Htel-Dieu Grace Healthcare sets service priorities for children and youth - Action News
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Windsor

Htel-Dieu Grace Healthcare sets service priorities for children and youth

HDGH is also continuing to build services at the Transitional Stability Centre.

'Kids are more aware of mental health issues,' said Mary Broga

The board at HDGH has agreed on a set of priorities over the next three years. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

The board of Htel-Dieu Grace Health Care (HDGH)has agreed on a set of priorities to tackle over the next three years in order to improve mental health services for children and youth.

According to Mary Broga, executive director for Lead Agency for Child and Youth Mental Health, they're looking at where there might be overlap or gaps.

Here are the priorities:

  • Creating a centralized systemwhere families can go to find out the services they need
  • Helping homeless youth get access to mental health care
  • Helping children with challenging behavioural issues, such as developmental disabilities and severe acting out
  • Strengthening connection with primary care

Brogasaidmore children and youth are seeking help for mental health issues and addictions which she attributes to the result ofbetter awareness.

"Kids are more aware of mental health issues. They're more willing to go out and seek help. We're actually losing the stigma that's associated with mental health," said Broga.

Mary Broga, executive director for Lead Agency for Children and Youth Mental Health in Windsor-Essex says children have a higher awareness of mental health. (Dale Molnar CBC News)

HDGH is also continuing to build services at the Transitional Stability Centre on Ouellette Avenue.HDGH CEO JaniceKaffersaid about onethird of the people coming into the centre areunder 29.

"We are seeing that as an access point for youth as well," said Kaffer.

Kaffer said they are continuing to work on relocating 60 acute mental health care beds to the Tayfour Campus as part of the mega-hospital restructuring plan.

"We've actually added to that conversation the need for an urgent assessmentcentre or psychiatric emergency department here," said Kaffer.

HDGH CEO Janice Kaffer says they are continuing to meet with the province about the mega-hospital. (Dale Molnar/CBC News)

According to Kaffer, such a centrewould speed up services to the mentally ill, who currently "languish" for a long time at traditional emergency departments.

Kaffer said the new provincial governmentcontinues to familiarize itself with the structuring plan,but that thechange in government hasn't delayed the project significantly. She said they continue to meet with the province.

"The election probably did kind of set us back a little bit because there was a period of time where government wasn't actually reviewing the file, but that would be normal," said Kaffer.

"Those kinds of delays were anticipated."