Gaps remain in involuntary psychiatric admission compliance, says B.C. ombudsperson
VICTORIA — A report says three-year-old recommendations to protect the legal rights of people involuntarily admitted to psychiatric facilities in British Columbia are still not being adequately implemented.
Ombudsperson Jay Chalke says the legally required documents for involuntary admissions are only being completed 42 per cent of the time.
Chalke says that is up from 28 per cent when he made his recommendations in 2019, but still represents a significant gap in compliance by mental health facilities.
The original report found admission documents were often missing, late or improperly completed.