Philanthropist and child advocate Margaret McCain pledges $10 million to improve child, youth mental health

Gift is Canada's largest to child and youth mental health

TORONTO, April 25, 2012 - Respected child advocate, the Hon. Margaret McCain, OC, ONB, has today committed a $10 million gift to enhance - and better coordinate - mental health initiatives for children and youth at Toronto's Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) and across Ontario.

This investment will establish the Margaret and Wallace McCain Centre for Child, Youth and Family Mental Health at CAMH and act as a catalyst for system-wide improvements benefitting young people and their families. The Centre will support a search for an internationally recognized leader in child and youth mental health to guide the expansion of treatment services and new research initiatives at CAMH. As well, the Centre will strengthen partnerships to improve coordination of services across the province.

For Margaret McCain, this gift to CAMH builds on her life-long commitment to improving the lives of children and families. "It is well understood that the first signs of mental illness often appear in young children and youth. By investing today in CAMH, my late husband, Wallace, and I believe that early intervention and access to expert care will provide real hope to families for the future," said Mrs. McCain, former lieutenant-governor of New Brunswick and co-author of three influential Early Years Study reports into early childhood learning, in 1999, 2007 and 2011.

Among the top priorities for CAMH is recruiting world-class leadership for the program. "This gift will help us recruit experts, harness our resources, break down existing silos of service and strengthen partnerships to improve care for children and youth," said CAMH CEO Dr. Catherine Zahn.

The McCain gift will help address gaps in the system for children and youth by supporting a broad range of initiatives, including:

  • Recruiting much-needed specialists in the field.
  • Improving access to integrated mental health and addiction services for youth, a critical need for approx. 60 per cent of youth in crisis. This summer, CAMH will open in stages a new provincial inpatient unit for youth with concurrent mental illness and addiction issues linked to an intensive day treatment and transitional support program to help youth successfully reintegrate into the community.
  • Strengthening knowledge transfer between CAMH and other partners.

"Having the confidence of such a respected life-long advocate for children underscores CAMH's value as a trusted leader within the mental health system as well as our capacity to initiate system-wide improvements in the service of children, youth and families," said Darrell Louise Gregersen, President and CEO, CAMH Foundation. "CAMH is deeply committed to ensuring that no child or young person in crisis is left with nowhere to turn."

The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (www.camh.net) is Canada's largest mental health and addiction teaching hospital, as well as one of the world's leading research centres in its field. CAMH combines clinical care, research, education, policy development and health promotion to help transform the lives of people affected by mental health and addiction issues. CAMH Foundation (www.supportcamh.ca) raises funds to support CAMH's excellent patient care, insightful research and innovative programs to better understand, treat and prevent mental illness and addiction.

 
For further information:

Denise Koulis, CAMH Foundation, 416.535.8501 x 4395 or denise_koulis@camh.net.

 

Click here to watch Margaret McCain on TVO's The Agenda with Steve Paikin

 

Click here to view media articles about this announcement

 


CAMH patient, Colin Stainton, 11, thanks
Margaret McCain for her gift of $10 million to
CAMH in support of children, youth and families.


Dr. Catherine Zahn, President & CEO of CAMH,
watches as Colin Stainton and his mom, Cheryl
Marsh, present Mrs. McCain with a thank you card
made by patients of CAMH's Child, Youth and
Family Program.

 


(LtoR): Dr. Eric Hoskins, Minister, Child and Youth
Services, Margaret McCain, Kelly Meighen, Chair,
CAMH Foundation Board of Directors, Darrell Louise
Gregersen, President & CEO, CAMH Foundation,
Dr. Catherine Zahn, President & CEO of CAMH and
Colin Stainton.


(LtoR): Dr. Eric Hoskins, Minister, Child and Youth
Services, Margaret McCain, Kelly Meighen, Chair,
CAMH Foundation Board of Directors and Darrell
Louise Gregersen, President & CEO, CAMH Foundation.

Margaret McCain thanks and encourages CAMH
patient, Colin Stainton, while sister Marie Stainton,
14, and mom, Cheryl Marsh, proudly look on.


(LtoR): Dr. Catherine Zahn, President & CEO of CAMH,
Dr. Eric Hoskins, Minister, Child and Youth Services,
Darrell Louise Gregersen, President & CEO, CAMH
Foundation, Margaret McCain, Marie Stainton, Colin
Stainton and Cheryl Marsh.

 


(LtoR): Susan Pigott, VP of Community Engagement
at CAMH, Simon Napayok, artist and former CAMH
patient, and Lisa Brown, Executive/Artistic Director of
Workman Arts
.


Margaret McCain thanks artist and former
CAMH client, Simon Napayok, for the soapstone
sculpture (pictured) he specially crafted as a token
of thanks for Margaret and Wallace McCain's
generous gift to CAMH Foundation.

 


(LtoR): Kelly Meighen, Chair, CAMH Foundation Board
of Directors, Darrell Louise Gregersen, President & CEO,
CAMH Foundation, Margaret McCain and Ana Lopes,
Vice-chair, CAMH Foundation Board of Directors.


Margaret McCain talks with Dr. Eric Hoskins, Minister,
Child and Youth Services and another guest shortly
after the announcement of Margaret and Wallace
McCain's $10 million gift to CAMH Foundation.

 

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Foundation

Charitable Number:
106932320RR0001

100 Stokes Street, 5th Floor
Bell Gateway Building
Toronto, ON M6J 1H4

Toll-Free: 1.800.414.0471
Telephone: 416.979.6909
Fax: 416.979.6910


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