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Health Law: A primer for family caregivers in the mental health & addiction sector

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Health Law: A primer for family caregivers in the mental health & addiction sector

Are you figuring out the mental health act for someone you care for? Navigating privacy and consent with the person you care for? Then you don’t want to miss these webinars!

Angie Hamilton from Families for Addiction Recovery and Mary Jane Dykeman from INQ Law team-up to put on a two-part webinar to help family caregivers navigate health law in the mental health and addiction system. Angie also has lived experience as a parent caregiver and both webinars will walk through some common scenarios family caregivers may face. You don’t want to miss it!

REGISTER HERE

Part 1: In this session, we will examine how the Health Care Consent Act and Personal Health Information Protection Act, 2004 affect an individual’s rights, the roles and obligations of substitute decision-makers, and practical strategies for navigating the health system. It will also speak to special issues in the mental health and addictions sectors, and key issues regarding children and youth.

Part 2: As a follow-up session, we will talk about the mental health system, including the Mental Health Act framework and community-based services, risk management considerations, privacy, and being an advocate in the system. We will discuss broadly to case scenarios in the mental health and addictions sector, involving the health system, housing and more.

About our speakers:

Angie Hamilton is an Executive Director and Co-Founder of Families for Addiction Recovery, a retired lawyer and parent of a child who struggles with addiction. She is a member of the Public Policy Committee of the Canadian Society of Addiction Medicine and a Board Member of The Ontario Family Caregivers’ Advisory Network. She was a member of the National Board of MADD Canada from 2014 to 2020 and the Chair of their Public Policy Committee.

Mary Jane Dykeman is a partner and co-founder at INQ Law in Toronto. She has acted as in-house legal counsel to two Toronto teaching hospitals. In her work, she regularly assists hospitals, long-term care and retirement homes, and community health care organizations in finding practical solutions to legal, clinical, risk and privacy matter - including mental health, consent, capacity and substitute decision-making, and difficult family issues. Since 2004, she has taught the mental health law course in the Osgood Professional Development Health Law LL.M.

REGISTER HERE

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@Registered Member posted:

Are these Canadian laws or provincial? Do they apply in Quebec?

Hi Susie- It will be focused on Ontario laws primarily but it will also look at the national landscape as a whole in terms of how we can improve health law for mental health and addictions. Angie is a huge advocate in that area so I am sure she will share some of her knowledge

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