New program pairs Victoria police officers with nurses for mental health calls - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 04:09 AM | Calgary | -17.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

New program pairs Victoria police officers with nurses for mental health calls

The Co-Response Team consists of a specially-trained and experienced police officer working alongside a registered nurse with experience in mental health care.

The teams are trained in de-escalation and mental health care

Victoria Police Chief Del Manak is pictured standing at a podium
Victoria Police Chief Del Manak stands next to Tasha McKelvey and Rob Schuckel from Island Health as he announces the VicPD and Island Health's new co-response team on Monday, Jan. 30, 2023. (Mike Mcarthur)

A new program in Victoria will pair police officers with registered nurses to handle mental health-related calls.

Officially launched on Mondayafter a two-week pilot, the Co-Response Team (CRT) will respond to calls in Victoria and Esquimalt from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., seven days a week.

The CRTconsists of two teams, each with a specially trained police officer and a nurse experienced in psychiatry and mental health care.

"We're addressing a gap ...this is what our communities have been asking for, for quite a long time," said Victoria police Chief Del Manak at Monday's announcement.

Both 911 and non-emergency call takers will assess whether the situation warrants a police-only or a CRT response, Manak said.

The officers will be armed, hesaid, but both the officers and the health-care workers will be dressed in plainclothes and will travel in an unmarked police car for discretion.

Health staff will work to assist the person, which may involve seeking their friends or family, offering hospital care, or referring them to other community resources, said Tasha McKelvey, the director of the South Island Mental Health and Substance Use with Island Health.

"The co-response team will resolve mental health situations collaboratively and in the least intrusive way," said McKelvey.

Rob Schuckel, the co-ordinator with Island Health's Mental Health and Substance Use Services, said these calls come from various locations, including shelterson the streets and in people's homes.

"Really, we're just working with that person. We're trying to have a conversation about what's going on today."

A similar programlaunched months agoby the Nanaimo RCMPpairedaspecially-trainedofficer with a registered nurse to resolveurgent mental health-related crisis situations.

Similar programs have also started in B.C.'s Interior and other provinces.