the same universal human experiences of joy, grief and loss, heartbreak, success, connection, and vulnerability. Do gay men really experience these things any differently from other people? What kinds of unique experiences do many gay men share that impact their emotional health and well-being? When we think about trauma, we often picture stories of war, violent physical assault, or childhood abuse. But the simplest definition of trauma that I’ve heard is when a person’s capacity to process an event or series of events is overloaded. This includes the young gay person who is taunted or physically threatened for years, and doesn’t have a safe person to talk to about what is happening. These frequent and ongoing experiences of being in danger, whether emotionally, verbally, or physically, have the power to completely override our ability to process what is happening. We can eventually learn not to trust and to even hide who we are. Stories of trauma, often involving families of origin and experiences of growing up in various communities across Canada, seem to be the norm rather than the exception for many of the men I work with. As they learn to distrust others, these parts of their story stay buried inside. The high rates of HIV infection P5SITIVE LIVING 20 among gay men can exacerbate these negative feelings even more. It is essential to understand and listen for those experiences, because they shape gay men’s choices, the ways in which they see themselves, and perhaps lifelong feelings of deep shame and inadequacy about who they are. These worldviews aren’t easily dismantled, especially when people struggle to find alternative ways of seeing themselves and relating to others. In order to explain how these experiences alter the way we see and present ourselves to others, we sometimes use the term “internalized homophobia.” This concerns me because I think it turns society’s sickness into our own. I like to think of gay people who need to pretend that they aren’t gay as being smart and committed to their own survival. It’s a strategy that isn’t going to hold up over the full course of an adult life, but I know that it has saved numerous lives when nothing else was available. Earlier on, I asked if gay men have a unique shared experience that makes us see ourselves, and the world, any differently from others. But I also wonder if we need to find and experience hope and meaning differently in the face of adversity. Gay resources are limited, and often only found in major urban centres. Current options can largely depend on what resources are available. Future possibilities, on the other hand, can be endless and are limited only by someone’s ability to dream big. Exceptions look at the way people have survived and thrived in spite of overwhelming difficulty. And lastly, solutions build on past and current successes. I do not want to come across as victimizing gay men and presenting us as helpless and weak. I believe that nothing could be further from the truth. The counselling work I do is extremely varied, and everyone has his own individual story, strengths, and way of seeing the world. I do think that it is essential to recognize common threads in the stories of the men I work with, both past hurt and future possibility. If we want liberation and freedom in our lives, we need to be able to be honest about where we have been and where we want to go. For more information, please contact STOP HIV/AIDS team at 604.838.1331 5 Lynden Neudorf is a counselor with the STOP HIV Team at Vancouver Coastal Health. MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 21 The Doctor will see you now By ◆ Shelly Tognazzini ◆ I remember meeting Dr. Andrea Szewchuk at the John Ruedy Immunodeficiency Clinic at St. Paul’s Hospital (IDC) last year and being taken aback by her youth, confidence, and, in her words, “person-centered” approach. Extremely calm, approachable, and down to earth, she had a very natural