Advocates, families speak out in defence of B.C.’s Mental Health Act
VANCOUVER — Frederick Dawe remembers the night about 30 years ago that his six-foot-eight son experienced a psychotic break in the emergency room of a Vancouver-area hospital.
“He just lost it. He picked up a couch, swung it around the room, cleaned the room out,” Dawe said. “It took four security guards to hold him down while they gave him an injection.”
The month-long hospital stay that followed was one of several where Peter Dawe was kept against his will. Both he and his father say those treatments saved his life.
“You’re not of sound mind,” said Peter, now 50. “When you’re in that state you’re not thinking properly.”