1. Continue recent investments for prevention and early intervention services that target populations who are at a higher risk of developing a mental health or substance use problem due to impacts of the pandemic.
2. Provide counselling and other proven therapies free at the point of use at primary care networks and through community-based organizations where people already access services.
3. Fund culturally-safe, community-driven wellness programs and practices that meet the mental health and substance use needs of underserved populations that encounter barriers to accessing clinical care.
4. Reinforce the public health approach to substance use that promotes health and equity for people who use drugs through decriminalization and pharmaceutical alternatives to the toxic drug supply.
5. Implement a full evidence-based youth and adult substance use system of care that spans prevention, screening, harm reduction, treatment, and recovery services.
1. Immediately raise income and disability assistance rates to ensure no income in BC is legislated below the poverty line.
2. Build on housing investments to create a continuum of social housing that offers a flexible and progressive range of supports that meet the needs of people with severe and complex conditions and enable their transition to safe, permanent housing.
3. Enable phone and internet access for all people living at or below the poverty line through the provision of technology grants for personal devices and $10 per month high-speed Wi-Fi to support access to virtual care.
1. Initiate a full and independent review of the Mental Health Act to guarantee that BC’s laws and policies protect the human rights of people who are involuntarily detained.
2. Provide support to municipalities to pilot civilian-led mental health crisis teams made up of clinicians and peers as an alternative to police led interventions.
3. Direct health authorities to collect race-based, Indigenous and other disaggregated demographic data on mental health crises and overdose events to reveal and address systemic discrimination in health care.
*This article originally appeared on the CMHA BC Division
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