The Pender Islands Health Care Society (PIHCS) is a community non-profit society which owns and operates the Pender Islands Health Centre. The Society provides a number of health and social services directly, and leases space and provides support to private health care practitioners and government agencies delivering services at the Health Centre.
The Pender Islands Health Care Society (PIHCS) is a community non-profit society which owns and operates the Pender Islands Health Centre. The Society provides a number of health and social services directly, and leases space and provides support to private health care practitioners and government agencies delivering services at the Health Centre.
Photo GalleryHomeSituated in the Canadian Southern Gulf Islands, which lie between British Columbia's mainland and Vancouver Island, the natural beauty and Mediterranean climate of North and South Pender Islands attract people from around the world. Some stay a few days or weeks and others put down roots, becoming part of this unique community.The Pender Islands Community Hall hosts an assortment of events: concerts, plays, art exhibitions, the Farmers Market and the annual Fall Fair. Set in at the edge of a unique pine forest next to farmlands the Community Hall fits beautifully into the Pender Island ambience: warm and welcoming. The Welcoming Poles at the Hall's entrance, created by the Bear Mother Project, greet visitors. If you're on the Pender Islands stop by the Hall and see what we're up to.Gallery
The Hiiye'yu Lelum (House of Friendship) Society provides health, social, recreational and cultural services to promote individual, family and community self-reliance. These services address the needs and aspirations of aboriginal people and focus on well-being within a cross-cultural context. To provide a cultural bridge between the Aboriginal and non-aboriginal cultures in the Cowichan Valley. To provide a central facility where counselling, information and referral services are provided and where meetings, education and recreation activities may take place. To provide opportunities for the development of Aboriginal leadership in the community. To promote the well-being of Aboriginal people through program development.
We believe in the idea that people can recover from mental illness when they play an active and empowered role in their journey. Get InformedThe more we learn mental health and mental illness, the better equipped we become to promote and maintain good health in ourselves and others. Get InvolvedWith your help, CMHA can help someone with mental illness
Cowichan Family Life grew out of a grassroots movement driven by concerned and caring people, who believed counselling services should be available to everyone. We provide peer counselling to individuals, families and couples. A strength-based, solution focused model is used to support people who are dealing with current personal issues that are negatively impacting their lives.
Christian Science church services are held on the 1st and 3rd Sundays of each month at 10:30am Pacific time and include readings from the Pastor, The Bible, and Science & Health with key to the Scriptures, hymns sung and prayer.
On-line attendance is possible. Please call 250 597 7554 or email christianscienceduncan@gmail.com for details.
Valley Integration to Active Living Society (V.I.T.A.L. Society) is a not-for-profit organization based on a model designed between 1989 and 1991. This model provided support to dual-diagnosis clients with challenging behaviors who had experienced difficulty living in their communities. Some of our residents experienced difficulty with legal/correctional systems. Their dual-diagnosis resulted in attempted treatment in a variety of settings that had produced little effect. Service providers with conventional service models were unwilling to continue to support them, resulting in residents spending most of their time in institutions such as Glendale Lodge and Riverview Hospital. With the closure of institutions, there was a need for alternate care models to provide a stable community-placement for these individuals. The model was designed on the aspects of institutional care that was most effective, modifying it to work in a community setting.The Ministry of Social Services and Housing, with some hesitation, accepted the idea of trying the model on an experimental basis.