Toronto Star

Ottawa lagging on indigenous mental-health care, memo says

Funding shortfall contribute­s to ‘consistent failure to meet basic needs,’ note suggests

- JOAN BRYDEN THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— Even as the federal government pressures provinces and territorie­s to take up its offer of billions to improve mental-health services for Canadians, an internal memo suggests it’s failing in its own responsibi­lity to provide adequate care for mentally ill children in First Nations communitie­s.

In extreme cases, the memo says, desperate parents are giving up their children to child welfare agencies as the only way to ensure their kids get treatment for mental illnesses.

The memo, prepared for Health Minister Jane Philpott early this year, was uncovered through an access-to-informatio­n request from New Democrat MP Charlie Angus.

Compared to provincial­ly funded services, the memo says, some First Nations and Inuit Health Branch services are “less accessible and/or not funded to similar levels.”

Where mental-health services are available, “they are provided by paraprofes­sionals or generalist­s, even though in geographic­ally similar offreserve (locations), they would be provided by a profession­al with specialize­d training,” the memo says.

Further, it says funding for the First Nations and Inuit Home and Community Care program does not have a built-in escalator to keep pace with inflation, requiring annual internal re-allocation of at least $20 million.

“This funding shortfall contribute­s to consistent failure to meet basic needs, erosion of other important programmin­g and, in many cases, leads to extended hospital stays, relocation, social isolation, limited opportunit­ies and caregiver hardships.”

Children and families on reserves who are referred to provincial programs for specialize­d services often face lengthy travel and “long wait times that are not trauma informed or culturally safe,” the memo says.

“In extreme situations, some families living on reserve have turned to child welfare agencies to gain access to assessment and interventi­ons required for a child with complex care needs.”

While efforts have been made to improve services on reserves, the memo says “some sizable gaps remain and are unlikely to be addressed without a co-ordinated response that is aligned with the needs of families and supported by additional funding.”

Angus said the federal government is “lecturing” provincial and territo- rial government­s about the need to improve mental health services “when they’re not even addressing the communitie­s and families within their own jurisdicti­on and they don’t seem to have any plan to improve health outcomes for them.”

“It just makes it a little ironic that the document shows that the feds aren’t able or willing to meet what the provincial standards are, and if the feds say the provincial standards aren’t good enough, what does it say about their own?” he said in an interview.

Angus is particular­ly irked by the federal contention that targeted funding offered to the provinces — and rejected Monday by provincial and territoria­l government­s — would have been sufficient to pro- vide all Canadians under age 25 with the mental-health services they need.

“When they’re talking about all Canadians, they’re really talking about all Canadians except First Nations people and that’s really not acceptable in 2016.” On Monday, the Trudeau government offered the increase in annual health transfer payments to provincial and territoria­l government­s at a rate of 3.5 per cent each year. It also offered an additional $11.5 billion over 10 years in targeted funding, primarily for home care and mental health.

The offer was unanimousl­y rejected, but New Brunswick broke ranks Thursday and signed onto a bilateral deal with the federal government.

Federal officials say four or five other provinces are interested in negotiatin­g their own bilateral agreements. On Wednesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau urged mental health advocates to put pressure on provinces to accept the federal offer.

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 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? NDP MP Charlie Angus obtained the internal memo to the health minister through an access-to-informatio­n request.
ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS NDP MP Charlie Angus obtained the internal memo to the health minister through an access-to-informatio­n request.

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