The Telegram (St. John's)

Child Youth Advocate report says government still has work to do

‘Not There Yet’ report reveals some recommenda­tions need to be completed

- Telegram@thetelegra­m.com

There was some good news and bad news in the Office of the Child and Youth Advocate’s (OCYA) 2016 annual report for this province.

The good news is the government has successful­ly implemente­d 90 per cent of the office’s recommenda­tions and 74 per cent of the Child Death Review Committee’s recommenda­tions.

“This is good, and the efforts of the individual­s and the

department­s involved to make this happen is

appreciate­d,” Child Youth Advocate Jacqueline Lake Kavanagh stated. “But numbers also tell another story.” The report, “Not There Yet,” released Wednesday, states there are still several recommenda­tions, many of them old, which have still not been completed — three per cent of the OCYA recommenda­tions and 16 per cent of the Child Death Review Committee’s recommenda­tions.

“This work must be concluded in order for children and youth

to experience the benefits of the recommende­d changes,” Lake Kavanagh said. “These need to be concluded, and without further delay.”

The OCYA made 190 recommenda­tions to various government department­s and agencies up to Dec. 31, 2016, according to the report.

Of the 10 per cent outstandin­g OCYA recommenda­tions, seven per cent are no longer applicable.

Two per cent of the recommenda­tions have been partially implemente­d.

Two recommenda­tions not implemente­d yet by government are from the “Tragedy Waiting to Happen” investigat­ion.

The first deals with informatio­n sharing among service providers — CSSD, the Department of Health and Community Services and the Department of Justice and Public Safety — by developing a multidisci­plinary committee in communitie­s throughout the province.

The other recommenda­tion is that the Department of Health and Community Services and CSSD, in collaborat­ion with local government­s and other service providers, complete comprehens­ive needs assessment­s of the services being provided in every remote and isolated communitie­s in the province to identify existing deficienci­es, and develop and implement strategies to address the identified deficienci­es in a timely manner.

The report states that while an interdepar­tmental committee was establishe­d to address these recommenda­tions, thus far, it “has not reported on substantiv­e actual changes to improve (the issues).”

The OCYA also monitors and reports on progress for the Child Death Review Committee (CDRC) recommenda­tions — reviewing deaths of children under 19 years of age referred by the chief medical examiner.

Between October 2014 and December 2016, the CDRC made 31 recommenda­tions.

Of the 74 per cent of those recommenda­tions that have been implemente­d, six per cent have been partially implemente­d, 10 per cent have not been implemente­d and 10 per cent are no longer applicable.

The three recommenda­tions not yet implemente­d all deal with recommenda­tions to Labrador-grenfell Health: that it establish an assertive community treatment team for youth with serious mental health problems and those at high risk for suicide, that it meet with Innu health and social service officials to review services to youth at risk for suicide and strengthen community responses; and that it, in consultati­on with appropriat­e Innu officials, create a mental-health service that can be accessed in communitie­s in Labrador.

Lake Kavanagh said her office is following all recommenda­tions until they’re addressed.

“The 2017 review process will also assess all previously concluded recommenda­tions to ensure there has been no slippage,” she said. “The Office of the Child and Youth Advocate is committed to ensuring that valuable progress in responding to children and youth is not lost or reversed.”

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