
Brentwood Recovery Home receives nearly $100,000 in provincial grant
A nearly $100,000 grant for the Brentwood Recovery Home.
Brentwood has received a $99,000 Resilient Communities Fund Grant from the Ontario Trillium Foundation (OTF) to grow their Peer Support Training Program.
This program empowers individuals with lived experience of recovery, or who are considered 'alumni' of the program, to help support others on their own recovery journey.
Through this initiative, which launched in July 2024, Brentwood has been able to train three full groups, surpassing the goal of 60 participants.
The content of this course aligns with both provincial and federal peer support guidelines to provide these individuals with the knowledge and skills to offer safe and effective peer-to-peer assistance in Windsor and Essex County.
Sonja Grbevski, executive director of Brentwood Recovery Home, said Brentwood has a really strong alumni base who want to help.
'Being able to provide additional training because we know lots has changed in the trajectory of addictions, or addictions and mental health, and equipping our alumni and peers has been absolutely critical to bring them to that next level of support,' she said.
She said if they weren't provided this grant, they wouldn't have been able to do this program.
'That really speaks to the fact of how important this grant was for us, we were able to do three full cohorts, actually we've surpassed the goal of 60 participants, and being able to spread the knowledge across our alumni group, our peer support initiatives.'
Grbevski said those in recovery want that personal connection.
'We've heard it over and over is, 'Can I please have someone who's gone through this journey to help me walk beside me and guide me along with the formal structure of programs'.'
This funding was for a one-year term.
Approximately 70 individuals are currently on program, however there are a number of individuals who attend daily programming but do not stay on site.
Brentwood Recovery Home is dedicated to providing lifelong, compassionate, and evidence-informed addictions treatment. Through this peer support initiative, alumni remain engaged with the community and reinforce positive recovery outcomes.
- Written by Meagan Delaurier/AM800 News
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CTV News
3 hours ago
- CTV News
Ontario's measles outbreak through the eyes of front-line workers
Emergency department charge nurse David Lambie outside the emergency entrance of the Woodstock General Hospital in Woodstock, Ont., Thursday, May 22, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nicole Osborne ST. THOMAS — Health-care workers battling measles in southern Ontario say they think about the outbreak from the moment they wake until the moment they sleep. They say treating and tamping down the surge of a disease most have never seen in their lifetime is constant. Some have even been infected by patients who unwittingly spread the highly infectious illness while seeking help for early but general symptoms — fevers and coughs are common before the telltale rash appears days later. Measles has spread to more than 3,000 people in Canada this year. More than 2,000 of those infected are in Ontario. Here's a look at caregivers on the front lines of an outbreak that has particularly struck a region south and east of London. 'The unlucky ones' Carly Simpson considers herself one of the 'unlucky ones.' Five days after developing a sore throat, body aches and fever, the nurse practitioner gazed at her reflection in the bathroom mirror, stunned to see red splotches all over her body. 'Oh my gosh this is measles,' Simpson gasped. She said measles never crossed her mind when she first fell ill mid-March, suspecting a more likely cause was her autoimmune disease, ankylosing spondylitis, which leads to chronic pain and inflammation. After all, the vast majority of cases had been among the unvaccinated and Simpson said she had been inoculated three times — including a booster in 2015 after a test revealed her previous two shots didn't lend full immunity. Simpson said she had been assured at the beginning of the outbreak that three shots would be enough to protect her. She still got sick and was essentially bedridden for days, only mustering enough energy to walk to the bathroom. But she said the rash only lasted a day and never spread to her husband or kids. 'I had a mild case because I've been vaccinated,' said Simpson, among five per cent of the outbreak's cases to involve vaccinated people. She suspected she was infected by a patient who came to her clinic with virus symptoms a couple of weeks earlier. Early symptoms can seem like other illnesses until the rash appears, leaving health-care workers who examine them vulnerable to exposure. 'Is this just a common cold? Is it just some viral infection?' she said of the questions that dog caregivers. Shawn Cowley was unlucky, too. He noticed white spots inside his cheeks in late April, and then a red blotchy rash on his forehead that migrated down his face, and onto his shoulders and arms. 