7 minute read

Guest editorial

Next Article
Evidence matters

Evidence matters

Mental health and substance use health workforce needs policy attention

By Mary Bartram and Kathleen Leslie

More than one in three Canadians report serious mental health concerns, and one in four report problematic substance use, according to the most recent data from the Mental Health Commission of Canada and the Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction. These are staggering numbers.

The impacts of the global pandemic on the mental health and substance use of the Canadian population are proving to be complex -- and persistent. The mental health and substance use health workforce is the backbone of the critical response but is at risk of being overshadowed by the crisis in the broader health workforce.

Regulation of this field would help provide Canadians with more equitable access and enable needed critical workforce planning. The federal government has an important role streamlining this process in partnership with the provinces and territories -- and in creating a new national health workforce registry, which would help the health system as a whole.

Mental health and substance use health counselling in some parts of Canada right now is a bit of a wild west.

If you go to a regulated psychotherapist or counselling therapist in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario or PEI, you will know what kind of service to expect, who is providing it and what kind of accreditation they’ve received. You are also more likely to get these regulated services paid for by the province, or at least partially covered by your workplace benefits program if you are fortunate enough to have one.

But if you live elsewhere in Canada, many provinces and territories have yet to move forward with psychotherapy regulation. This means you won’t know what you’ve signed up for.

Some protections are in place through the voluntary certification and competency frameworks of provincial associations, but services from these providers may not qualify for public and private funding. And from a health planning perspective, understanding the supply of these mental health and substance use providers is more difficult.

In this way, the fragmented regulatory landscape for mental health and substance use health providers across Canada is undermining equitable access to services and inhibiting our capacity to undertake workforce planning.

Our current research, led by Athabasca University in collaboration with the University of Ottawa and the Mental Health Commission of Canada, is zeroing in on both key barriers and facilitators to these critical regulatory reforms.

For example, progress in New Brunswick was helped by a unique approach.

Continued on page 6

UPCOMING DEADLINES

DECEMBER 2022 ISSUE

EDITORIAL: November 8 ADVERTISING: Display – Nov. 25 | Material – Nov. 29 Monthly Focus: Medical Imaging/Year in Review/Future of Healthcare/Accreditation/Hospital Performance Indicators: Overview of advancements and trends in healthcare in 2021 and a look ahead at trends and advancements for 2022. An examination of how hospitals are improving the quality of services through accreditation. Overview of health system performance based on hospitals performance indicators. A look at medical imaging techniques for diagnosis, treatment and prevention of diseases. + SPECIAL FOCUS: ANNUAL RADIOLOGY SUPPLEMENT

JANUARY 2023 ISSUE

EDITORIAL: December 6 ADVERTISING: Display – Dec. 16 | Material – Dec. 20 Monthly Focus: Professional Development/Continuing Medical Education (CME)/Human Resources: Continuing Medical Education (CME) for healthcare professionals. The use of simulation in training. Human resource programs implemented to manage stress in the workplace and attract and retain healthcare staff. Health and safety issues for healthcare professionals. Quality work environment initiatives and outcomes. + PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT SUPPLEMENT

610 Applewood Crescent, Suite 401 Vaughan Ontario L4K 0E3 TEL. 905.532.2600|FAX 1.888.546.6189 www.hospitalnews.com

Editor Kristie Jones

editor@hospitalnews.com Advertising Representatives Denise Hodgson

denise@hospitalnews.com Publisher Stefan Dreesen

stefan@hospitalnews.com Accounting Inquiries accountingteam@mediaclassified.ca

Circulation Inquiries info@hospitalnews.com

Director of Print Media Lauren Reid-Sachs

Senior Graphic Designer Johannah Lorenzo

ADVISORY BOARD

Barb Mildon,

RN, PHD, CHE VP Professional Practice & Research & CNE, Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences Helen Reilly,

Publicist Health-Care Communications Bobbi Greenberg,

Health care communications Sarah Quadri Magnotta,

Health care communications Dr. Cory Ross,

B.A., MS.C., DC, CSM (OXON), MBA, CHE Vice President, Academic George Brown College, Toronto, ON

ASSOCIATE PARTNERS:

