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Family Support
The CMHA National’s document, A Framework for Support is in its third edition, and provides a valuable context in which to think about recovery for a person with serious mental illness. The following text is from that document:

Since its inception in the early 1980's, the Framework policy project has called for the full involvement of consumers and families in mental health systems that are community focused and recovery oriented. In support of this, the Framework identified four key interest groups with the potential to integrate and support people with mental illness.

The Community Resource Base, as these four groups are collectively called, reflected a shift in thinking by including consumers and families as full partners, along with mental health service providers and representatives of generic social agencies, in the process of planning and operating the mental health system. These ideas of partnership, and the redefinition of consumers and families as key players and change agents with a wealth of practical and experiential knowledge, have proven to be enduring components of the Framework model. They are the foundation for a policy approach that is centred on the lives of people with mental health problems, not just the professional service system that is designed to help them.

Family and Friends

Families are the single largest group of caregivers, often providing financial, emotional and social support, although their role generally goes unrecognized. Families, when organized, have the potential not only to support their ill relative, but to provide support to one another and to other families as well. Despite the importance of the role that families play and the burden they carry, they receive almost no financial support. It is ironic that professional service providers, who provide care and support to people with mental illness, receive almost 100% of the mental health dollars, while families, who also provide care and support, receive virtually no financial resources.

For many people, informal networks of friends or neighbours fill the same functions as families.
These networks provide a variety of kinds of support and the opportunity for reciprocal relationships not usually found in the system of formal services.

From CMHA/Peel’s perspective, it is the presence of all types of community resources that impact most positively on person’s recovery. As such, we are committed to involving family as much as we can, based on the wishes of our clients, to help our clients achieve recovery. Our Community Development work also aims to work in partnership with family organizations.

Canadian Mental Health Association Peel Branch