Makigiarvik needs more than space to deliver mental health support, says expert - Action News
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Makigiarvik needs more than space to deliver mental health support, says expert

Nunavut's new minimum security prison in Iqaluit will have space dedicated to assist inmates with mental health issues, but an expert says that's no replacement for the specialized staffing needed to deliver the services required.

Specialized housing not same as mental health services, says CAMH psychologist

The Baffin Correctional Centre has a 'Behavioural Unit' with several cells that they use to separate unruly prisoners. Dr. Simpson says that on average, 15 per cent of any given prison population requires specialists in mental health. (Kieran Oudshoorn/CBC)

Nunavut's new minimum security prison in Iqaluitwill have space dedicated to assist inmates with mental health issues, but an expert says that's no replacement for the specialized staffing needed to deliver the services required.

A damning 2015 report from Canada's Auditor General slammed the territory's corrections facilities for failing to provide adequate access to mental health services. In response, the Department of Justice says they intend to dedicate half of the 48 beds at the recently-openedMakigiarvikcorrectional facilityto assist prisoners with mental health issues.

The justice department says it "intends" to providespecialized mental health programming in the jail. It's not clear what that means for staffing.

YvonneNiego, assistant deputy minister for the territory's justice department, says the new, dedicated space at Makigiarvik is a game changer.

"When we try to run our programs with a lack of space and a lack of means to separate out the different security risks then it's difficult for [prisoners] to be ready and able to participate in programming," Niego said.

However, not everyone is convinced.

"[Providing] specialized housing for some people who have mental health vulnerabilities, that's important," said Dr. Alexander Simpson, chief of forensic psychology at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto, "but that's not the same as a mental health service."

On average, said Simpson,15 per cent of a standing prison population will require specialist mental health support. That percentage includes inmates with "current major-depression, a history of bipolar disorder or a lifetime history of psychotic illness."

But mental health staff do more than just treat major mental illness. Simpson said that they also assist in dealing with inmates with behavioural issues, such as substance abuse and anger management.

A facility like Iqaluit's Baffin Correctional Centre or Makigiarvik, said Simpson, should have a specialized team of psychiatrists, psychologists, nurses and social workers who can triage inmates as they arrive, assess their mental health needs, and provide ongoing treatment.

Currently, Nunavut's Department of Justice employs one psychologistand two full-timenurses in Iqaluit, andone nurse in Rankin Inlet.