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Who is impacted by BC’s Mental Health Act?
Data, Unpacking Assumptions Malachite Goudie-Groat Data, Unpacking Assumptions Malachite Goudie-Groat

Who is impacted by BC’s Mental Health Act?

Collecting and having access to transparent data when considering who experiences involuntary treatment is not only useful in seeing the impacts and any potentially harmful trends in order to be able to address them, but also it is an incredibly important tool in combatting common misconceptions about those who are involuntarily treated. An absence of information can contribute to leaving space for people to perpetuate harmful stereotypes and hold damaging ideas of those who are being involuntarily treated. It can also create space for those in power to play off of people’s fears that are based in misconceptions instead of reality, leading to decisions being made without consulting people with lived experience expertise who are impacted by those decisions.

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ICYMI: May Edition
Announcements Malachite Goudie-Groat Announcements Malachite Goudie-Groat

ICYMI: May Edition

From an infographic and shareables about reducing stigma and discrimination through the language we use when discussing mental health and substance use health issues, disaggregated data collection for better representation, and the decriminalization of drug possession in BC, here's what us and others were up to in May.

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How We Talk About Things Matters
Guiding Principles Kendra Milne Guiding Principles Kendra Milne

How We Talk About Things Matters

How we talk about people with mental health or substance use health issues can either combat discrimination or it can reinforce stereotypes that have real impacts in people’s lives. Here are some ways to reduce stigma around mental health and substance use by challenging these ideas through how we think and what we say.

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Research Kendra Milne Research Kendra Milne

Racism, police violence & mental health

In recent weeks, activists and racialized communities have shone a light on ongoing racial discrimination and unacceptable use of force by police against black, Indigenous, and other racialized people… Racism is a mental health issue and the systems that currently respond to mental health issues, from police to the health care system itself, often reinforce discrimination and exacerbate inequities.

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