nonjudgmental demeanor, right down to the lack of a white coat in clinic. When I meet up with her for lunch to interview her in Victory Square on a glorious sunny day, it is obvious she is passi onately committed to inclusive patient-centric care. We sit down on the ledge in the park, observing the activity around us, ensuring we can carve out a little space and time to talk and enjoy the sun. It’s easy to see she knows the ‘hood, and the people in it. She smiles and enjoys the interactions and urban noises around us. “I am interested in how people experience the world and how that works within institutionalized oppression,” she says. Her work and volunteerism reflect t hat. Dr. Szewchuk works at the IDC providing primary care for people living with HIV, and at the Pender Community Health Centre, and through the VCH Transgender Healthcare Clinic. She is also a centre organizer with the Catherine White Holman Wellness Centre, a low-barrier volunteer centre providing care to the transgender and gender-diverse community. “I think that as a family doctor and a person who identifies as queer, I feel a responsibility to engage and empower people in care, particularly those that have often not had the best experience with healthcare providers and the healthcare system. From a social justice perspective, we have the opportunity to help those most marginalized and that is something very important to me. Also, from a medical perspective HIV interests me, particularly in some of the most marginalized in the trans community. It is impossible to look at the health care of an individual without looking at the health of the community,” she says. Positive Living BC’s Care Registry (www.careregistry.ca) is an online database designed to connect people living with HIV/AIDS with care providers in BC. It provides contact information for care providers including physicians, dentists, massage therapists, nurse practitioners, counsellors, and dietitians who welcome clients living with HIV/AIDS, and who will provide respectful, supportive care. Healthcare providers listed on the registry have the medical knowledge to meet the needs of people living with HIV/AIDS. The Care Registry is for information purposes only and does not recommend, advocate, or endorse any particular service. P5SITIVE LIVING 21 Providing service on the Downtown Eastside, she sees so many clients who are dealing with much more than HIV. Poverty, homelessness, racialization, mental health issues, and addictions only multiply the barriers to, access to, and engagement with care. Dr. Szewchuk works with an open mind, a curious nature, and meets her patients where their needs are at today, at this moment, in this appointment. She wants her clients to feel heard, and goes out of her way to make sure they are. Whether that is for HIV care or transgender support and referral, Dr. Szewchuk is a welcome addition to both the LGBT and the HIV community. “Historically, transgender health has not really been as well supported as it should be. I think that is shifting–it just needs to shift more quickly. I am concerned with providing more accessible, safe, and healthy care for trans and gender-expansive people in our health system. Outside of her clinic schedu le and volunteer work, Dr. Szewchuk loves to be outdoors, camping, gardening, riding her bicycle, and applying social justice to her practice and principles. As we wrap up our interview, Dr. Szewchuk says, “I feel extremely lucky and privileged to do what I do. Yeah, I am new and young, but I love working with the eclectic and diverse community I do–it’s work that has value, and I love the challenges it presents.” Szewchuk is available for drop-in at the IDC at St. Paul’s on Tuesd ay afternoons providing HIV primary care, at the Pender Community Health Centre Mondays and Fridays, and at the VCH Transgender Clinic. She is listed on the HIV Care Registry (www.careregistry.ca) and can be reached through any of the three clinics and organizations listed below. 