'Stuff of nightmares': Followup report details more mistreatment of children in Sask. group homes
CBC
Warning: This story contains details some readers may find disturbing.
The Saskatchewan Advocate for Children and Youth has released a new report that details more horrifying conditions in some of the province's group homes.
The new report, released Monday, is a followup to a report released in March, which said four children in the care of the Ministry of Social Services were neglected and restrained during their time at a Saskatoon group home.
Reports of serious incidents in group homes kept coming in after the March report, prompting this week's followup, which is also intended to evaluate the ministry's progress since March.
The ministry is still working on recommendations from the first report, but that needs to be accelerated, said children and youth advocate Lisa Broda, who is an independent officer of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan.
"The advocate continues to see the most vulnerable of children neglected, as evidenced in the newest critical incidents," her report says.
It details one recent incident in Prince Albert that shows poor training of staff working with children with complex medical needs.
Staff caring for a deaf and blind child with prosthetic eyes left them out of his eye sockets for eight hours, contrary to medical standards. Staff were then directed to insert them without proper training.
"This is like the stuff of nightmares," Meara Conway, the provincial NDP critic for social services, said Tuesday.
"The advocate is clearly concerned about a lack of accountability and service quality."
The report details another incident in Regina, in which a five-year-old escaped one-on-one supervision via an emergency exit. The report says the child was known to run and was interested in water.
He was found floating in a nearby creek, making a gurgling sound. The child was taken to the hospital, where medical staff cleared his lungs and he was released the next day.
The same child escaped two months later and was found at a Walmart more than five kilometres away.
Other incidents highlighted in the new report include: