Saturday
17Oct2009

Ashley Smith suicide prompts probe into other prison deaths

From The Toronto Star by Diana Zlomisitc

The federal prison watchdog is probing two more "troubling" inmate deaths, which he says question the correctional service's ability and willingness to prevent suicides in the wake of the Ashley Smith case.

"There have been subsequent deaths in custody, which I'm investigating – a couple of which are very troubling and which reflect some of the same failings we found in Ashley Smith's death," Howard Sapers, the federal correctional investigator, told theToronto Star.

Smith, 19, killed herself in 2007 at a Kitchener prison for women. A recent Star story detailed how her developing mental illness went untreated and how guards watched as she strangled herself in a segregation cell. MORE HERE

Saturday
17Oct2009

A Homeless Report Card for British Columbia The Tyee asked experts to assess progress on the issue, and assign some grades.

 By Monte Paulsen, 12 Oct 2009, TheTyee.ca

Homelessness has grown worse across British Columbia during the past three years, and the federal government has failed to help.

Those are among the conclusions of a Tyee panel of six experts who graded three levels of government on their efforts to end homelessness. The informal panel issued C grades to the City of Vancouver and the Province of British Columbia, while slapping the Government of Canada with an F.

Panelists were selected for two criteria: All have first-hand experience working with the homeless in Vancouver, and none are employed by government. They are: Sean Condon, editor of Megaphone Magazine; Nancy Hall, former mental health advocate; Dave Jones, security consultant to the Downtown Vancouver Business Improvement Association; Jean Swanson, co-ordinator of the Carnegie Community Action Project; Laura Track, housing lawyer with the Pivot Legal Society; and Harsha Walia, project coordinator at the Downtown Eastside Women Centre.

No one should suppose that this grading process was either scientific or unbiased -- most of those on the panel are professional critics. But their comments do provide a perspective on where British Columbia has made progress against its sprawling homelessness problem, and where there is still more to do.

Homelessness has grown worse MORE HERE

Saturday
17Oct2009

Psychiatric cuts to Victoria services will cost: MD

BY KIM WESTAD AND RICHARD WATTS, TIMES COLONIST

If mental-health patients get sicker because of cuts to services in Victoria, they could end up costing the health system more in emergency care, says one of Canada's most experienced psychiatrists.

"I know of no system which could sensibly cut both in-patient services and outpatient community supports at the same time and still say they will deliver the same level of service," said Dr. Donald Milliken, the former chief of psychiatry at the Eric Martin Pavilion, who now works in the mood-disorders clinic at the facility.

Mentally ill patients will have access to fewer resources as a result of the Vancouver Island Health Authority cuts announced this week, said Milliken.

VIHA is cutting 15 per cent of bed capacity at Eric Martin, about 10 beds. Also eliminated are six counsellors, about 25 per cent of that force. There will also be a 20 per cent cut in the number of people providing follow-up care for those discharged from psychiatric care. MORE HERE

Saturday
17Oct2009

Teaching 9-year-olds about mental illness

Oliver Moore
HALIFAX — From Tuesday's Globe and Mail

 

People with symptoms of mental illness often wait years before seeking treatment. And by the time they do, some will have the odds stacked against them because of the related effects of their disorder: substance abuse, reduced employment options and broken relationships with friends and family.

It's a vicious pattern that the Nova Scotia government is hoping to break by offering even the youngest students specific education in mental health.

Mamoona Brace, who teaches a combined Grade 4 and 5 class in Dartmouth, said she has been incorporating the new curriculum regularly into her classroom. The messages at this level include students being told about the signs of mental disorders, and how to distinguish possible symptoms from normal ups and downs.

The teacher noted that everyday life can provoke a roller-coaster of emotion for children, and they need to recognize when they should be concerned. MORE HERE

Monday
28Sep2009

Albertans debate government's plan to close mental-health hospital beds

EDMONTON — The man in the blue baseball hat, a Tim Hortons coffee in hand, sits on the bench in the unseasonably stifling early morning heat and shouts at passing cars on downtown Jasper Avenue. He can be heard a block away.

Across the intersection, another man scours the bus-bench trash can for returnables. Spittle hangs in a gossamer thread off his beard.

The scene is commonplace in major cities, mentally ill with nowhere to go.

But it's one that has become a fulcrum of angry debate in Alberta as the province forges ahead with plans to close more than half the 410 beds at Alberta Hospital, the region's mental health bedrock and backstop for 86 years.

It underlines pessimism with a government trying to cut, mould and remake a health-care system on the fly in the face of crashing oil and gas prices and multibillion-dollar deficits.

The plan, announced last month, will see patients moved out and the beds closed behind them over the next one to three years as equivalent beds become available in other hospitals or in community sites.

No patient, it is stressed, will leave until there is a commensurate spot to go.

Tom Shand, executive director of the Alberta division of the Canadian Mental Health Association, agrees with the principle but not the timeline.

"It's almost like putting up a building at the same time you're bringing in tenants," says Shand. "The broader planning has not been done. It's being rushed."

The decision has met fierce resistance from lawyers, care advocates, families of patients, psychiatrists in the hospital, police and the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees, which represents more than half the staff at the hospital.

The Edmonton Police Commission, the force's civilian oversight body, said last week that a third of the 200,000 emergency calls a year are related to problems that lead back to mental illness.

Cutting beds, it says, will mean more patients becoming abandoned, homeless and sucked into the orbit of crime.

The Criminal Trial Lawyers Association says it's not convinced the province will pony up the cash and supports needed to make the community program work.

Too many of the mentally ill are already in the justice system, the association says, charged with petty crimes and then caught in the pitiable spin cycle of street-arrest-detention, street-arrest-detention.

Last year, a provincial study found that most of Edmonton's 3,500 homeless have addiction or mental illness problems.

The AUPE, which represents therapists, aides, dietary specialists and support staff at the hospital, has taken the battle to the airwaves. It is spending $100,000 on three prime-time TV commercials urging Albertans to tell Premier Ed Stelmach's government that losing the hospital would cause irreparable harm. More Here