5 Shelly Tognazzini is the treatment, health, and wellness coordinator at Positive Living BC. John Ruedy Immunodeficiency Clinic 5th floor, St. Paul’s Hospital, 604.806.8060. Pender Street Clinic 59 West Pender St, 604.669.9181 Catherine White Holman Wellness Centre 1145 Commercial Drive (in the REACH Clinic), 604.442.4352 MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 22 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 23 The TriiAdd study is improving adherence and suppression By ◆ Heiko Decosas ◆ O ver the last decade, treatment for HIV has improved significantly, with an increase in treatment options. However, according to TriiAdd study (CTN 286) principal investigator Dr. Marina Klein, “close to 30 percent of Canadians living with HIV (PLHIV) who have a prescription for HIV medications struggle with adherence: starting and stopping, or switching treatments frequently.” These people are unable to consistently suppress the virus, leading to health complications and a further risk of transmission. The TriiAdd study will test to see if using a new single tablet regimen (STR) called Triumeq with counseling support can improve adherence and virus suppression for PLHIV. “With this study, we hope to show that one-on-one counseling alongside a well-tolerated single-tablet HIV regimen provides a level of healthcare that meets people where they are at and improves their health outcomes,” says Dr. Klein. Dr. Brian Conway is lead doctor and researcher at the Vancouver Infectious Diseases Centre (IDC) and a co-investigator for the study. “We focus specif ically on engaging more vulnerable patients into a multi-disciplinary healthcare environment. We deal with the challenges of adherence on a daily basis and, given our focus on HIV and hepatitis C, this new study is well suited to our centre’s communitybased research approach.” Researchers hope to recruit 100 participants from ten Canadian CTN-affiliated sites. PLHIV who are 18-years old or older with documented evidence of non-adherence and poor virologic control are eligible. Participants will be randomized in a one-to-one fashion to the experimental arm, switching immediately to the Triumeq tablet along with adherence counselling, or to the control arm, continuing on with the currently prescribed HIV treatment regimen, as well as additional adherence counseling. People randomized in the control arm will be offered the possibility of switching to Triumeq after 24 weeks so everyone will have a chance to make the switch to the STR. Jonathan Roger, the new study coordinator, says, “The research team is currently conducting site feasibility assessments across Canada and is looking to open between two and four recruitment sites in BC early this summer.” For more information contact ctninfo@hivnet.ubc.ca 5 P5SITIVE LIVING 23 Studies enrolling in BC CTNPT 003 Bone and renal outcomes in tenofovir-exposed infants BC site: Oak Tree Clinic, Vancouver CTNPT 011 Monitoring penicillin levels for syphilis BC site: St. Paul’s Hospital, Vancouver CTNPT 014 Combination therapy for HIV in the setting of HCV co-infection BC sites: Vancouver Infectious Diseases Centre (VIDC), Vancouver | Cool Aid Community Clinic, Victoria CTN 222 Canadian co-infection cohort BC site: St. Paul’s Hospital, VIDC, Vancouver CTN 240 Valacyclovir in delaying antiretroviral treatment entry (VALIDATE) trial BC sites: VIDC, Oak Tree Clinic, Vancouver | Cool Aid Community Clinic, Victoria CTN 248 Incentives stop AIDS and HIV in drug users BC site: VIDUS/ACCESS Project, Vancouver | Cool Aid Community Clinic, Victoria CTN 262 Canadian HIV women’s sexual and reproductive health cohort study (CHIWOS) BC contact: 604.806.8615, 1.855.506.8615 (toll-free) | allison_carter@sfu.ca CTN 264 Investigating access to food for people living with HIV-HCV co-infection BC Site: VIDC, St. Paul’s Hospital CTN 26 HIV canquit smoking study BC site: