Sarnia gets 'mobile crisis intervention teams' for mental health calls - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:32 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Windsor

Sarnia gets 'mobile crisis intervention teams' for mental health calls

Police in the Sarnia area will now be joined by a nurse when answering mental health calls.

The teams are a result of a new agreement between police and the hospital

Bluewater Health, Sarnia Police and OPP are working together to address mental health calls. (Jonathan Pinto/CBC)

Police in the Sarnia area will now have a nurse to help them when answering mental health calls.

A new "mobile crisis intervention team" for both Sarnia Police and OPP was announced Friday at Bluewater Health during a visit from provincial Health Minister Christine Elliott, solicitor general Sylvia Jones and Michael Tibollo, associate minister of mental health and addiction.

Paula Reaume-Zimmer.
Paula Reaume-Zimmer is the integrated vice-president of mental health and addictions at Bluewater Health and the Canadian Mental Health Association branch in Lambton Kent. (Kelly Francis/Bluewater Health)

Paula Reaume-Zimmer, integrated vice president of mental health and addictions at Bluewater Health and the Lambton-Kent branch of the Canadian Mental Health Association, said the mobile crisis intervention teams will be called when police identify an individual with mental health or addiction issues.

"The officers on the scene can hand over to this team," she explained. "A mental health assessment can take place by a nurse ... They will also have access to our department of psychiatry. So if [the individual in need] is active with a psychiatrist they could maybe connect... and have some direction from them."

Reaume-Zimmer says the new team will reduce the number of mental health patients that end up in the emergency department by default.

The team is one of theresults of a new "police-hospital transition framework" announced by the province that encourages individual hospitals and police services to agree on standard protocols when addressing mental health calls.