Toronto Star

Mental health legislatio­n ‘handcuffs’ kin hoping to care for loved ones

Traumatic incident prompts positive interventi­on, expert says

- LAURA ARMSTRONG STAFF REPORTER

From the tender age of 14, young people are masters of their own medical treatment under the law, from birth control to mental-health care.

“It really handcuffs families, but it is the legislatio­n,” said Phyllis Grant-Parker, executive director of Parents Lifeline of Eastern Ontario. “Legally, physicians cannot discuss with a parent about their child of14 or older unless the child has given them permission to do so.”

Often, Grant-Parker said, it takes a traumatic event before there is some positive interventi­on. That seemed to be the case for Ali Shahi, a Mississaug­a man suffering from depression and a gambling problem who allegedly uttered a direct threat while on board a Sunwing flight from Pearson Internatio­nal Airport to Panama Friday.

Shahi was arrested in Toronto after the plane turned around.

On Saturday, his parents, who were at a loss over what to do about their son’s erratic behaviour, spent hours in closed-door sessions with a judge arranging for Shahi to finally receive a 72-hour psychiatri­c evaluation.

Under Canada’s Mental Health Act, only physicians, justices and police officers are able to commission a person’s involuntar­y admission to a mental health assessment, said Lin Fang, an associate professor at the University of Toronto’s Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work.

Their families, the people who know them best, are left virtually powerless, Fang said.

“Usually family members spend a lot of time with the individual­s. They can notice the behaviours much better than a physician or other profession­al who maybe only spends a very short time with the individual.”

Justin Bourque, 24, who allegedly shot and killed three Mounties in New Brunswick in early June, suffers from depression, his father, Victor Bourque, said in an interview with Postmedia News. His parents tried to get the police involved, to no avail. Bourque’s case, his father said, fell through the cracks.

Astudy by the Mental Health Commission of Canada estimates two out of every five people with mental illness have been arrested in their lifetime, three in every 10 people with mental illness have had the police involved in their care pathway and one in seven referrals to emergency psychiatri­c in-patient services involves the police.

Local police officers were dispatched to 20,550 calls for service involving an emotionall­y disturbed person, 8,384 of which resulted in an apprehensi­on under the Mental Health Act, said the recent use-offorce report by retired Justice Frank Iacobucci commission­ed by Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair.

For parents, the province’s mental health system is not intuitive, said Grant-Parker.

 ??  ?? Ali Shahi, who suffers from depression, was arrested after uttering a direct threat on board a Sunwing flight.
Ali Shahi, who suffers from depression, was arrested after uttering a direct threat on board a Sunwing flight.

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