tragedies like the lapu lapu festival killings are “the cost we ultimately end up paying when you choose to save money by not putting mental health care at the centre of our public health priorities,” said kiffer card, an assistant professor in sfu’s faculty of health sciences.
card agreed the province needs another forensic psychiatric hospital.
overall, he added, the number of mental health beds in b.c. must be doubled or even tripled, but that must come with adequate funding and staff to handle complex patients and to minimize their risk for aggression.
“that’s been a really big challenge here in b.c., of getting the beds and keeping the beds,” he said.
kiffer card is an assistant professor in the health sciences faculty at simon fraser university. photo credit: peter osnes, ubc
kiffer card is an assistant prof
there are at least three community-based residential programs which, over the last year, have stopped taking forensic patients, edwards said in an email.
“it is my understanding that, at present, there are no residential substance treatment facilities in b.c. that will accept forensic patients who are under the review board’s jurisdiction,” she said.
edwards said there is “an acute shortage” of housing for patients discharged from the psychiatric hospital. she is aware of just three places — in coquitlam, victoria and prince george — that will now accept them.