Suicides in Quebec: Coroner wants friends and family included in mental health care
MONTREAL — Quebec’s Health Department should do a better job of involving friends and family in the treatment of people suffering from mental health issues and addictions in order to prevent suicides, coroner Julie-Kim Godin said Wednesday.
As part of a report on suicide in the province, Godin said the Health Department should work with health-care establishments and other organizations to find ways to include friends and family members, who can help protect their loved ones but are often shut out of the treatment process.
“Even when loved ones are benevolent and clearly express their desire to help, they are not necessarily given the opportunity to be heard or to accompanying the user,” she wrote in the report. “As a result, they feel powerless and uninvolved, even excluded from treatment and the recovery process.”
She recommends that the Health Department change consent forms to ask people if they agree to have their information shared with their loved ones.

