Province responds to wildfires’ impacts on mental health
If you’re feeling grief, anxiety or stress around disasters and health emergencies, you’re not alone.
Read More
Honourable Jennifer Whiteside
Read BioEmail: MMHA.Minister@gov.bc.ca
The Province continues to enhance B.C.’s response to the toxic drug crisis, investing $1 billion through Budget 2023 over the next three years.
It is not acceptable to interrupt vital, life-saving services to exercise the right to protest, and it’s taking a toll on care providers’ mental health.
We are working hard to build a seamless, integrated system of mental health and substance-use care that can be accessed quickly and close to home.
If you’re feeling grief, anxiety or stress around disasters and health emergencies, you’re not alone.
This factsheet is updated with current information on the overdose crisis in B.C., including provincial actions, statistics and announcements.
British Columbia is in the midst of two major public health emergencies. The first is the on-going overdose crisis, and while overall death rates have started to come down, it continues to take a heart-breaking toll on families and communities across B.C. The second, of course, is the COVID-19 pandemic, which has drastically changed all our lives.
Watching a young person struggle with mental health or addictions challenges is a parent’s worst nightmare. We all want to see our children thrive. And yet when they need help, families in crisis have had to struggle to navigate a fragmented system that doesn’t get their kids the care they need. There are waitlists to navigate, expensive bills to pay and doors that seemingly lead nowhere.
Every day, three or four more British Columbians die from a drug overdose. It’s the worst public health crisis to hit our province in decades.
Mental-health and substance-use challenges and disorders can happen to anyone, affecting people of all ages, income levels, professions and social classes.
The stories of people taken by the overdose crisis come from every corner of the province. A forestry worker in the North who became addicted to painkillers for a workplace injury and then turned to street drugs. Friends celebrating after a wedding in the Interior. Suburban parents who left behind young children. Middle-aged men who were clean and sober for years.
View the Ministry's latest photos on Flickr.
Watch the Ministry's latest videos on YouTube.
Listen to the Ministry's latest audio clips on SoundCloud.
The B.C. Public Service acknowledges the territories of First Nations around B.C. and is grateful to carry out our work on these lands. We acknowledge the rights, interests, priorities, and concerns of all Indigenous Peoples - First Nations, Métis, and Inuit - respecting and acknowledging their distinct cultures, histories, rights, laws, and governments.