St. Paul’s Hospital To find out more about these & other CTN studies, visit the CIHR Canadian HIV Trials Network at hivnet.ubc.ca or call 1.800.661.4664. Heiko Decosas is the communications and knowledge translation officer at the CIHR Canadian HIV Trials Network in Vancouver. MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 24 POZ In grateful recognition of the generosity of Positive Living BC supporters Gifts received January – February 2015 C NTRIBUTI NS $5000+ LEGACY CIRCLE Peter Chung* TD Bank Financial Group $2500 - $4999 VISIONARIES The Shooting Stars Foundation $1000 - $2499 CHAMPIONS Metropolitan Pharmacy* Dean Nelson* Kumar Shahani* Harvey Strydhorst* Bramwell Tovey* Paul Goyan* Gary R. Bell Gaynor C. Yeung Law Corporation Docusystems Integrations INC Dragonwires Telecom INC $500 - $999 LEADERS Brian Lambert* Deborah Bourque* Emet G. Davis* Christian M. Denarie* Scott Elliott* James Goodman* Silvia Guillemi* Cliff Hall* Ross Harvey* Mike Holmwood* Fraser Norrie* Leslie Rae* Donald G. Seaton* Blair Smith* Chris Staples Mahmoud Virani* Kasey Reese Marthinus Wasserfall Henry Wozniak Fraser King $150 - $499 HEROES Jeffery Alexander* Wayne Avery* Cheryl Basarab* Ryan Bernhauser John Bishop* Kevin Bougher Elizabeth Briemberg* Susan C. Burgess* Len Christiansen* Vince Connors* Ken Coolen* Edith Davidson* Maxine Davis* Carmine Digiovanni* Caryl Dolinko Gretchen Dulmage* Patricia Dyck* Dena R. Ellery* Don Evans* Stephen French* Gap Inc Jean Sebastian Hartell* Wayne Hartrick Jaqueline Haywood* Alexander Hird Ron J. Hogan* Leah K. Iverson Pam Johnson* Rebecca Johnston* Elaine Jones* Helen Kang* Knights of Malta Dogwood Chapter Mona Kwong Rick Laird David Love Colin Macdonald* James McLean Kate McMeiken* Carl Meadows Mark Mees* Laura H. Morris* Cameron Murton James Ong* Dennis Parkinson* Anil R. Patade Bonnie Pearson* Mary Petty* Pharmasave #87 Neil Power* Katherine M. Richmond* Caterina Rizzo Alin Senecal-Harkin* Lillian M. Soga* Keith A. Stead* Ronald G. Stipp* Jane Talbot* P5SITIVE LIVING 24 Lara Manierka Salvatore Martorana* Angela McGie* Mitchell McKamey Lindsay Mearns* May Mehrabi Roger Merkosky Bea Miller Grant Minish Felipe Mollica Austin Neaves Valerie Nicholson Sam Omidi Penny Parry* Leo Patierno John Pedersen Lorne Prupas Lisa Raichle* Sheldon Rennie Adrian Smith* Daphne Spencer Stephanie Tennant Stephanos Tsungaris Carolyn Unsworth Vancity Community Foundation Flora Ware Ross Waring Fred West Ron Wilson Adrienne Wong* Dean Thullner* Stephanie Tofield* Top Drawers Apparel Inc. Glyn A. Townson* Ralph E. Trumpour* Louella Vincent* $20 - $149 FRIENDS Belle Ancell Bernard Anderson* Patricia G. Barlor* Be the Change Group Jag Bilkhu Richard Bing Scott Blythe Lisa Bradbury* Shelley Bridge Sandra Bruneau* Leonora Calingasan Ernesto Caranto Adriane Carr Ann Caulfield Chris G. Clark* Melissa Clarkson Barry DeVito* Tobias Donaldson* Explorer Software INC Solomon Gauthier Carolien Geiger Kerry Gibson Frank Gillespie* Leah Gregg Amanda Groves Todd Hancock Tracey L. Hearst* HEU Support Services Facility Local Richard Housser Heather Inglis* Chris Kean* Ryan Kreut Catherine Lamb Teresa Laturnus Miranda Leffler* Lori Leung Gerry Lising William Liu Sharon E. Lou-Hing* MAY •• JUNE 2015 * Denotes monthly donors (reflects the total contribution for the year) To make a contribution to Positive Living BC, contact the Manager of Major Gifts and Donor Relations, Zoran Stjepanovic. e zorans@positivelivingbc.org t 604.893.2282 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 25 PROFILE OF A VOLUNTEER Noli has the ability to make every moment breathe with integrity and respect. His commitment to Health and Wellness through his volunteer time is not only commendable, but resounding in the ripple effect it has on each person he treats. His smile could light the darkest day from a mile away. SHELLY TOGNAZZINI, TREATMENT, HEALTH AND WELLNESS COORDINATOR * NOLI CATAPANG* WHAT IS YOUR VOLUNTEER HISTORY? HOW