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In a mental health crisis, university campus police won't be the only responders under new program

In a mental health crisis, university campus police won't be the only responders under new program

CBC
Monday, May 09, 2022 11:09:08 AM UTC

A program that pairs police with trained mental health workers has expanded to the University of Waterloo — a change that one student leader says has been a long time coming. 

Under the integrated mobile police and crisis team (IMPACT) program, the Canadian Mental Health Association, Waterloo Wellington, and police work together to provide supportive mental health crisis care to those in need. It builds on a University of Guelph pilot program that began last fall.

From Thursday through Sunday, a staffer with IMPACT will be on call to help assess and de-escalate University of Waterloo students in crisis. 

It's hoped the program will help avoid unnecessary trips to the emergency room. Until now, a common response to a student's after-hours mental health crisis would be for campus police to take them to hospital for assessment — something Jeff Stanlick said can be "very intrusive."

"While it's also very necessary at times, opportunities to provide support by the right person, at the right place, is preferable," said Stanlick, director of services for the CMHA, Waterloo-Wellington. 

Stephanie Ye-Mowe agrees. While in her third year, the faculty of environment student said a professor became concerned about her mental health. They called campus police, who ended up apprehending her in the middle of the university's student centre. 

Ye-Mowe said she was taken to Grand River Hospital, where she waited for hours, only to be sent home when staff decided she wasn't in immediate danger. 

"It was definitely a very traumatic and uncomfortable experience," said Ye-Mowe, vice-president for education with the Waterloo Undergraduate Students' Association. 

"I definitely think that it could have been handled better." 

Ye-Mowe said there's long been a need for better crisis support on campus, especially given that a person's late teens or early twenties is often when a mental illness shows up.

"Being in a stressful environment, mental health emergencies will occur," she said. "So it's important to have crisis services available." 

In her role with the student association, Ye-Mowe has pushed for IMPACT — or something like it — to expand to the University of Waterloo after first hearing about the program as a University of Guelph pilot. 

The Guelph pilot began in October and has yielded promising results, according to Stanlick.

In less than six months, the program was used more than 100 times, and in the vast majority of cases, people were helped on campus and didn't need to be taken to hospital, he said.  

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