Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

OPED: Listening Can Be One Of The Best Ways You Can Help A Family Member Experiencing Mental Health And Addiction Challenges

Rachna Singh, 01 Aug, 2019 05:43 PM

    This week our government is launching a campaign encouraging families to start having courageous conversations about mental health and addiction challenges.

     

    The campaign makes life-saving resources more accessible by having translated information on the StopOverdosebc.ca website and Punjabi ads that highlight the importance of listening without judgement.


    By taking the time to listen with empathy, compassion and understanding, we can open the door for our loved ones to share what they are going through and allow them to reach out for help.


    To put it simply, talking saves lives.


    The overdose crisis has taught us that no one is immune – addiction and mental health challenges can affect anyone. We all need to be ready and willing to help each other without judgement. If someone in my family experienced an overdose, I hope that they wouldn’t be left to suffer alone. That someone would help them. Because we are all someone’s family and deserve to be treated that way.


    Learning how to help has never been easier. By calling 8-1-1 or visiting StopOverdoseBC.ca/Punjabi, you can access Punjabi resources on how to respond to an overdose, where to go for services and supports and how to support a loved one who might be experiencing mental health and addiction challenges.



    Stigma is as dangerous as any drug. It can leave people suffering in silence, unable to ask for help. It can isolate people from their loved ones and trap them in a lonely spiral of shame and blame that can be extremely difficult to overcome. On top of that, stories of systemic racism, discrimination and lack of culturally aware services in our system of care can make the idea of reaching out for help even more daunting.


    But that narrative is changing: slowly but surely. More people are coming forward and saying mental health challenges are not weaknesses and addiction is not a moral failing. We know that there is nothing more courageous than reaching out for help. We know that it’s okay to not be okay. And we know by sharing our stories, we can build stronger communities where talking about mental health and addiction challenges is not taboo but encouraged.


    Everyone deserves the chance to find their own unique pathway to healing and hope. That’s why earlier this year, we expanded service hours at the Roshni Clinic, which offers culturally tailored and language-specific services in Punjabi, Hindi and English for people living with addiction challenges.


    Last month, the Minister of Mental Health and Addictions Judy Darcy launched A Pathway to Hope, a plan to improve mental health and addictions care across the province. The Pathway outlines our priorities for building a seamless, integrated system of care where cultural awareness and humility are embedded in services at every opportunity.


    We have a long road ahead of us to get to a place where more people feel comfortable and supported sharing their mental health and addiction challenges. But it starts with us, in our homes, in our neighbourhoods, and our communities and builds out from there. It can all start with a simple conversation that could help save a life.


    By Rachna Singh
    MLA Surrey - Green Timbers

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Once Driven Near Extinction, Wild Turkeys Making Themselves At Home In Quebec

    They arrived a few years ago — three-foot tall, bare-headed visitors that would occasionally stare intently at residents from their balconies and yards.

    Once Driven Near Extinction, Wild Turkeys Making Themselves At Home In Quebec

    Forest Fire Threatening Pikangikum Grows In Size, Airlifts Continue

    Forest Fire Threatening Pikangikum Grows In Size, Airlifts Continue
    A forest fire threatening a First Nation in northwestern Ontario has grown in size, officials said Thursday as more flights were planned to airlift residents out of the community.

    Forest Fire Threatening Pikangikum Grows In Size, Airlifts Continue

    More 'Work To Do' To Mobilize Canadians On Climate Change Action: Trudeau

    More 'Work To Do' To Mobilize Canadians On Climate Change Action: Trudeau
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he has more work to do to sell Canadians on his vision for more action to fight climate change.

    More 'Work To Do' To Mobilize Canadians On Climate Change Action: Trudeau

    B.C.'s New Speculation Tax Funnels $115 Million Into Affordable Housing

    The British Columbia government says its new speculation and vacancy tax has pumped $115 million into a fund to create more affordable housing.

    B.C.'s New Speculation Tax Funnels $115 Million Into Affordable Housing

    Big, Old B.C. Trees Produce Mutations Over Time That Could Improve Success: UBC

    Big, Old B.C. Trees Produce Mutations Over Time That Could Improve Success: UBC
    VICTORIA - Researchers collected DNA from the tops of some of Canada's tallest trees to search for mutations that could provide evidence of how the ancient forest giants evolve to survive.

    Big, Old B.C. Trees Produce Mutations Over Time That Could Improve Success: UBC

    Developer Offers Disputed Oka Land To Kanesatake Mohawks As Ecological Gift

    A Quebec land developer says he's signed an agreement with the Mohawk Council of Kanesatake to return a parcel of forest that was central to the Oka crisis that began 29 years ago today.

    Developer Offers Disputed Oka Land To Kanesatake Mohawks As Ecological Gift