WOULD YOU RATE POSITIVE LIVING BC? Since becoming a registered acupuncturist, I’ve been a regular volunteer acupuncturist for Vancouver Homeless Connect and Under One Umbrella. Currently my only volunteer work with PLBC is as an acupuncturist. I love PLBC. There are many worthy organizations where I could volunteer my skill set but I opted to continue to volunteer here because I was so impressed by the members, volunteers, and staff. WHY DID YOU PICK POSITIVE LIVING BC? WHAT IS POSITIVE LIVING BC ‘S STRONGEST POINT? I was originally just supposed to volunteer on a temporary basis until the previous acupuncturist’s replacement would be ready to start. The latter ended up not being able to continue the work so I opted to stay on. PLBC provides so many quality services to its members. Furthermore, it strives to make these accessible and is able to create a strong sense of community while doing so. P5SITIVE LIVING 25 MAY •• JUNE 2015 WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE MEMORY OF YOUR TIME AS A VOLUNTEER AT POSITIVE LIVING BC? It means a lot to me that folks are allowing me to have an instrumental role in managing their health. The work I do here affords me access to conditions and concerns that I rarely get to work on in my private practice. It can be c hallenging but I can’t help but feel that it’s making me a better practitioner. Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 26 Where to find HELP If you’re looking for help or information on HIV/AIDS, the following list is a starting point. For more comprehensive listings of HIV/AIDS organizations and services, please visit www.positivelivingbc.org/about-other-organizations bA Loving Spoonful bANKORS (West) bPurpose Society for Youth & Families bAIDS Society of Kamloops bDr. Peter Centre bRed Road HIV/AIDS Network bFriends for Life bVancouver Native Health Society Suite 100 – 1300 Richards St, Vancouver, BC V6B 3G6 t 604.682.6325 e clients@alovingspoonful.org www.alovingspoonful.org 101 Baker Street Nelson, BC V1L 4H1 t 250.505.5506 or 1.800.421.AIDS e information@ankors.bc.ca www.ankors.bc.ca 1110 Comox Street Vancouver, BC V6E 1K5 t 604.608.1874 e info@drpetercentre.ca www.drpetercentre.ca (ASK Wellness Centre) 433 Tranquille Road Kamloops, BC V2B 3G9 t 250.376.7585 or 1.800.661.7541 e info@askwellness.ca www.askwellness.ca bAIDS Vancouver 40 Begbie Street New Westminster, BC V3M 3L9 t 604.526.2522 e info@purposesociety.org www.purposesociety.org 61-1959 Marine Drive North Vancouver, BC V7P 3G1 t 778.340.3388 e info@red-road.org www.red-road.org 1459 Barclay Street Vancouver, BC V6G 1J6 t 604.682.5992 e email@friendsforlife.ca www.friendsforlife.ca 449 East Hastings Street Vancouver, BC V6A 1P5 t 604.254.9949 e vnhs@shawbiz.ca www.vnhs.net bLiving Positive bVancouver Island Persons 713 Johnson Street, 3rd Floor Victoria, BC V8W 1M8 t 250.384.2366 or 1.800.665.2437 e info@avi.org www.avi.org 168 Asher Road Kelowna, BC V1X 3H6 t 778.753.5830 or 1.800.616.2437 e info@lprc.ca www.livingpositive.ca 1139 Yates Street Victoria, BC V8V 3N2 t 250.382.7927 or 1.877.382.7927 e support@vpwas.com www.vpwas.com bAIDS Vancouver Island (Campbell River) bMcLaren Housing bWings Housing Society bOkanagan Aboriginal AIDS Society bYouthCO AIDS Society 803 East Hastings Vancouver, BC V6A 1RB t 604.893.2201 e contact@aidsvancouver.org www.aidsvancouver.org bAIDS Vancouver Island (Victoria) t 250.830.0787 or 1.877.650.8787 e info@avi.org www.avi.org/campbellriver bAIDS Vancouver Island (Courtenay) t 250.338.7400 or 1.877.311.7400 e info@avi.org www.avi.org/courtenay bAIDS Vancouver Island (Nanaimo) t 250.753.2437 or 1.888.530.2437 e info@avi.org www.avi.org/nanaimo bAIDS Vancouver Island (Port Hardy) t 250.902.2238 e info@avi.org www.avi.org/porthardy bANKORS (East) 46 - 17th Avenue South Cranbrook, BC V1C 5A8 t 250.426.3383 or 1.800.421.AIDS e gary@ankors.bc.ca www.ankors.bc.ca Resource Centre Okanagan 200-649 Helmcken Street