Involuntary mental health care must be ‘dignified and humane,’ B.C. premier says
VANCOUVER — Premier David Eby says mental health care in the province for those committed against their will needs to be “dignified and humane” to be effective, as his government works on a strategy about involuntary care.
Eby, speaking after a deadly random stranger attack in downtown Vancouver this week, says the 2012 closure of Riverview mental health hospital in Coquitlam put vulnerable people on the streets without adequate supports.
He says he saw people struggle with mental health, brain injuries and drug addiction while working on the Downtown Eastside, watching them “go downhill and die.”
Eby says there’s still a place for involuntary care in B.C., but “warehousing people” isn’t enough and any measures taken to address the needs of people in mental health crises must be “humane and respectful.”