CANADA
Reality check on teen suicide issue
If you find Premier Christy Clark’s campaign against teen bullying to be
superficial or even self-serving, I’ve got news for you. It’s potentially
worse than that.
With the greatest respect to the family of Amanda Todd, her tragic case
isn’t representative of teen suicide any more than it is typical of
high-school bullying.
A clearer and more disturbing picture emerges from the latest report of
B.C.’s Representative for Children and Youth, Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond. It’s
a survey of 89 child protection cases from 2007 to 2010, where 15 kids
killed themselves and the rest inflicted serious self-injury, in some cases
repeatedly.
The word “bully” does not appear in the report. It speaks of domestic
violence, physical and sexual abuse, addiction, and runaways targeted by
street predators. Three quarters of the kids were removed from their homes
to protect them from their parents. More than half are aboriginal.
Its key conclusion is that shifting traumatized and mentally ill teens from
institutional care to foster homes isn’t working. Earnest but inadequately
trained foster parents and social workers can’t cope with kids who need
diagnosis, treatment and supervision.
Without that, kids are shuffled through foster homes an average of a dozen
times in three years, with little attachment to home or school. Some were
violent – no surprise given their formative years.
I asked Turpel-Lafond about the B.C. government’s recent focus on bullying.
She said it’s worthwhile, and there are parallels between Todd’s case and
more common teen suicides. One is isolation at moments of crisis.
“Say you’re a middle-class parent with a child who hasn’t come out of their
bedroom in six months, or you have a boy in foster care who’s in his 14th
home,” she said. “They both want to kill themselves, so what do you do?”
Ideally, you intervene and get them to a child psychologist. Parents or
guardians who can’t afford $150 an hour can wait months for the Ministry of
Children and Family Development to arrange it. And in the meantime, our
supposedly family-based foster care system sends them to school.
“I’m really worried about how [school-based anti-bullying programs] will
affect the most vulnerable kids, because you start anonymously reporting
someone as being a bully,” Turpel-Lafond said. “Yeah, we know they’re in the
youth justice system. We know they’re troubled. By the way, they’ve been
sexually and physically abused, jumped through 30 foster homes, and now we
want to label them again?”
This is not to suggest that the existing B.C. effort isn’t substantial. The
ministry reports that there are 2,221 front-line staff positions, of which
219 are currently vacant. It’s notoriously difficult to recruit, train and
keep child protection workers, especially in remote communities.
Turpel-Lafond said her latest figures show the child and youth mental health
service has 476 staff, with 21 vacancies and a government-wide hiring
freeze. And many of those are doing double duty as community service
managers.
Those managers don’t even have reliable data on case loads, she said. They
just know they’re overwhelmed and many of the kids aren’t being reached.
This is not about political blame. I can trace this problem back to when
Grace McCarthy was children’s minister, and the NDP did no better.
I’ve learned a bit about Riverview and Tranquille, asylums that were closed
because of a modern belief that they were inhumane. At least they offered
safety and medical care to even the most damaged people.
Right now our enlightened, progressive society can’t even help most of the
kids we know are at high risk.
Tom Fletcher
22 November 2012
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