Vancouver, BC V6B 5R1 t 604.669.4090 e info@mclarenhousing.com www.mclarenhousing.com 200-3717 Old Okanagan Way Westbank, BC V4T 2H9 t 778.754.5595 e info@oaas.ca www.oaas.ca bPositive Living Fraser Valley Society Unit 1 – 2712 Clearbrook Road Abbotsford, BC V2T 2Z1 t 604.854.1101 e info@plfv.org www.plfv.org bPositive Living North West 3862F Broadway Avenue Smithers, BC V0J 2N0 t 250.877.0042 or 1.866.877.0042 www.plnw.org P5SITIVE LIVING 26 MAY •• JUNE 2015 Living With HIV/AIDS Society 12–1041 Comox Street Vancouver, BC V6E 1K1 t 604.899.5405 e wingsinfo@shaw.ca www.wingshousing.bc.ca 205–568 Seymour Street Vancouver, BC V6B 3J5 t 604.688 1441 or 1.855.968.8426 e info@youthco.org www.youthco.org Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 27 POSITIVE LIVING BC SOCIETY BUSINESS UPCOMING BOARD MEETINGS 2015/16 TUESDAYS 4.30PM STANDING COMMITTEES & SUBCOMMITTEES If you are a member of the Positive Living Society of BC, you can get involved and help make crucial decisions by joining a committee. To become a voting member on a committee, please attend three consecutive meetings. Here is a list of some committees you might be interested in and their contact information. More committees are listed at www.positivelivingbc.org BOARD ROOM May 12, 2015 Financial Statements | February Executive Committee Director of Human Resources May 26, 2015 Board & Volunteer Development_ Marc Seguin t 604.893.2298 e marcs@positivelivingbc.org Written Executive Director Report Executive Committee Director of Community Based Research June 9, 2015 Complete Board Evaluation Chart Standing Committees Financial Statements| March Director of Fund Development June 23, 2015 Positive Action Committee_ Ben Fussell t 604.893.2283 e benf@positivelivingbc.org Education & Communications_ Adam Reibin e adamr@positivelivingbc.org t 604.893.2209 Health Promotion_ Elgin Lim e elginl@positivelivingbc.org Written Executive Director Report Executive Committee Quarterly Department Reports - 1st Quarter Director of Operations & Administration t 604.893.2225 History Alive!_ Marc Seguin e marcs@positivelivingbc.org t 604.893.2298 July 7, 2015 Executive Committee Membership Statistics Director of Programs & Services Positive Living Magazine_ Jason Motz t 604.893.2206 e living@positivelivingbc.org Positive Living BC is located at 803 East Hastings, Vancouver. For more information, contact: Alexandra Regier, director of operations t 604.893.2292 or e alexr@positivelivingbc.org t 604.893.2259 Support Services_ Jackie Haywood e jackieh@positivelivingbc.org 803 East Hastings Vancouver BC Canada V6A 1R8 Name__________________________________________________ Address ____________________ City _____________________ ❍ BC ASOs & Healthcare providers by donation: Minimum $6 per annual subscription. Please send ____ subscription(s) Prov/State _____ Postal/Zip Code________ Country_____________ ❍ Please send Positive Living BC Membership form Phone ________________ E-mail ________________________ ❍ Enclosed is my donation of $______ for Positive Living I have enclosed my cheque of $______ for Positive Living * Annual subscription includes 6 issues. ❍ $25 in Canada ❍ $50 (CND $)International Please send ______ subscription(s) Cheque payable to Positive Living BC. (membership includes free subscription) contact > positivelivingbc.org • living@positivelivingbc.org • 604.893.2206 P5SITIVE LIVING 27 MAY •• JUNE 2015 Issue96_in9_liv poz mag.qxd 2015-05-05 19:59 Page 28 By ◆ Paul Goyan ◆ It’s almost 5 am. I am at the computer trying to knock off something personal and amusing for a mental health awareness article. When people use the term mental health, what they really mean is mental illness. I stumble upon an email that reveals this doozy—“Happy Optimism Month! It’s Gonna Be Great!” I almost puke. I try to be optimistic and avoid any pessimism that can worsen my chronic depression. If I’m neither wholly optimistic nor pessimistic, how then might my general