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Therrien honoured for championing Sudbury hospice



Léo Therrien of Sudbury had a life-changing experience after a visit to Haiti in his first year at Laurentian University. "It was a cultural shock coming back here...it really hit me," he said. He decided to go into social work because he wanted to help people and make a difference, and that's exactly what he has done.

Winner of the 2010 Community Builders Award of Excellence for health care, Therrien is the executive director of the Maison Vale Inco Hospice, a place where people go to live their final journey. Along with staff and volunteers, he has created a place full of life, love and laughter.

Some call the hospice "a prelude to heaven," and the people who work there "angels."

Leo Therrien, executive director, Maison Vale Inco Hospice."This isn't a sad place where the focus is on death," said Therrien. "Here, the focus is on life."

The hospice has a large kitchen/dining room area, a fireplace, soft lighting, spectacular views of Bethel Lake, walls covered with paintings by Sudbury artists, tasteful furnishings and even a large playroom for children. Visitors are welcomed 24/7.

Therrien worked previously with Development and Peace, an organization that secures funding for projects in the developing world, and then co-founded Village International Sudbury, a nonprofit organization selling fair-trade products from developing countries.

He was hired in 2000 as the executive director of Maison La Paix, the only AIDS hospice in Northern Ontario. Under his guidance, Maison La Paix, expanded its mandate to provide end-of-life care to the general public.


Need

An estimated 1,200 people require palliative care in Sudbury every year.

Therrien recognized a need in the community for a larger hospice, a place where people could live and die in peace with dignity. Maison Vale Inco Hospice, which has 10 private bedrooms, opened in September 2008.

Therrien was involved in the building of the hospice from beginning to end. The first hurdle after securing government support was raising $4 million for the building through the My Sudbury Needs a Hospice campaign chaired by Gerry Lougheed Jr.

"I believe if it were not for Léo Therrien, we would not have the hospice we have today in Sudbury," said Father Gérald C. LaJeunesse, chair of the hospice board, in his letter of support for Therrien's Community Builders Award nomination. As passionate as Therrien is about the hospice, he is equally passionate about the need to secure more funding from the provincial government. Services at the hospice are free, but the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care only covers 40 per cent of the operating costs. This means Therrien and his board of directors have to raise more than $600,000 annually to cover all other operating costs.

"We get funds from in memoriam donations, as well as donations from families, community groups and businesses. We are members of United Way.

We get money from the Trillium Foundation for the day program. We hold bingos and we have The Hike for Hospice. I don't know any other non-profit group that needs to raise $600,000 every year," he complained.

Therrien can't understand why the provincial government won't provide 80 per cent of the operating costs, especially when the hospice costs $300 to $400 a day per patient to run, compared to $800 to $1,000 per patient per day for hospital care.

"This hospice clears hospital beds, opens emergency beds and reduces the cost of health care," he said.

Therrien is a member of the board of the Hospice Association of Ontario and has received numerous community awards, including the YMCA Peace Medallion, the Francophone Personality of the Month (2007), the United Way Community Award (2007) and the Community Leadership Award from Le Club Richelieu les Patriotes (2008). 


www.maisonsudburyhospice.org

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