
B.C. health minister says about 6,000 on ‘extended leave’ from mental health care
VICTORIA — British Columbia’s health minister says almost 6,000 people were on leave from involuntary mental health care in the province last week, pushing back against Opposition claims that the patients aren’t being tracked.
The status is known as extended leave, in which a person receiving involuntary mental health treatment is allowed back into the community while remaining under care.
It’s been in focus since it emerged that the suspect in last month’s Lapu Lapu Day festival attack that killed 11 people in Vancouver was on extended leave at the time.
Claire Rattée, the B.C. Conservatives’ critic for mental health and addictions, asked in the legislature why the government had “no ability to track” patients on extended leave and did not know how many there are.