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[溫哥華本地新聞] VaNncouver mayor and police chief say
ncouver mayor and police chief say ‘alarming trend’ of violent attacks signals mental health crisis
B.C. not ready to create new institution for mentally ill
VANCOUVER - The provincial government may need to create an institution for severely mentally ill people with a propensity for violence, but it still needs to do more work to understand the scope of the health care crisis that is gripping the province, Health Minister Terry Lake said Friday.
As a result, Lake says he can’t support a call from Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson and Police Chief Jim Chu for a new 300-bed secure facility for the province’s most violent mentally ill people, who are responsible for a dramatic increase in random and violent attacks on unsuspecting citizens.
Chu and Robertson held a news conference Friday saying mental health issues in Vancouver have reached a crisis level and called on the province to make major changes to protect the public from an increasing number of violent incidents.
Lake said he’s being told there is new evidence that some of those with the most severe mental health issues are also suffering permanent brain damage from the use of highly-damaging drugs such as crystal methamphetamines. That’s different from the kinds of mental illnesses in the past that would have landed a person in the now-closed Riverview Institution.
“Nothing is ever simple, of course, but what I am learning from people who deal with this population is that we may be dealing with something quite different from what we’ve seen in the past, and that is long term, permanent brain damage, acquired brain injury, if you like, from the long-term use of drugs like methamphetamines,” Lake said.
“We have spent hundreds of millions of dollars in community treatment and facilities for people who came out of Riverview. But I am told that the population the chief and the mayor are worried about is not the same population that would have been housed in Riverview in past practice.”
Robertson and Chu said severe mental health issues in Vancouver have become so serious they are now on par with the crisis the city encountered at the height of the HIV/AIDS epidemic a decade ago.
Police are finding that one in five cases they respond to now involve a person with severe mental health issues. Since January 2012 there have been 96 serious incidents, including one 15-month period in which 26 people were attacked in 11 separate incidents, Chu said. In most of those cases, they involved people who police had multiple interactions with under the Mental Health Act.
“As we talk about this issue, we should not stigmatize those with mental illnesses,” Chu said. “A very small portion commit violent crimes, and we have definitely noticed a disturbing trend in the last year.”
In one of those cases, a man viciously beat three elderly women, kicking and stomping each of them in the head. In another case, a man walking his dog was stabbed multiple times and was eviscerated, with his internal organs being visible to responding officers. In a third case, Chu said, a mentally-ill person stabbed an innocent woman at a convenience store so hard that the knife broke off in her head.
“The trend is alarming and currently poses the greatest risk of an unprovoked attack on everyday citizens in Vancouver,” the VPD said in a background paper. “These attacks have included vicious beatings, stabbings and a shooting, and have involved on occasion very young victims, including newborn twins.”
The number of cases in which police apprehend people under the Mental Health Act has risen by 23 per cent this year over last year. |
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