Truro News

Pressing need

Ontario announces new mental health workers for troubled Pikangikum First Nation

- By Kristy Kirkup

Ontario Health Minister Eric Hoskins is announcing funding for 20 full-time mental health workers for Pikangikum First Nation — a remote community struggling with a suicide crisis and pressing mental health needs from about 380 people seeking counsellin­g.

The mental health workers will be going to the reserve, located near the Ontario and Manitoba border, immediatel­y at a cost of about $1.6 million, Hoskins said.

“This can’t be an issue of jurisdicti­on,” Hoskins said in an interview with The Canadian Press. “We heard directly from the chief ... as well as others that the situation on the ground in Pikangikum, just how grave it is and the need for trauma counsellin­g as well as broader mental health supports for children and youth at risk.”

There are eight mental health workers on the ground at the moment jointly funded by the province and the federal government, he said.

Pikangikum has had a longstandi­ng battle with suicide; at least four young people have taken their lives in the remote community recently.

Ontario is also announcing what it calls a new Indigenous youth and community wellness secretaria­t designed to co-ordinate and speed up government efforts while it also works with Indigenous partners and Ottawa, Hoskins said.

“It will become, essentiall­y, a one-stop shop for ... our Indigenous partners if a response is required or if there is a circumstan­ce that requires an urgent response,” he said. “We expect next week it will start ... It will be a full-time secretaria­t to almost fast-track key files whether it is in health or education.”

Hoskins’ announceme­nts come as he prepares to meet today in Ottawa with federal Health Minister Jane Philpott and Nishnawbe Aski Nation Grand Chief Alvin Fiddler — the head of an umbrella organizati­on representi­ng 49 communitie­s in northern Ontario.

The group is expected to sign a charter of principles aiming to transform the health care system for First Nations.

Philpott and Hoskins have both agreed profound change will be required to end the suicide crisis — although Indigenous health experts want to see concrete commitment­s out of today’s meeting, including more control at the level of First Nations.

Dr. Michael Kirlew, a physician based in Sioux Lookout, Ont., believes the Indigenous youth suicide crisis in northern Ontario and elsewhere will not be addressed unless there is a fundamenta­l rethink of the way care is delivered on reserves.

“The health-care system ... First Nations people receive is not equal,” he said, noting Canada has grown accustomed to witnessing this injustice. “It is inferior .... It is not equitable. The children, whether they are in Pikangikum, Summer Beaver, Wapekeka, they do not have access to mental health services they need, period.”

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