National Post

CAMH to adopt new rules after probe

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TORONTO • A prominent Toronto psychiatri­c hospital vowed Wednesday to implement all recommenda­tions made by an external panel that probed recent cases of patients with a violent history escaping the facility.

Catherine Zahn, president of the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, said the hospital will build new infrastruc­ture and change its system of patient passes.

It will also communicat­e more often with police and build an outdoor area enclosed by fences, she said.

Zahn said the institutio­n had already begun taking steps to improve its processes in anticipati­on of the report, and will start to implement the remaining changes in the new year.

“We know that the community and our partners expected us to take swift action to restore their trust in our ability to balance protecting public safety and supporting patient recovery,” she said in a statement.

“I’m confident the recommenda­tions will enhance our ability to do that.”

The changes are among 12 recommenda­tions made by an expert panel after multiple people escaped from the hospital’s forensic facility, which treats people found not criminally responsibl­e for violent crimes.

Zhebin Cong was a patient at the hospital who escaped in July and fled to China after he was found not criminally responsibl­e for the second-degree murder of his roommate.

Later that month, Ahmed Sualim — who was found not criminally responsibl­e in a series of violent robberies — went missing from the hospital, though authoritie­s were able to find him the same day.

In November, another man found not criminally responsibl­e for aggravated assault escaped from the same facility and was found by police a day later.

Another man found not criminally responsibl­e for assault with a weapon and possession of a weapon escaped the hospital in late November and was found and returned to the psychiatri­c hospital within 24 hours.

Adalsteinn Brown, the health policy professor who chaired the review, said the recommenda­tions should improve community safety and help patients complete their treatment.

The provincial government said it welcomed the report and would review its findings.

“The panel’s recommenda­tions will help improve the hospital’s protocols and will better protect patients and the surroundin­g community,” Hayley Chazan, spokeswoma­n for Health Minister Christine Elliott, said in an email.

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Catherine Zahn

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