In the headlines or behind the scenes, CAMH stories always aim to inform, engage, and enlighten.
A newly released report co-led by Brock University and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) aims to create and strengthen supports and services for Indigenous Peoples with neurodevelopmental differences.
About New Brock-CAMH report calls for enhanced mental health, neurodiversity supports for Indigenous communitiesSince its launch many facets of CAMH have worked together, with the support of important community partners, to make meaningful progress on our goals. We are happy to share examples from each category of the strategy to demonstrate our progress.
About Dismantling Anti Black Racism Year 2 update on CAMH strategyFor more than 15 years, CAMH has partnered with Working for Change to ensure that all hospital retail food services are staffed exclusively by people with lived experience of mental illness including addiction.
About A pathway to hope, one panini at a timeFollowing a weeklong Accreditation Canada visit to our hospital in June, the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) has been accredited with Exemplary Standing, the highest level of achievement possible.
About CAMH once again awarded Exemplary Standing from Accreditation CanadaAutistic females have an 83 per cent increased risk of self-harm leading to emergency healthcare relative to non-autistic people, according to a new study from ICES and CAMH
About A call to improve mental health support to reduce the risks of self-harm and suicide in autistic individualsSUMMIT study led by CAMH womenmind? scientist is the largest talk therapy clinical trial ever conducted for perinatal women
About Improving access to mental health supports for pregnant women and new mothersResearchers using advanced brain imaging are first to find increase in protein marker of inflammation in illness affecting 200 million globally
About CAMH study confirms ongoing brain inflammation associated with long COVIDCAPE Project finds Ontario score fell from top jurisdiction nationally to fourth overall at 40 per cent
About Ontario alcohol policy receives failing grade