• Aucun résultat trouvé

Law Press Release March2010 ENG 1 0

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Partager "Law Press Release March2010 ENG 1 0"

Copied!
1
0
0

Texte intégral

(1)

 

NEWS RELEASE 

Embargoed until 10:00 am PST, March 11, 2010 

 

Unique study asks those with mental illness about experiences with police 

 

Calgary, AB March 11 2010 – One of the most challenging issues facing law enforcement today is handling  encounters involving people with mental illness.  Although the majority of people with mental illness do not  commit criminal acts, around 1 in 5 will come into contact with the law as police officers are often the first to  respond to incidents. 

 

A new research project funded by the Mental Health Commission of Canada (MHCC) will study interactions  between police and those living with a mental illness.   The study is being led by BC Mental Health and  Addiction Services and is conducted in partnership with Simon Fraser University, the University of British  Columbia and the Canadian Mental Health Association – BC Division. 

“This is the first study of its kind in Canada,” says Dr. Dorothy Cotton, psychologist and member of the MHCC’s  Mental Health and the Law Advisory Committee. “Significant resources are going into furthering police 

understanding of mental illness, and how interactions between people with mental illness and the police can  be improved.“ 

 

Retired Police Chief Terry Coleman, also a member of the Mental Health and the Law Advisory Committee,  notes the results will influence police training and education across the country. 

 

The research will study four key areas:   

1. Under what circumstances do people living with a mental illness interact with the police? 

2. What are the factors that result in positive or negative perceptions regarding police interactions? 

3. Do people with a mental illness have different attitudes toward the police than the general  population? 

4. How do people with mental illness think that perceptions of, and interactions with, the police can  be improved? 

Focus groups involving approximately 25 people living with a mental illness (who have also had direct contact  with the police) are taking place in Metro Vancouver. In addition, individual interviews will gather in‐depth  information regarding participants’ perceptions of police, and further surveys will also be distributed across  British Columbia to people living with severe mental illness. The surveys will focus on participants’ feelings,  attitudes and beliefs about the police.  

The MHCC is a non‐profit organization created to focus national attention on mental health issues. It is funded  by the federal government but operates at arm’s length from all levels of government. The Commission’s  objective is to enhance the health and social outcomes for Canadians living with mental health problems and  illnesses. The Commission is working on four key initiatives and has eight Advisory Committees. 

‐30‐ 

For further information and interview requests contact: 

Karleena Suppiah, Communications Specialist, 403. 385. 4050  ksuppiah@mentalhealthcommission.ca 

Références

Documents relatifs

The MHCC, working with a large and exceptional group of partners here, officially opened the Bosman in 

[r]

This inquiry, conducted on behalf of the Mental Health Commission of Canada (MHCC), began as a search for legal principles governing the liability of employers and their agents

Support was high for the features presented and the roundtable discussions describing what is needed to achieve an accessible mental health system, with four fifths (79%)

The Commission’s recently-released Mental Health Strategy for Canada and its upcoming release of the National Standard for Psychological Health and Safety in the Workplace are

“Stigma and Mental Illness” is a joint project of the IWK Health Centre and the Mental Health Commission of Canada (MHCC) The video will be used to educate health care providers

Part I was a study by Cotton and Coleman (2008) of the curricula related to mental illness that are taught in Canadian police colleges and police academies. The purpose

• Additional strategies suggested for improving how people with mental illness perceive and interact with the police included: (a) building stronger linkages between the police