Abstract
This article is a description of how cross-cultural services in mental health have evolved in Vancouver. With 49% of Vancouver’s total population described as a ‘visible minority’ by Statistics Canada, it has been essential for the city, in its efforts to provide health care that is accessible, available and acceptable to all, to develop health care that acknowledges racial and cultural diversities. Vancouver’s Cross Cultural Mental Health Services had their beginnings over 25 years ago. The services encompass both formal and informal sectors of the healthcare system, are provided at primary, secondary and tertiary levels of healthcare delivery and are available through hospital- and community-based services. With recent regionalization of British Columbia’s health services, the cross-cultural mental health service has experienced increased coordination under the administration of the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority (one of six British Columbia health regions). The initial elements of a cross-cultural mental health service consisted of the Vancouver Association for the Survivors of Torture, the Cross-Cultural Clinic at Vancouver General Hospital, and the Multicultural Liaison Workers Program of the Vancouver Community Mental Health Service. Collaboration and partnerships between the formal and informal sectors support each other, bridge gaps in services and provide a milieu for growth and development.
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