outlook be classified? Think of me as an optimist with a chip on his shoulder. I may not yet be a full-blown optimist, but I’ve come a long way from my sarcastic, cynical past. I celebrated my 30 th anniversary last month. Three decades of living with HIV—that’s half of my life. I’m grateful to be alive— happy even, although I’d be happier if my body was younger and lighter. With gentle determination and my daily doses of Effexor, Vyvanse, and testosterone gel, I feel pretty good physically, and, much of the time, mentally. None of this would have been possible without the care I received from a number of therapists. The late Dr. Merv McArthur, a gentle, smiling Buddha of a man was the first to treat my depression. Next was Dr. Peggy Koopman, a brilliant and charming psychologist who worked on my empathy, finding me to be somewhat like the Tin Man from The Wizard of Oz. For eight years now, I have been with Dr. Donna Dryer, a Cortes Island psychiatrist who lives in a rainforest and researches psychedelics. She accepts me for who I am while nudging me to move forward. No promise of cures, just a better understanding of whom I am and the tools to deal with the challenges of life. But in-between Drs. Koopman and Dryer, and for five tumultuous years, there was my very own Dr. Strangelove. A Kleinian psychoanalyst and university professor, Dr. S was in his mid-fifties, a native of Rio de Janeiro who moved to Canada after studying psychoanalysis in London. I did not fool Dr. S and I feel as though he never liked me. (“It’s not that I am indifferent,” he would say. How comforting.) Middle-aged and balding, he wore clothes that suited his tall, slim build. There was a little bit of Julio Iglesias in him, a ladies’ man who was proud of it. We made it through five years together, three fifty-minute sessions per week. P5SITIVE LIVING 28 I would bus to Dr. S’s house. Ushered into his office, I would lay down on his black leather couch while he sat behind me drinking espresso. We had a difficult relationship. I find it hard to connect with a disembodied voice. Worse, according to him, everything I did was wrong. He pushed my buttons, and I pushed his— transference and counter-transference. I had been HIV-positive for five years when we started. Dr. S tried to crack my psychic defences. “You have AIDS,” he would say. “You’ll be dead in six months.” Since my CD4 count at the time was around 1200 per ml, I kept arguing that I had HIV, not AIDS. He would have none of it. I wouldn’t have stayed if I hadn’t been told that he was my last chance. Ten years earlier, I would have rejected him outright as a homophobe. But with the start of the AIDS epidemic, I was concerned that he was right. The fact is, Dr. S did not like homosexuals. “You homosexuals,” he once said, “are all like chickens—you behave like you have a cloaca: you shit where you have sex.” (Cloaca is the single opening to the chicken’s intestinal, reproductive, and urinary tracts.) We would part ways eventually, but despite my reservations, I learned much from Dr. S. But it is impossible for people like me to make progress in therapy without knowing that the therapist is on my side, and Dr. Dryer is, no question. In today’s self-help culture, most people don’t need or want a therapist; or if they do, they can’t find the right person or afford to pay. Therapy or not, we have to live our lives by moving forward, not living in the past. Often I find the lyrics of a song can serve as a mantra for selfempowerment and healthy living—physically, mentally, and spiritually. Johnny Mercer’s “Ac-Cent-Tchu-ate the Positive” is one example: You’ve got to accentuate the positive Eliminate the negative And latch on to the affirmative Don’t mess with Mister In-Between. I need to do more work ac-cent-tchu-ating the positive aspects. I may be almost 60, but I am a work in progress. 5 Paul Goyan is the past treasurer of the board of Positive Living BC. MAY •• JUNE 2015