'Fortunately for me, because I was fully vaccinated I didn't get the full brunt of measles,' he said, explaining that the rash otherwise would have covered his whole body. Still, it took about a week for his body to recover from the exhaustion. Cowley is a key player in measles containment as head of emergency management and preparedness at the local health unit, Southwestern Public Health. His case was traced to his son's hockey tournament. He eventually told his colleagues that he contracted measles but noted there is 'a stigma' associated with the illness. Cowley also felt guilty for going to the grocery store and filling up on gas before he was symptomatic, potentially spreading it to others. 'When you find out you do potentially have measles, and the number of people I've exposed, understanding how virulent measles is, that's a really hard thing to deal with personally because you put other people at risk.' 'Slow burn' Dr. Erica Van Daalen calls the outbreak a 'slow burn' but one that has required close collaboration among local hospitals to safely treat and isolate measles patients. The chief of staff at St. Thomas Elgin General Hospital said she might see one to three patients in the emergency department on an average day, and often they are children. As of late May, three infected pregnant women had delivered babies and 15 kids had been admitted. Those include young patients transferred from hospitals in Woodstock and Tillsonburg, which don't have pediatric units. 'It's a lot of one-on-one bedside nursing,' Van Daalen said in an interview earlier this spring. 'When the days are busy, it wears on the nurses.' Less than seven per cent of Ontario's cases have ended up in hospital. But the logistics of safely admitting a measles patient is like expert-level Tetris. Masked patients are ushered through back doors to negative pressure rooms that keep contaminated air from escaping into other areas of the hospital and infecting more people. The room is sealed and has a system that filters and exchanges the air. Exposure risks are avoided as much as possible, even trips to the bathroom, said Sangavi Thangeswaran, a registered nurse and an infection control practitioner at both Alexandra Hospital Ingersoll and Tillsonburg District Memorial Hospital. 'We ask the patient to stay in there. If they need anything like using the washroom, we try to give them commodes or urinals, just to lessen the exposures,' Thangeswaran said. There are five negative pressure rooms at Woodstock Hospital. When they're full, patients are assessed in the ambulance garage, said David Lambie, a charge nurse in Woodstock's emergency department. It is an extra layer of logistics to navigate, said Lambie, whose hospital has cared for 108 measles patients since January, 55 of them kids. Once a patient is well enough for discharge, their negative pressure room is left empty for half-an-hour while contaminated air is expunged. Then it's deep cleaned for the next patient, said Thangeswaran. She said each of her Oxford County hospitals initially had just one negative pressure room in each emergency department but as cases swelled they created three more. As of June 12, her team had cared for 14 measles patients in Ingersoll and 64 in Tillsonburg. 'Inherent challenge' Van Daalen, of the hospital in St. Thomas, said deciding whether to discharge a kid sick with measles sometimes keeps her up at night. 'You hesitate to send them home because you're not quite sure how they're going to land,' she said. 'There are some later-term consequences for kids who have measles. It's a very rare complication, but we'll have to keep our surveillance up.' Dr. Ninh Tran said he felt like he was approaching burnout in late February. Ontario's weekly case count had nearly doubled to 177 over a two-week period ending Feb. 27, with almost half of the overall cases located in his southwestern public health unit. Pressure was high to trace cases, halt community spread and stop infections. 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CP is solely responsible for this content. Hannah Alberga, The Canadian Press


CBC
4 hours ago
- CBC
Tire particles, perfumes, metals? Extensive study of Toronto air looks at what we're breathing in
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CBC
5 hours ago
- CBC
Class action on birth alerts gets green light against Ontario, but faces hurdles
A class-action lawsuit that hopes to help pregnant mothers who were red-flagged and had their newborns taken away by child welfare agencies has been certified to proceed against the Ontario government — but it's only a partial win for the plaintiffs. Part of the lawsuit — to hold 49 children's aid societies (CAS) across the province accountable for those "birth alerts" — failed to get the green light from an Ontario Superior Court judge. It's taken three years for the proposed class action to reach this certification ruling — a step necessary before a group lawsuit can proceed to trial. Now, a lawyer representing the plaintiffs says appealing the court's decision could delay justice for parents a bit longer. Birth alerts are notifications that child welfare agencies issued to hospitals about pregnant people they deemed "high-risk." In turn, health-care providers were required to alert welfare authorities when the subject came to seek medical care or deliver their baby. The alerts led to newborns being taken from their parents for days, months or even years. Critics have called them unconstitutional and illegal. The Ontario government issued a directive in 