Is Forced Treatment the Answer to Homelessness?
CanadaMon Nov 18 2024
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More and more people are struggling with homelessness in Canada, with over one in ten experiencing it at some point in their lives. Governments are dismantling encampments and some are even using special laws to ignore court rulings. Now, they're considering forced mental health treatments. But is this the right solution?
Currently, any province in Canada can force someone into mental health treatment. The rules vary but should only be used as a last resort. People have the right to decide what happens to their bodies, according to Canada's Supreme Court. Financial problems, not mental health issues, are the main cause of homelessness. Forcing treatment on people isn't backed by science and can lead to more harm than good.
In Quebec, Ontario, and British Columbia, the use of mental health laws to detain people has been rising for over a decade. This trend is similar in other western countries, suggesting forced treatment is now a big part of mental health care. People who are forced into treatment often have their rights violated. Many class-action lawsuits in Canada have been won or are ongoing because of this.
Forced treatment supporters argue that mental health issues and addiction cause homelessness and violence. But research shows this isn't true. Economic inequality and rising housing costs are the real reasons behind the rise in homelessness. Tools used to evaluate risk and incapacity mainly target marginalized people.
Politicians say forced treatment works, but data doesn't support this. Instead, having more community-based services and involving people with experiences in mental health seems more promising. Using kinder language like "compassionate care" doesn't change the fact that forced treatment is an old approach that violates people's rights.
https://localnews.ai/article/is-forced-treatment-the-answer-to-homelessness-470afc27
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