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Family violence increases risk for many diseases while harming mental health

November 10th, 2016 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Family violence increases risk for many diseases while harming mental health)

domestic abuseMore than 230 Canadians a day are victims of family violence that are reported to police, Canada’s chief public health officer says in releasing a new report on a seldom discussed issue

Dr. Gregory Taylor’s 2016 report on the state of public health focuses on family violence, including sexual, emotional and financial abuse, as well as neglect. Taylor calls the statistics staggering.  Read the rest of this article at CBC…

ADHD Nation by Alan Schwarz review – investigating a £10bn industry

November 10th, 2016 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on ADHD Nation by Alan Schwarz review – investigating a £10bn industry)

1728_adhd_guardianAn urgently needed study of the diagnosis and medication of ADHD reveals a disease ruthlessly marketed by drug companies, scientists and self-help authors

Months before I was diagnosed, I had already fallen into the clutches of what the New York Times journalist Alan Schwarz calls the “ADHD industrial complex”. In his new book, ADHD Nation, Schwarz details how this circle of pharmaceutical companies, scientists, patient advocacy groups and self-help authors have succeeded in so diluting the diagnostic criteria for ADHD, and then so ruthlessly marketing it, that today nearly one in seven young people in the US, and one in five boys, has a diagnosis.  Read the rest of this article at The Guardian…

Nanaimo Working Group to host public forum on overdose crisis

November 9th, 2016 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Nanaimo Working Group to host public forum on overdose crisis)

Infortunio e assistenza“We need to continue to bring the community together to talk about the seriousness of the overdose crisis and how better to respond,” says Dr. Paul Hasselback, Island Health’s Medical Health Officer for Central Vancouver Island

Nanaimo and area residents are invited to a public forum on Tuesday November 15 to learn about the opioid overdose crisis, the impact it’s having on the community and the work underway to prevent and manage overdoses and support those with opioid dependency who are at risk for an overdose.  Read more at Island Health…

Basic income is not just about work, it’s about health

November 8th, 2016 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Basic income is not just about work, it’s about health)

Shadow of a little girl and womanThe big difference between the current welfare payments and a basic income…would be that basic income would be paid automatically, rather than requiring a whole bunch of paperwork and constant monitoring to prove eligibility

André Picard — The way we deal with adults living in poverty is a mess. Whether you believe in a handout or a hand-up approach, what those in need tend to get these days is the back of the hand. The social-welfare system is parsimonious, judgmental, demeaning, complex and bureaucratic. Worst of all, it tends to perpetuate, rather than alleviate, poverty. So is there a better way? That is the basic question that Ontario hopes to answer with its much-anticipated pilot project, testing a “basic income” approach.  Read the rest of this article at The Globe and Mail…

Don’t delay helping poor: Ontario should test out a plan for ‘basic income’

November 7th, 2016 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Don’t delay helping poor: Ontario should test out a plan for ‘basic income’)

Poverty background conceptThe idea is to study what the effects would be of providing people in poverty with a basic income, as a step towards designing a permanent system

The idea of providing a basic minimum income for everyone – no strings attached – is an alluring one that has been kicked around for decades. Now the Ontario government is edging closer to testing the idea with a proposal that highlights both some of the advantages and many of the problems inherent in the idea.  Read the rest of this editorial at The Toronto Star…

Mental illness afflicts about 20% of Canadians, gets 7% of health funding

November 1st, 2016 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Mental illness afflicts about 20% of Canadians, gets 7% of health funding)

“Mental health has been left out of the publicly insured framework not because of evidence but because of historic decisions fueled by misinformation, fear and prejudice and by squabbles over jurisdiction”

OTTAWA—The Trudeau government is being urged to make mental health a top priority as it negotiates a new health accord with the provinces and territories. Dr. Catherine Zahn, president of the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, says mental illness afflicts some 6.7 million Canadians — roughly 20 per cent of the population — and costs the economy an estimated $51 billion each year. That’s a bigger burden than is caused by cancer or infectious diseases, and yet Zahn says only about 7 per cent of the billions spent on health care in Canada goes to mental illness.  Read the rest of this article at The Toronto Star…