Gap in services for Indigenous people in B.C. correctional centres: audit
VICTORIA — An audit has found British Columbia’s Provincial Health Services Authority did not consistently provide Indigenous inmates with mental health or addictions diagnoses with access to services they needed inside jails.
A report from the office of B.C.’s auditor general says the audit found “full care plans” were completed for fewer than half of 92 sample clients jailed in eight of the province’s 10 institutions between January 2019 and December 2021.
It says the audit had to rely on the sample files because the health authority’s current system could not produce reports on Indigenous clients’ access to mental health and substance use services, constituting a lack of oversight and monitoring.
It found 93 per cent of clients whose files it reviewed were screened within 48 hours of entering the correctional system, and 63 per cent received services for all or some of their needs within 72 hours, while nine per cent declined help.