Mental Health Commission of Canada
The Mental Health Commission of Canada is a national non-profit organization created by the Canadian government in 2007 in response to a Senate committee tasked to study mental health, mental illness, and addiction. The committee appointed Michael J. L. Kirby as the first chairperson. The MHCC was endorsed by all the provinces and territories with exception to Quebec. The Commission is funded by Health Canada and has a ten-year mandate enforced through a sunset clause. On 21 April 2015, Minister of Finance Joe Oliver announced that the 2015 federal budget calls for the renewal of the MHCC for another ten-year mandate starting in 2017–2018.
The organization is governed by a board of directors including government and non-governmental directors. Since 2013, the board has been assisted by an advisory council and a network of ambassadors. From 2007 to 2012, the board was assisted by eight advisory committees. The Commission is not responsible to undertake service-delivery or advocacy for mental health services. The aim is provide relevant jurisdictions and stakeholders with tools and information required to improve the quality of and access to mental health care.
The proposal for creation of the MHCC was made by the Canadian Senate Standing Committee on Social Affairs, Science and Technology in 2006 in their publication, "", a comprehensive study of the state of mental health care in Canada.
Mandate
The MHCC was tasked with three major objectives:- To develop a .
- To oversee the development and implementation of an anti-stigma and anti-discrimination campaign.
- To create a, with the aim of mobilizing evidence-based knowledge to improve best practices and increasing dialogue across Canada.
The MHCC does not provide clinical services, direct fiscal or human resources related to clinical practice, monitor government performance, or engage in advocacy with government bodies. It operates outside the federal/provincial/territorial constitutional framework, working at all jurisdictional levels.
Former Advisory Committees
From 2007 to 2012, the MHCC worked with eight committees, each having approximately 120 members with expertise and experience in a different field of mental health, in order to oversee their mandate. The committees were tasked with advising on the following major areas of concern:'
- , a Canadian policy paper on mental health issues concerning children and youth.
- Evidence-based mental health services for youth through schools.
- The MHCC Youth Council
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- assist in the development of best practices for law enforcement through the creation of The Police Project.
- develop tools to study the impact of human rights on the mentally ill and their involvement with the law.
- the creation of guidelines to support people involved in the care of seniors.
- the drafting of the Seniors Mental Health Policy Lens Toolkit, a survey designed to assess the mental health of senior citizens.
- addressing issues surrounding peer support, immigrants, refugees, racially marginalized groups and housing.
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- advising on the writing of the National Standard of Canada for Psychological Health and Safety in the Workplace.
Other significant projects and initiatives
At Home
The Commission's "" research project looked to address homelessness for people with mental illness by combining treatment with places to live, and is the largest experiment of its kind in the world. Taking place in Vancouver, Winnipeg, Toronto, Montreal and Moncton, the project is based on the Housing First model of the Pathways to Housing program in the United States, which has reported positive results in cities including New York, Philadelphia and Washington.In 2012, the National Film Board of Canada is documenting the results of the At Home project with the interactive web documentary Here At Home. Fifty short documentaries about the experiences of participants in At Home are being added to the NFB website until the summer of 2013. Directors on the NFB project include Manfred Becker, Lynne Stopkewich and Louiselle Noël.
The research portion of this project concluded in March 2013.