Hospital News is published for hospital health-care professionals, patients, visitors and students. It is available free of charge from distribution racks in hospitals in Ontario. Bulk subscriptions are available for hospitals outside Ontario. The statements, opinions and viewpoints made or expressed by the writers do not necessarily represent the opinions and views of Hospital News, or the publishers. Hospital News and Members of the Advisory Board assume no responsibility or liability for claims, statements, opinions or views, written or reported by its contributing writers, including product or service information that is advertised. Changes of address, notices, subscriptions orders and undeliverable address notifications. Subscription rate in Canada for single copies is $29.40 per year. Send enquiries to: subscriptions@ hospitalnews.com Canadian Publications mail sales product agreement number 42578518.

NEWS London researchers discover novel method to diagnose long COVID

By Celine Zadorsky

Published in Molecular Medicine, researchers at Lawson Health Research Institute have found that patients with post-COVID-19 condition (long COVID) have unique biomarkers in their blood. The team is now working on developing a first of its kind blood test that could be used to diagnose long COVID. The discovery could also lead to new therapeutics for this condition.

Long COVID occurs when someone experiences symptoms like fatigue, cognitive issues, shortness of breath and gastrointestinal issues after an initial COVID-19 diagnosis. It can sometimes take up to 12 months for the condition to occur.

“It’s estimated that 30 to 40 per cent of patients with COVID-19 will develop long COVID,” says Dr. Douglas Fraser, Lawson Scientist and Critical Care Physician at London Health Sciences Centre (LHSC). “Physicians currently rely on symptoms alone to diagnose the condition, but our research offers a unique profile of blood biomarkers that could be used in a clinical test.”

The researchers studied 140 blood samples from participants at LHSC and St. Joseph’s Health Care London, including St. Joseph’s PostAcute COVID-19 Program. Participants were those with presumed long COVID, hospital inpatients with acute COVID-19 infection and healthy control subjects.

“We chose to study blood vessels that link all the body systems together to look for changes after an acute infection,” explains Dr. Fraser, who is also a Professor at Western University’s Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry.

The team found that blood vessels of those with presumed long COVID were changing rapidly after a confirmed COVID-19 infection. They also found that patients with long COVID had 14 elevated blood biomarkers associate with blood vessels. With the help of machine learning, they discovered that two biomarkers called ANG-1 and P-SEL could be used to classify long COVID with 96 per cent accuracy.

“Long COVID is a relatively new condition and we have much to learn about it,” says Dr. Michael Nicholson, Associate Scientist at Lawson, Respirologist at St. Joseph’s and Associate Professor at Schulich Medicine & Dentistry. “This research advances our understanding of long COVID with the potential to improve diagnosis and patient care.”

The advantage of biomarkers is that they not only help diagnose a disease but also provide insight into potential treatments. The team is now focused on using their findings to create a clinical diagnostic test with a goal of also exploring therapeutics.

“With a point-of-care diagnostic test, we could confidently diagnose long COVID and eventually develop targeted therapeutics against these blood vessel changes that we have discovered,” says Dr. Fraser. “The ultimate goal is to improve patient outcomes following a long COVID diagnosis.”

This research was supported by funding from London Health Sciences Foundation, London Community Foundation and the AMOSO Innovation Fund. It builds on a growing body of COVID-19 research from scientists at Lawson Health Research Institute.

The study’s first author Maitray Patel, is a PhD student from Western’s Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry. Patel worked on blood analysis under the supervision of Drs. Doug Fraser and Mark Daley. ■ HDr. Douglas Fraser, Lawson Scientist and Critical Care Physician at London Health Sciences Centre.

Dr. Michael Nicholson, Associate Scientist at Lawson, Respirologist at St. Joseph’s and Associate Professor at Schulich Medicine & Dentistry. Celine Zadorsky is a Communications Consultant at Lawson Health Research Institute.

Engineering the extraordinary

Alleviate pain. Restore health. Extend life.

Six powerful words that inspire us to engineer the extraordinary, innovate life-transforming technologies, and create better patient outcomes in Canada.

©2022 Medtronic. Medtronic, Medtronic logo, and Engineering the extraordinary are trademarks of Medtronic. All other brands are trademarks of a Medtronic company.

This article is from: