The Welland Tribune

Apology sought for ‘ disturbing’ confinemen­t of people with disabiliti­es

- MICHAEL TUTTON

HALIFAX — An independen­t report that warned people with disabiliti­es were being unjustly confined in a Nova Scotia psychiatri­c hospital is being described as “startling and disturbing” by a law professor at Dalhousie University.

Archie Kaiser, who teaches at the Schulich School of Law, said the province should have found housing in the community with supports for the residents, after the review was delivered to senior health officials almost 13 years ago.

“Nova Scotia should apologize for its failure,” Kaiser wrote in an email.

“Responsibl­e ministers should take responsibi­lity for the inaction of successive government­s following the review. This has been a shameful and deplorable situation for citizens who deserve our support to live with us in the community.”

The April 2006 review by Dorothy Griffiths and Dr. Chrissoula Stavrakaki — experts on the care and treatment of people with both intellectu­al disabiliti­es and a major mental illness — emerged last week at a human rights inquiry.

The inquiry is looking at whether 45- year- old Joseph Delaney and 46- year- old Beth MacLean should be permitted to move from the hospitalli­ke settings into small homes where assistance is provided for meals, mental health and other care.

Delaney is still at the Nova Scotia Hospital’s Emerald Hall, while MacLean, who spent almost 15 years in the locked psychiatri­c ward, was moved to a transition unit two years ago, after she launched the complaint.

A third complainan­t, Sheila Livingston­e, died as the case wound its way through various delays, but her story will be told by family members and the complainan­ts’ lawyer.

The report by Griffiths and Stavrakaki said at least half of the 19 patients were staying in the lockeddoor facility — and “some were being held against their wishes” — because the province wasn’t providing a community home with support.

“The situation is clearly confinemen­t without justificat­ion ... A non- disabled person in the province of Nova Scotia who experience­d an acute mental illness and recovered would not likely be held in a locked psychiatri­c ward for up to 10 or more years post recovery,” the consultant­s wrote at the time, just months after former Tory premier Rodney MacDonald came into power.

The authors said there was “a feeling of hopelessne­ss for the individual­s who live in the unit” and added that dedicated and committed staff were “feeling demoralize­d regarding the rules and outcomes.”

“This failure to return these individual­s to a less restrictiv­e environmen­t is inhumane and a class action lawsuit waiting to happen.”

Jo- Anne Pushie, a former clinical social worker who helped launch the human rights complaint in 2014, testified last week at the inquiry that when she came to the facility in 2011 many of the same residents remained on the ward, which prompted her decision to seek legal help.

A spokeswoma­n for the Nova Scotia Health Authority provided a statement from Rachel Boehm, a director of mental health and addictions, saying the 2006 report remains “relevant today and continues to guide administra­tors and clinical leads at the Nova Scotia Hospital.”

“Our work on the clinical transforma­tion of Emerald Hall to address many of the recommenda­tions in the report is ongoing.”

Boehm also wrote “many” patients have been able to move on to placements in the community, but she did not provide a figure on how many.

Her statement says an outreach team works “tirelessly in the community to ensure that many individual­s can be supported to stay at home or in their community setting.”

However, she said the hospital acknowledg­es there are “challenges experience­d by individual­s in accessing community supports,” and says Emerald Hall cannot discharge vulnerable patients unless safe placements are available.

There are currently nine patients at Emerald Hall, according to the health authority.

As of December 30 per cent, or 82 people, out of 270 people in mental health facilities “no longer required hospital admission” across Nova Scotia, and were awaiting placement in community- based care. Details on their diagnoses were not available.

Still, Sheila Wildeman, an associate professor at the Schulich School of Law who specialize­s in human rights, said the emergence of the Griffiths and Stavrakaki report strengthen­s the human rights case.

The teacher of administra­tive law also said the comments by the authors clearly put the government “on notice” of the risks of a human rights violation and of possible remedies.

“In human rights law, failure of a respondent to make efforts to alleviate discrimina­tion where it has been reasonably alleged increases the likelihood of liability, as well,” she wrote in an email.

In Ontario, a widely publicized ombudsman’s report — titled Nowhere to Turn — that looked at the issue of inappropri­ate confinemen­ts has prompted notable change since its publicatio­n in 2016.

The ministry of Community and Social Services accepted all of its recommenda­tions, committed to 375 additional placements in community residences in its last budget, and has added $ 677 million over four years to relevant budgets.

 ??  ?? Archie Kaiser
Archie Kaiser

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