Canadians give provinces failing grades on access to mental health services

 In Opinion

In a survey of Canadian residents who have accessed mental health services in the past year, the Canadian Alliance on Mental Illness and Mental Health (CAMIMH) found that the provinces received a collective grade of “D” in providing access to mental health professionals.

“It is deeply concerning to know that close to half (47 per cent) of all respondents gave the provinces a failing grade of ‘F’,” said Ellen Cohen, CAMIMH Co-Chair. “Now, more than ever, we need accessible, timely and inclusive access to mental health care services. There can be no health without mental health.”

The survey found:

• Only 23 per cent think that mental health supports are meeting their needs.

• 12 per cent accessed a mental health service or substance use health service over the past year. Of those, 70 per cent were able to access the services they wanted, and 69 per cent are confident in navigating the mental health system.

• 91 per cent of respondents felt that they should not have to wait more than a month for mental health care with 39 per cent saying wait times should not exceed one week.

• 89 per cent are supportive of setting standards, benchmarks or guidelines for wait times.

• An overwhelming majority feel that both the federal (81 per cent) and provincial (89 per cent) governments need to increase the availability of mental health care providers to ensure timely access to care.

“People are not getting the care they need and that must change,” said Dr. Kim Hollihan, CAMIMH Co-Chair. “Clearly, all governments need to up their game to improve and expand timely access to mental health and substance use health services across the country.”

CAMIMH calls on the federal, provincial and territorial governments to ensure a significant portion of the federal government’s recently announced $196 billion health funding commitment is invested to improve and expand access to mental health and substance use health programs, services and supports. While the federal government has broken its promise to introduce a $4.5 billion Canada Mental Health Transfer, CAMIMH strongly believes that the provinces and territories must be held accountable for these investments and their on-the-ground impact.

CAMIMH looks forward to working with all levels of government, and others, to improve timely access to publicly funded mental health and substance use health programs, services and supports. Our mental health matters.

To see the full survey results, please visit our website at camimh.ca.

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