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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. 

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B.C. health minister says about 6,000 on 'extended leave' from mental health care

British Columbia’s health minister Josie Osborne says “now is the time” for American doctors and nurses to move to the province as it fast tracks recognition of their credentials during an escalating trade war between Canada and the United States. Osborne, speaks during a news conference in Burnaby, B.C., on Monday, June 10, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck


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.

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