
Health Sciences' integrated ER could deter people from seeking mental health care, warns advocate
CBC
When the Health Sciences Centre's new mental health and addictions facility opens, its emergency room will be integrated with the hospital's existing general emergency room.
Eastern Health says the decision to assess mental and physical health emergencies in the same emergency room was made, in part, to reduce stigma surrounding mental health services — but an advocate says the integration might make it harder for someone experiencing a mental health crisis to seek help.
Sarah Hillier, a mental health advocate in Churchill Falls, said she doesn't think combining the emergency rooms is a good idea.
"I do understand the kind of thought of, 'mental health is health.' It absolutely is. But I just think that comes also with being sensitive to the needs of mental health and how to appropriately address emergencies."
Hillier, who has used mental health services at the Waterford Hospital, said she might not have gone if she'd had to go to a general emergency room.
When seeking mental health help, a person often needs to advocate for themself, she said — and even just going to an emergency room can be a hard step to take.
Being in that environment can be discouraging, she said, and the process could be a deterrent for people seeking mental health services.
Hillier said integrating the ERs to reduce stigma could backfire.
"Reducing stigma does not mean lumping everyone together," she said. "Reducing stigma means approaching it the way that it needs to be approached sensitively and and in a very timely manner."
But having the mental health facility at the main Health Sciences Centre, said Hillier, could help reduce the stigma of going to the Waterford Hospital, a dedicated psychiatric hospital.
When asked about Hillier's concerns, Patrick Whalen, Eastern Health's regional director of mental health and addictions, said "health is health."
He said the regional health authority held significant consultations when planning the new model, including with mental health advocates, individuals and families with experience in the mental health-care system, the Eastern Health client-family advisory council and clinicians.
"We brought that question to them: would they rather have a separate psychiatric assessment unit as part of the new build or would they prefer to have this new model, where we integrated into the Health Science emergency unit, which is being done nationally in other provinces?"
The consensus from those groups was to integrate the psychiatric assessment unit into the general emergency services, he said.