Sunday, December 22, 2024

Mental health worsening across Canada, access to care is uneven, report says

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TORONTO — Kristin Pardy hid her bulimia for more than 10 years.

When she finally mustered the courage to go to her local clinic in Cartwright — a community of about 400 people in southern Labrador — and share her “secret,” the nurses were “amazing” and got her a referral to an outpatient eating disorders program in St. John’s.

But St. John’s is about 1,400 km away, and as a working mom, ”I couldn’t leave my kids for that long. I definitely couldn’t leave my job for that long,” Pardy said.

“Because it was going to be an outpatient program, I would still have to pay to find accommodations for the six to eight weeks that I was there. I’d still have to pay my bills while I was there. I’d still have to feed myself while I was there,” the 38-year-old paramedic said in an interview by phone.

”(With) the financial barriers and the logistical geographical barriers of the only treatment available to me, I just, I couldn’t do it,” said Pardy, who is a member of Nunatukavut, the southern Labrador Inuit population.

Inability to get needed mental health care is a reality facing many people in this country, according to The State of Mental Health in Canada 2024, a report released Tuesday by the Canadian Mental Health Association.

The report says 2.5 million people can’t get the care they need, citing a variety of reasons, from unavailability of services to the out-of-pocket costs of seeing many mental health professionals whose services aren’t publicly funded.

It says 57 per cent of young people between 18 and 24 years old who have early signs of mental illness say they can’t afford to get services.

The grim findings come when the need is greatest, as overall mental health across Canada is three times worse than it was before COVID-19, the report says.

Access to care varies widely across provinces and territories, with the biggest barriers in northern and rural parts of Canada, it says.

That’s certainly the case in rural Newfoundland and Labrador.

During the pandemic, Pardy suffered from postpartum depression after the birth of her third child and was also diagnosed with anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder by a doctor visiting the community.

She was prescribed medication for her anxiety, but her husband’s health insurance provider cut her off of his plan once they became aware that she had anxiety and bulimia.

The letter dated Dec. 16, 2021, which The Canadian Press has seen, said her eligibility for spousal coverage on the group plan had depended on her “providing evidence of good health.” It said the company was unable to increase the premium to account for her new status of “above average risk” and advised her to seek insurance coverage elsewhere.

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