2020 to end the practice, following several other provinces and territories, saying the alerts disproportionately affected Indigenous and racialized mothers. I'm not fighting this alone. - Neecha Dupuis, Ottawa mom Co-plaintiff G.G., whose identity is protected under a publication ban, said she's seeking "due justice" for Indigenous women like her who've been traumatized by birth alerts. She learned in 2016 that Native Child and Family Services Toronto issued a birth alert while she was pregnant with her third child, and said she felt pressured to undergo invasive testing and mental health assessment. Workers later amended the birth alert after finding no grounds to apprehend her newborn, her claim states. "I want there to be justice and accountability," G.G. told CBC News. "Indigenous mothers and families have the severe impacts of birth alerts that continue to this day." Neecha Dupuis, who was the subject of a birth alert at an Ottawa hospital, sat in the virtual courtroom in April as the certification hearing took place. "It widened my view as to how far and how deep CAS has harmed all these people," said Dupuis, who's Anishinaabe. "It's so emotional, it really is, because … I'm not fighting this alone." Appeal to follow 'strong' ruling: lawyer This week, co-counsel for the plaintiffs Tina Yang said her team is planning to appeal the judge's decision to not certify the action against the children's aid societies. "It's a strong ruling with regard to Ontario ... [but] obviously, disappointment with regard to the denial of certification against the children's aid societies," said Yang, with Goldblatt Partners LLP, in reaction to the decision. Yang said the class action in Ontario is the first among similar claims in B.C., Saskatchewan and Manitoba to reach certification. "It's such an important cause to be litigated," said Yang. "It's not just compensation. It's about recognition of what happened, vindication of those rights ... and that hopefully ... there's a commitment to making sure that something like this never happens again." The Ontario Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services forwarded CBC's request to the attorney general, which said in an email it would be inappropriate to comment within the appeal period. The lawyers representing the 49 children's aids societies also declined, citing the same reason. The appeal period ends Friday. Should there be appeals from any parties, the matter will then go through the Ontario Court of Appeal before the class action could move forward, explained Yang. CASs did not act 'in unison': motion "Birth alerts were illegal and discriminatory," the statement of claim states, especially as they targeted unborn children. The plaintiffs' lawyers had pointed out that child protection agencies "have no jurisdiction to act in protection of, or, by extension, to require warnings in respect of, the unborn," according to the certification motion, citing a 1997 Supreme Court decision. The claim alleges the provincial government was negligent and breached sections of the Charter of Right and Freedoms, and argues "for years the Ministry failed to end what was within its knowledge a wrongful and harmful practice." However the judge found the claims against the 49 children's aid societies — conspiracy, negligence, intrusion, misfeasance in public office and breach of the same charter rights — failed to pass the test for class actions in the province. "The relationship between the 49 CAS Defendants is non-hierarchical. They are separate, distinct, and equivalent entities," the judge wrote. For instance, the owner of a Toyota with bad transmission can't sue Honda, even if Honda's transmissions are just as bad, the motion explains. "Since the CAS Defendants are independent actors, they cannot be liable in unison regardless of whether Birth Alerts were wrongful or rightful." Yang wants to stress that the denial "was not a rejection of the validity" of most of the plaintiffs' claims, "but rather a reflection of the technical class-action rules." "We still believe strongly in this case," she said. Yang added her team is exploring options suggested by the judge, such as bringing a class-action against individual children's aid societies, though that would mean finding dozens of additional plaintiffs. G.G. said she's proud the legal team is pursuing the appeal. "This class-action lawsuit places responsibilities on each and every one of the children's aid societies of the unconstitutional and racist behaviour of opening files on Indigenous pregnant persons," she said. "And that's wrong, and that's not what truth and reconciliation looks like." Ottawa mom hopeful Since sharing her story with CBC in 2022, Dupuis obtained hospital records through a freedom of information request that show child protection workers sent alerts to The Ottawa Hospital where she gave birth to her son in July 2011. "This [social worker] received three voicemail messages over the weekend concerning CAS alerts on this patient," read the hospital worker's notes from that July, which were shared with CBC. That's why Dupuis says she supports the appeal against the children's aid societies, no matter how long it takes. "They need to be held accountable for what they did to my family," she said. "If we made it halfway, that's better than no way."