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Mental health could be the 'echo pandemic' once the public health crisis eases

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https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/pandemic-effects-will-linger-1.6047081

 

Mental health could be the 'echo pandemic' once the public health crisis eases

Suicide rates have been stable, but more people have considered it, study finds

The New Brunswick Human Rights Commission is seeing exponential growth during the pandemic in the number of complaints filed on the basis of mental disability. 

In the last fiscal year, 115 complaints were filed based on mental disability. There were 60 the previous year, said Claire Roussel-Sullivan, the chair of the commission. 

And so far this year, the commission has already seen more complaints than it did in the year leading into the pandemic. That's 67 complaints in less than two months — more than all of 2019-2020. 

"So that's significantly higher than previous years," said Roussel-Sullivan. 

She said "mental disability" can include everything from mental disorders to depression and anxiety. 

And the mental health fallout from the pandemic may be felt for years to come, says the executive director of the Canadian Mental Health Association of New Brunswick. 

Christa Baldwin said the number of New Brunswickers reaching out for help soared during the pandemic. She predicts things will only get worse as society emerges from "survival mode."


Christa Baldwin, the executive director of the Canadian Mental Health Association of New Brunswick, predicts mental health will become an 'echo pandemic' of COVID-19. (Submitted by Christa Baldwin)

She said mental health will become an "echo pandemic" of COVID-19.

"This is a real crisis point now for mental health," said Baldwin. 

Before the pandemic, the New Brunswick association was providing services to about 86,000 residents. Baldwin said that jumped to 204,000 because of COVID-19. 

Roughly 70 per cent of the visits to the group's website during the pandemic were new visitors, said Baldwin. 

"So when we talk about mental health demand, that's significant." 

Baldwin said it's been "all hands on deck" at the association during the pandemic. 

Study finds stable suicide rate 

Baldwin said she isn't surprised by most pandemic-related statistics — except the suicide rate. 

Research done by the Canadian Mental Health Association, in collaboration with the University of British Columbia, reveals that the suicide rate has remained stable through the pandemic, but the number of people thinking about suicide has increased.

It went from about two per cent of people surveyed prior to the pandemic "to six per cent to 10 per cent during different parts of the pandemic," said Baldwin.

The survey asked 3,027 people in Canada specifically about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on their mental health. 

Although the study doesn't show an increase in the number of suicides, Baldwin said an increase in the number of people thinking about it is "pretty concerning."

Thirty-eight per cent of those surveyed said their mental health has declined because of COVID-19. 

And the figures are worse for those who were already struggling before the pandemic. That group was twice as likely to say their mental health has declined because of COVID-19, and four times more likely to have suicidal thoughts or tried to harm themselves, the survey suggests. 

'Chronic under funding'

"In some ways, the history we have been living has brought us to this situation," said Baldwin.

"The chronic under funding of mental health in this province by every government that we've had hasn't allowed us to have the right or appropriate resources in place to help people with their mental health needs." 

Baldwin said governments have to invest more in proactive mental health care. 

"We've recognized that we cannot treat our way out of this mental health crisis that we're finding ourselves in now. We need to be upstream and have the preventative lens and earlier intervention to help people before they reach the crisis point."

She would like to see mental health receive the same amount of funding as physical health, but there is a long way to go to close that gap. 

"Mental health is a universal human right equal to physical health," Baldwin said. "So all people have a right to accessible and appropriate mental health services the way they do for physical health.

"So if someone is reaching out because they have a broken leg, you go to the hospital, you get a cast, you have appropriate services. You're not sent away, come back in two weeks for a cast. So that's where we need to land with mental health."

More problems or less stigma?

In the New Brunswick Human Rights Commission's most recent annual report, mental disabilities are cited four times more than they were 20 years ago. 

And for the first time ever, mental disabilities are cited more often than physical disabilities.

Roussel-Sullivan said it's difficult to say whether there are more mental health issues or whether people just feel more comfortable talking about them. 

"We know, based on our data, that more people are putting in complaints, but we can't say whether there are more people in the province getting diagnosed with some type of mental illness," she said. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Mia Urquhart is a CBC reporter based in Saint John. She can be reached at mia.urquhart@cbc.ca. 

 

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices

 

25 Comments
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David Amos
Methinks there is no news here for me. At least everybody knows Higgy et al have trying to call me crazy for years but the shrinks won't go near me anymore me since the discovered that they won't be paid for their precious time because the "Powers That Be" have been denying my right to Health Care by simply renewing my Medicare card long before the pesky virus landed in New Brunswick and upset the apple cart N'esy Pas?

 

 

 

Ben Haroldson
They already sell a vaccine for that, it's called lpc, gnb ..pot and beer.


SarahRose Werner
Reply to @Ben Haroldson: You're confusing a vaccine with a treatment.


David Amos
Reply to @Ben Haroldson: Methinks Higgy et al know that l don't drink beer and don't smoke dope and definitely won't take a shot of a untested substance they dare to call a vaccine. I trust that you understand it is not wise not to try to be comfortably numb to often these days. An old Hillbilly such a I find it far more fun to to keep my wits about me as I monitor my crazy Labrador puppy as I watch the never ending circus unfolding its tent on a daily basis around the world and add my two bits worth now and then much to Higgy's chagrin N'esy Pas?

 

 

 


eddy watts
Well past the echo stage: no one is talking about the mental disease created by no work....social norms turned upside down....loss of hope...alcoholism....other drug addictions. (restrictions..some day there will be a forensic accounting of how many deaths were directly caused by Covid vs. the numbers we see reported)


David Amos
Reply to @eddy watts: Dream on 

 





Randy McNally
Kudos to the CBC and to the writer of this piece, Mia Urquhart, for shining some much needed light into the dark recesses of 21 century society. Mental health or the lack thereof is something that must be
met head on and dealt with if we are ever going to make it as a healthy Canadian population. Depression and anxiety holds countless thousands hostage in this province. They go undetected and unnoticed as they go about their lives in public as they project no negative
physical attributes although they are seriously ill just the same.


David Amos
Reply to @Randy McNally: Yea Right

 

 


Jeff Smith
Oh no all the store employees won't be able to bark at us where to stand in line. Such a terrible time - for the rest of us it will be shear joy.

 

David Amos
Reply to @Jeff Smith: Don't bet on it

 

 

 

 

Pat Holland
Every other country has seen suicide rates jump. Makes you wonder where they are getting their data. We should never allow government to do this to our country ever again
 

SarahRose Werner
Reply to @Pat Holland: Be nice if we never had another pandemic again - but I wouldn't be surprised if we did.


David Amos
Reply to @Pat Holland: I concur

 

 

 


James Smythe
The Higgs govt will plan to solve this by simply never declaring the
“public health crisis” to be over. Problem solved!


David Amos
Reply to @James Smythe: Sad but true

 

 

 

SarahRose Werner
This doesn't surprise me. One of the ways you deal with living with mental health issues is to build supports into your daily routine. This works pretty well - until something happens that disrupts your
routine. Of course the pandemic disrupted everyone's routines! For some people, this was a major annoyance. But for other people, it knocked out the supports that they were relying on to get them through each day.


David Amos
Reply to @SarahRose Werner: Nothing you say surprises me



 


Jay Edwards
November the coroner report will be coming out...suicides will outpace
CV19 deaths.


PHIL INNIS
Reply to @Jay Edwards: facts


David Amos
Reply to @Jay Edwards: Of that I have no doubt






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