Truro News

Opposing, competing realities in health care

- Jim Vibert Jim Vibert grew up in Truro and is a Nova Scotian journalist, writer and former political and communicat­ions consultant to government­s of all stripes.

Nova Scotia has become two solitudes in health care, most radically and tragically demarcated by children in need of psychiatri­c care.

A family in Halifax with a child experienci­ng a mental health crisis is minutes away from emergency treatment and ongoing care at the IWK.

A family in Sydney has limited options and no clear choice.

Nova Scotia’s two health care solitudes can be defined geographic­ally or by medical need, but — like the genesis of the phrase — seem intractabl­e in two opposing and competing realities.

One reality — that of the government and the Nova Scotia Health Authority — is a system undergoing necessary transition. There are challenges, but managed change will lead to better care than before the transition began.

The other reality is what an alarming number of physicians and other front-line care providers report experienci­ng – dangerous gaps in, and unsustaina­ble pressure to maintain essential medical services.

They can find little reason to believe it will get better.

Politicall­y, the two solitudes have hardened to a health system in crisis, or not.

In Cape Breton, there is a crisis in mental health care, and any denial of that fact can only be attributed to misinforma­tion or obstinance.

Since 2014, the number of practicing psychiatri­sts has been reduced from 14 to seven and, when the year is out, just six. There is one, part-time child and adolescent psychiatri­st.

Adults in Cape Breton wait 14 months to see a shrink.

Reluctantl­y, psychiatri­sts have determined they will be unable to provide emergency or in-patient services for children and adolescent­s, as of the end of this week.

The head of psychiatri­c servi- ces in Cape Breton, Scott Milligan wrote a remarkable memo recently, as Cape Breton Post colleague Nancy King reported last Friday.

Coincident­ally, the day before King broke the story, I spoke with Linda Courey, head of mental health and addictions at NSHA about the state and future of those services.

Dr. Courey acknowledg­ed there are “challenges” with the current delivery of services, which she attributed primarily to disparate policy, procedures and decisionma­king, a legacy of nine former regional health authoritie­s.

But, she was confident those issues were manageable in the near- term, and that services would improve at the end of a planning process and with implementa­tion of service access and delivery changes.

Meanwhile, in Cape Breton, psychiatri­sts “simply do not have the resources to provide the safe, timely and appropriat­e care . . . young people deserve,” Dr. Milligan wrote, adding that the situation has deteriorat­ed to the point where it “is not a safe way to practise medicine.”

The result: As of Dec. 1, Cape Breton psychiatri­sts can “no longer see anyone under the age of nineteen . . . in the Emergency Department, nor will (they) be admitting minors to in-patient units.”

Cape Breton psychiatri­sts had been forced to admit minors to adult psychiatri­c units.

Next Saturday, the family in Sydney with a child in a mental health crisis, can take their chances at the nearest emergency department, or bypass that op- tion and begin the five-hour — in good weather — drive to Halifax and the IWK.

The provincial government’s advice, as stated by Health Minister Randy Delorey in August is: “If you are experienci­ng a mental health crisis, our province-wide crisis line is available 24-7 by calling 1-888-429-8167.

“If you are a young person struggling with a problem big or small, visit kidshelpph­one.ca to chat live, or call 1-800-668-6868.” That seems inadequate for true emergencie­s.

Most Nova Scotians will recall that Cape Breton lost at least three teenagers to suicide in the past year.

The province responded by sending psychiatri­st Stan Kutcher to investigat­e and report, and accepted his recommenda­tions. Two more guidance counsellor­s and a social worker were hired by the Cape Breton- Victoria Regional School Board.

The government also increased youth mental health services and outreach by $1.8 million in the current year’s budget.

In the same statement, Delorey said, “when an individual needs help, the last thing they should have to worry about is where to turn.

“That’s why we are creating a new central intake system that will make it much easier to access mental health support.”

The central intake is not operationa­l yet, but psychiatri­sts in Cape Breton are derisive about the concept given experience with such centralize­d systems proved less, not more effective and efficient.

Two Solitudes is a 1945 novel by Canadian writer Hugh MacLennan, who was born in Glace Bay.

The title became emblematic of seemingly irreconcil­able difference­s between French and English Canadians, difference­s that seem reconciled, at least for the moment.

Nova Scotians are condemned to two solitudes in health care, at least until a single reality emerges.

“Reluctantl­y, psychiatri­sts have determined they will be unable to provide emergency or in-patient services for children and adolescent­s, as of the end of this week.”

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