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Youth services agency to host webinar for parents to help kids cope in a COVID-19 world

Webinar takes place on Wednesday, May 20 at 7 p.m.
IYSN YOUTH 1080x1080
Photo provided by IYSN Wellington/Guelph.

NEWS RELEASE
INTEGRATED YOUTH SERVICES NETWORK WELLINGTON/GUELPH
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The Integrated Youth Services Network Wellington/Guelph will host a webinar on Wednesday, May 20 at 7 p.m. to address the impact of COVID-19 on youth mental health and substance abuse in Wellington County and Guelph. This webinar is for parents and family members interested in learning more about help youth cope in a COVID-19 world.

A recent Ipsos Public Affairs Annual Mental Health Index survey, commissioned by Children’s Mental Health Ontario and Addictions and Mental Health Ontario, found that two-thirds of Ontarians (67 percent) feel that the mental health impacts of COVID-19 are going to be serious and lasting.

Almost three quarters (74 percent) of respondents feel that Ontarians are experiencing increased mental health and addictions challenges as a result of COVID-19. In addition, 76 percent believe the Ontario government should be putting the same focus on taking care of mental health as physical health during this time.

Prior to the pandemic, almost 50 percent of youth in Ontario were at moderate or serious risk of a mental health issue. Since COVID-19, more than half (59 percent) of parents have reported negative behavioural changes in their children.

Youth are now facing a future filled with uncertainty. With no date set for return to school and ongoing physical distancing, youth are experiencing feelings of loneliness and increased anxiety/depression.

Join Dr. Joanna Henderson, Executive Director, Youth Wellness Hubs Ontario and Director of the Margaret and Wallace McCain Centre for Child, Youth and Family Mental Health and Helen Fishburn, Executive Director of the Canadian Mental Health Association Waterloo Wellington, as they discuss how we can turn despair into hope.

“Youth, in particular, have been struggling with physical distancing from their friends, have missed out on key and meaningful milestones in their school year, and are trying to make decisions for next year at a time when it is almost impossible to predict what the future will look like,” says Helen Fishburn, “As a community, we are stepping up to support our youth through the stress and uncertainty of this pandemic, both short term and long term, to increase their resilience and wellness.”

Under the leadership of the Rotary Club of Guelph, a network of community organizations have come together to build what is so urgently needed in the community, centralized access to youth services – a one-stop-shop experience.

Interconnected by technology, youth will be able to access the right services virtually, and eventually in each of the seven new sites throughout Wellington County & Guelph.

Each site will offer a range of stepped-care services of varying levels of intensity that are co-designed with youth. Physical activity, mental health, substance use, and peer supports will be core services at all IYSN sites.

The seven sites include:

• East Wellington Community Services - Town of Erin

• Minto Mental Health - Palmerston

• Skyline Community Hub - Fergus

• University of Guelph

• YMCA/ YWCA of Guelph

• CMHA Waterloo Wellington

• Shelldale Family Gateway

With community support, we will be able to give our youth access to immediate virtual care during a time where they have nowhere else to turn. We will be able to invest in the future of 1,000s of youth when they need it most. When we come together as a community, we can make a difference.

When: Wednesday, May 20, 2020, at 7 p.m.

To register: https://bit.ly/35VXHp7

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