B.C. premier's expansion of involuntary medical treatment infringes on human rights: advocates - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. premier's expansion of involuntary medical treatment infringes on human rights: advocates

Advocates say the B.C. premier's proposalto expand the scope of involuntary mental health treatment could further infringe on the rights of marginalized people.

David Eby said new information sharing arrangements would help police and medical professionals coordinate

David Eby, a white man wearing a suit, speaks at a news conference.
B.C. Premier David Eby has proposed expanding the scope of involuntary mental health treatment in the province, which has alarmed civil rights advocates. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

Advocates say the B.C. premier's proposalto expand the scope of involuntary mental health treatment could further infringe on the rights of marginalized people.

Involuntary or mandatorytreatment is among Premier David Eby's proposals to expand mental health care support, which also includesfunding more mental health emergency teamsa pillar of his public safety plan.

Involuntary treatment is allowed under B.C.'sMental Health Act; a person can be detained in a psychiatric facilityif a doctor deems it necessary for their health and safety, as well as the safety of others.

But Eby is proposingto expand the system further, including by beefing up information sharing arrangements between police and medical professionals.

"Part of this announcement is a province-wide deployment of an app that allows police to contact directly those medical health professionals at the hospital to know how best to respond," he said.

"So they're not waiting there trying to explain to an emergency room physician or a nurse why this person needs to be held, that the information is shared seamlessly."

WATCH | David Eby talks about expanding mental health supports:

B.C.s new premier announces new public safety measures

2 years ago
Duration 1:45
B.C.'s new premier David Eby has unveiled a plan to tackle public safety issues, including measures to deal with repeat offenders and to expand mental health and addictions supports.

Eby saysthe province would also work to expand involuntary treatment tothe corrections system.

"This is an opportunity for us to get in there [and] provide medical support so that when they're released they're actually in better shape than when they went in."

The proposal followsmonths of complaints from police and B.C. mayorswho haverequested mandatory treatment especially forso-called prolific offenders.

Involuntary treatment doesn't work: advocate

Civil rights advocates say forced treatment is not based on science and called on the province to move away from the approach.

"Coercing people or forcing them into carceral settings for care does not actually engender good results," said Meenakshi Mannoe, a campaignerwith Pivot Legal Society.

Experts have previously said that involuntary care often breeds a distrust of the medical system, due to its "coercive" structure, and that it can sever connections to family and community.

Mannoe adds that advocates have noticedB.C.'s increasing use of the Mental Health Act to detain people for years, and while investments in treatment arewelcome,the province should work to make voluntary treatment more welcoming for anyone seeking care.

"What's on offer is just unsafe," she said. "They know that it jeopardizes their income, their housing, for example, if you have to go to a longer term treatment program."

A spokesperson for the Mental Health and Addictions Ministry said the province's "primary focus" isshoring up the voluntary care system.

"While involuntary treatment for psychiatric illness can be effective in some circumstances, voluntary services are the most effective, when possible," they said in a statement.

Treating drug addiction

According to the government spokesperson, the province is also "currently reviewing" sections of the act, which currently does not cover "involuntary care for substance use disorder in the absence of a concurrent psychiatric disorder."

In 2020, B.C. proposed mandatory treatment for youth who repeatedly overdose a proposal they rescindedafter significant criticism.

Later, during his leadership campaign, Ebytold Postmediathat involuntary care should be an option to protect peoplewho repeatedly overdose from serious brain injury.

But police are rarely judicious when it comes to detaining people under the Mental Health Act, according to Tyson Singh Kelsall, an outreach worker in the Downtown Eastside and a PhD student at Simon Fraser University,

Racialized drug users were most at risk, he added, sayingin the context of a poisoned drug supply, research has shown people are at heightened risk of death after compulsory treatment for drug addiction.

"If you're forced into treatment, and you're released your tolerance will be at an all-time low," he said. "There's a good chance you're gonna feel compelled to access the poisoned drug supply.

"We see a huge association between discharge from incarceration and overdose risk. It would be the same for compulsory care."

Singh Kelsall says the province is shying away from addressing the toxic drug supply by promising to shore up the treatment system instead.

"I believe the solution is having a regulated supply of drugs that people can do safely and not infringing further on people's human rights."

With files from Winston Szeto