Breakdown
He switched on the light then fell into darkness
Bill Wilkerson led a campaign to transform the way corporate Canada saw mental illness in the workplace. Then he unexpectedly slipped into crisis himself.
Freedom to be sick leaves families feeling chained
Caregivers who can't get mentally ill loved ones to seek help grapple with laws designed to protect civil rights
The loneliness of the psych ward
Many psychiatric patients never see a family member or friend at their bedside. Guilt, shame, fear and sometimes simply exhaustion can keep loved ones away, but for people enduring long stays in a mental hospital, those visits are a vital lifeline
My list: 10 things to do improve mental health care in Canada
A long-time advocate for people with mental illnesses gives his prescription for curing what ails mental health care in this country
When mental illness tarnishes your golden years
Members of an older generation struggle to overcome not only their own biases against seeking care for mental disorders, but the lack of services
New charity to take aim at mental illness
‘A national charity and a national army of volunteers are critical if we want to keep mental illness out of the shadows forever,' says head of Mental Health Commission
Psychiatry: A specialty relegated to the basement
Mental health patients and the medical professionals who treat them face discrimination every day
Slim chance for parole from a prison of the mind
It was a federal program meant to get mentally ill young offenders into treatment and out of prisons and lives of crime. It could decide the future of Canada's youngest violent criminals, including an Alberta girl who murdered her parents and brother. But five years after its creation, the IRCS system is hamstrung by restrictive laws and scarce health-care resources, critics say
Raising a child with a mental illness
A 10-year-old's violent rages force her parents to send her away. A Grade 1 girl is too terrified to sing O Canada at school. Over 800,000 families deal with childhood mental illness, often without help.
'Discrimination eats away at you - and increases your chance of mental illness'
It's a unique challenge: Diagnosing and treating immigrants with depression, anxiety and other diseases of the mind. Columnist Margaret Wente talks to a renowned British psychiatrist who's come to Canada to help
Editor's note
Speak your mind – and erase a stigma
Mental illness is a pervasive presence in almost all of our lives
Video Feature
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Avoid using restraints, coroner's jury urges after death of schizophrenic who was tied to bed
A lost opportunity with tragic consequences
Paranoid schizophrenic's family doctor, psychiatrist worked steps apart – but there's no record they consulted each other
Grisly killings expose system's failure
He was hearing voices and cried for help. When no one answered, he butchered them
Mental illness - past or present - is not a crime
But discriminating against people with mental illness is
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Profile: Hockey star lends his name to campaign
Daniel Alfredsson was inspired to challenge the stigma around mental illness, attaching his high-profile name to a public awareness campaign