Vancouver Sun

B.C. mental health detention system violates fundamenta­l rights: report

- GEORDON OMAND

B.C. needs to overhaul a mental health system that allows psychiatri­c facilities to detain people with little justificat­ion, to deny them access to a lawyer and to take away their personal clothing as a form of punishment, a legal advocacy group says.

The Community Legal Assistance Society published a report on Wednesday, titled Operating in Darkness, that describes B.C.’s mental health detention regime as one of the most regressive in Canada.

The report says the province’s Mental Health Act allows people in care to be put in solitary confinemen­t, strapped to a bed or given involuntar­y treatments like drugs and electrocon­vulsive therapy.

Report author Laura Johnston said it is “extremely unusual” for a provincial mental health act in Canada not to prohibit the discipline of patients who are being held without consent.

“Not only does our act not prohibit it, but it actively authorizes it,” Johnston said, adding that disciplina­ry measures include the use of restraints, solitary confinemen­t and withholdin­g personal clothing.

“You can earn your way back up to your clothing access by good behaviour, but bad behaviour, you can lose your rights to clothing,” she said, describing the practice as disturbing.

The B.C. government did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the report.

The Community Legal Assistance Society is a B.C.-based nonprofit group that provides legal services to people in mental health detention.

While voluntary mental health detentions have remained stable at about 17,000 per year over the past decade, the number of involuntar­y detentions spiked from about 11,900 to more than 20,000 over the same time period, the report says.

Female patients routinely have their clothes removed by male staff, doctors can make detention decisions without conducting inperson exams and there is no legal aid for patients at the time they are detained, the report says.

Johnston dismissed what she called a widely held view that people can only be detained if they are deemed to be an imminent threat to themselves or others. Involuntar­y detention can occur if it is believed someone may “deteriorat­e” without in-hospital treatment, which is a much lower standard, she said.

One of the features that sets B.C. apart from mental health regimes in other Canadian jurisdicti­ons is the absence of a regular review process, Johnston added.

“That is the main point of this report: Who’s looking at this system? Who’s monitoring this system?” she said.

A lack of oversight makes it difficult to understand why detention numbers are rising so steeply and whether policies such as solitary confinemen­t or restraint are successful, she added.

The report calls for an independen­t commission to overhaul the B.C. Mental Health Act, and makes a number of recommenda­tions, including better training for health-care providers, regular detention review hearings and the reestablis­hment of an independen­t mental health advocate.

“Whenever there is a system that takes away your liberty, takes away your freedom to make choices about your body, who touches it, what goes in it, what happens to it, we need to make sure there are very careful safeguards in place,” Johnston said.

 ?? RIC ERNST/FILES ?? A report published Wednesday by the Community Legal Assistance Society argues that an independen­t commission should overhaul the provincial Mental Health Act. Report author Laura Johnston says the act “actively authorizes” the discipline of patients...
RIC ERNST/FILES A report published Wednesday by the Community Legal Assistance Society argues that an independen­t commission should overhaul the provincial Mental Health Act. Report author Laura Johnston says the act “actively authorizes” the discipline of patients...

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