Monthly Archives: November 2010

OPSEU calls for timely access to mental health and youth services following Sarnia suicides

OPSEU recently called upon the provincial government to ensure timely access to mental health and youth services following a series of suicides in the Sarnia community.

OPSEU joined community members in calling for change following statistics showing higher-than-normal suicide deaths this year at a November 10 press conference in Sarna. Fourteen youths have taken their lives in that community.

“We’re drowning,” says Deb Gordon, Chair of OPSEU’s Child Treatment Sector. “In the past six months, St. Clair Child and Youth Services have received 34 crisis referrals from youth who had suicidal ideations or who have planned or attempted suicide. That is more crisis referrals than we received in an entire year from March 2009 to April 2010.”

Teen bullying and suicide have been in the media spotlight recently as several Hollywood celebrities have drawn attention to a topic often overlooked. Although the reasons can vary, homophobia and bullying are major contributors to teen suicide.

“I believe there is a direct relationship between the funding crisis and the crisis with children and youth in this community.” said OPSEU President Warren (Smokey) Thomas. “There has been no increase to core funding for children and youth mental health services in 14 out of 17 years.  What that translates to is a 35% reduction in capacity to be responsive.”

Ontario government has neglected youth mental illness leaving Ontario families to cope on their own. 

One in five children and youth meeting the criteria for mental health diagnosis but the majority of children will go untreated.

The press conference included OPSEU President, Warren (Smokey) Thomas; Sahar Nasr, President, Board of Directors, St. Clair Child and Youth Services; Peter Smith, Chair, Children’s Mental Health Advocacy Committee of Sarnia-Lambton and Deb Gordon, OPSEU Child Treatment Sector Chair and staff member at St. Clair Child and Youth Services.

By the numbers:

– The average wait time for youth mental health services in Ontario is five months.
– More than 90 per cent of suicide victims have a diagnosable psychiatric illness.
– Someone in the world commits suicide every 40 seconds, according to the World Health Organization.
– Canada suicide is the second leading cause of death in the 10 to 24 age group. The aboriginal youth suicide rate is four to six times that of non-natives.
– Ontario there are about 1,000 suicides every year. The Ontario Association for Suicide Prevention believes the real number is much higher.

Arbitrators continue to award increases in health care

Two more arbitration decisions recently awarded increases to hospital-based employees.

OPSEU members at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) were awarded retroactive increases of 2.5 per cent per year as part of a first collective agreement. The two-year agreement runs from November 7, 2008 to November 6, 2010. CHEO had retracted its wage offer during bargaining after the government introduced the Public Sector Compensation Restraint to Protect Public Services Act. The arbitrators awarded the increase following decisions at Windsor Regional Hospital, Sunnybrook, and earlier between CHEO and LIUNA.

The Toronto Star reports today that about 16,000 SEIU members in 60 hospitals across Ontario have been awarded two per cent raises in each of two years.

In this latest arbitration, arbitrator Kevin Burkett wrote: “Government pronouncements of intent with respect to future funding are not, in and of themselves, sufficient to override what would other wise be the content of an arbitrated award.A legislated directive would be required for this to happen.”

Dwight Duncan told the newspaper that “we won’t be transferring additional funds to accommodate them. That’s just the bottom line,” he said.

Tom Closson, CEO of the Ontario Hospital Association, said the government should enact legislation capping what arbitrators can award so there is “equity” between non-unionized and unionized health workers.

The OHA CEO dismissed the 2007 Supreme Court of Canada decision that struck down a BC law that took away worker’s rights and stripped job protection.

The CEO of Windsor Regional Hospital has been on his own rant about arbitration decisions following an award to OPSEU members at his hospital. (https://opseudiablogue.wordpress.com/2010/10/13/does-windsor-hospital-ceo-know-whats-going-on/).

Women’s College bans waiting room magazines

No more two-year-old National Geographics! Women’s College Hospital has joined the ranks of health care environments banning magazines in their waiting room. Patients can still bring their own reading materials but are asked not to leave them behind. The hospital believes banning waiting room reading material will cut down on the spread of infectious disease. It will be interesting to see whether the ban will also include hospital leaflets and newsletters.

Video: Tax cuts or health care — OPSEU Hospital Professionals speak out

Tax cuts or health care? OPSEU Hospital Professionals speak about priorities for health care in preparation for the October 6, 2011 provincial election. The Hospital Professionals Division is launching a campaign that asks us to choose between tax cuts for large corporations or health care for all Ontarians.