Fall 2023

Welcome to the final edition of the Healthy Communities Bulletin for 2023.

This and future versions of the bulletin will be archived at hpePublicHealth.ca/municipal-updates. Please encourage your internal and external contacts to subscribe for quarterly healthy communities updates!

In This Issue

Meet our Healthy Communities health promoter

In this edition, we are featuring Shannon, a health promoter and our municipal liaison for North and Centre Hastings. As a Healthy Communities (HC) health promoter, Shannon hopes to develop relationships with the community and build capacity for health promotion and healthy public policy. She will be working with municipalities and community organizations in our region to address cannabis use as well as tobacco and vaping use.

In the coming months, Shannon will be working on the municipal assessment tools with her designated communities to identify public health priorities in the community.

Shannon is available if you require support or information about tobacco and vaping cessation services and cannabis use.

To reach Shannon please email healthycommunities@hpeph.ca.

Find out more about the Healthy Communities program

If you would like to find out more about building healthy communities, please feel free to visit the Healthy Communities web page. The team can be emailed directly at healthycommunities@hpeph.ca, or through the form on our website.

Please note, if you have tobacco-specific questions, email our inspectors and nurse directly at ttl@hpeph.ca.

Active School Travel Campaign

The Quinte Region Traffic Coalition (QRTC) has received another grant to increase awareness of safe driving behaviours in school zones and to educate the school community about the benefits of active school travel. The new grant money will be used to further expand the Active School Travel Campaign, which was launched this past spring. The campaign aims to make school zones safer so that families will feel more confident choosing active transportation (such as walking, cycling, and skateboarding) when travelling to and from school.

QRTC purchased 12 student silhouettes (see above) to be installed near school zones where the speed limit decreases. The goal of the campaign was to grab the attention of drivers and remind them that they’re in a school zone and need to slow down with the intention of making school zones safer for children and encouraging them to use active transportation to get to and from school. In addition to the silhouettes, QRTC distributed fact sheets to schools and ran a social media campaign.

The silhouettes were a great success in Quinte West; we received positive feedback from school administration, crossing guards, and community members, which is why we plan to continue growing this program. Silhouettes can be seen this fall in Stirling, Bancroft, Prince Edward County, and a new site in Quinte West!

If your municipality is interested in joining the program, having silhouettes installed, or you are looking for more information on the program, please contact us at healthycommunities@hpeph.ca and we will be happy to discuss further.

Additional resources

Bill S-254 letter of support on behalf of the Board of Health

Bill S-254 is an act to amend the Food and Drugs Act (warning label on alcoholic beverages), which was introduced a year ago asking the Federal Government to mandate labeling on alcoholic beverages. It was initiated by Senator Patrick Brazeau in the Canadian Senate. Once passed, Bill S-254 will require alcoholic beverage labels to include standard drink information and health information about the link between alcohol consumption and the development of seven types of cancer.

The HC team from Hastings Prince Edward Public Health (HPEPH) drafted an advocacy letter to support Bill S-254. The requirements of the Bill are aligned with the recommendations of Canada’s Guidance on Alcohol and Health (CGAH) and Canadian Alcohol Policy Evaluation (CAPE) Evidence-based Recommendations for Labelling Alcohol Products in Canada.

In September, Hamzah Abid, a Healthy Communities health promoter, presented the new CGAH and the advocacy letter to the Board of Health (BOH) members. HPEPH’s Medical Officer of Health and BOH members were in support of the letter. Afterward, the letter was sent to Senator Brazeau, to show support for this bill.

Violence Prevention Evidence Review

Exposure to violence, especially during childhood, can have a lasting impact on one’s physical, mental, and emotional health, including increasing risk of substance use, mental illness, and chronic and infectious diseases. Violence includes behaviour that harms oneself, another person, or a group.

HPEPH recently completed a Violence Prevention Evidence Review to gain a better understanding of the state of violence nationally and here in Hastings Prince Edward counties (HPEC). The aim of the review was to assess the current situation and to understand what actions HPEPH can take to help address violence in our region. The review showed that violent crime and intimate partner violence (IPV) in HPEC is higher than the provincial average. Additionally, local police departments reported an increase in sexual offences and assaults from 2021 to 2022.

Last year there was an investigation into the triple murder of three women on the same day in 2015 by their former mutual partner. The investigation made 86 recommendations, the first was to ask the province to declare intimate partner violence an epidemic. So far, the province has not done so.

However, some municipalities have voted to declare IPV an epidemic, including Lanark County, Mississippi Mills, Ottawa, Renfrew County, and Prince Edward County. Additionally, Quinte West Council will be voting on declaring IPV an epidemic in November. This declaration from local municipalities demonstrates commitment to working together to end gender-based violence.

The recommendations from the HPEPH evidence review is informing how the HPEPH Healthy Communities program is developing strategies to help prevent violence, including teaching healthy relationships skills in childcare and school settings, strengthening supports for women and families, and creating supportive environments.

If you or someone you know is experiencing violence, visit the Quinte Coordinating Committee Against Violence for information and resources.

2024 ROMA Conference

Closer to Home
Sunday, Jan. 21 to Tuesday, Jan. 23, 2024

Sheraton Centre Hotel, 123 Queen St. West, Toronto

The Rural Ontario Municipal Association (ROMA) Board of Directors is pleased to welcome you to the 2024 Annual Conference.

The 2024 conference, themed Closer to Home, will provide rural municipal leaders the opportunity to address policy issues, funding concerns, and to meet directly with provincial ministers on local issues.

The ROMA Board has continued its policy and advocacy development on ensuring rural communities have access to services Closer to Home.

The ROMA Conference provides participants the same opportunity to advocate for their local needs by gaining insight, education, networking opportunities, and access to provincial and federal leaders.

Over the last several years, this important event has seen attendance grow to well over 1,000 participants. Don't miss it!

Register by October 27 to access early bird rates. Full registration and hotel information is available at www.roma.on.ca.

CONTACT
Email: events@roma.on.ca
Phone: 416-971-9856

Connections for healthier communities

Mental health and well-being in later life

Mental health, substance use, and addiction challenges can negatively affect older adults and their families. To help with these challenges, The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) has launched the Understanding mental health and well-being in later life project and developed a series of evidence-based handouts for adults aged 65 and older to raise their awareness of mental health and addiction issues.

The series consists of 12 brief handouts that introduce a breadth of mental health and addiction topics and provide contact information for organizations that can provide additional help in Ontario. Topics include, but are not limited to:

  • depression
  • anxiety disorders
  • dementia
  • cannabis and alcohol use

These handouts are free to download, print, and share in 12 written languages, including English, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Traditional and Simplified Chinese, Punjabi, Arabic, Vietnamese, Tamil, and Urdu.

Access the multilingual handouts here.

Healthy communities success story

International Overdose Awareness Day

International Overdose Awareness Day (IOAD) is the world’s largest annual campaign to end overdose, remember without stigma those who have died from overdose, and acknowledge the grief of the family and friends left behind.

On Thursday, August 31, many of our municipalities came together to acknowledge those impacted by overdose in our communities and raise awareness for those impacted. Municipalities included: Bancroft, Belleville, Picton, Trenton, and Tweed. Many organizations attended these events and provided resources and naloxone training. The broad participation in these events truly shows the impact a community can have when we all work together and support each other.

Hosting an IOAD is a powerful way that every municipality can choose to recognize the impact of overdose, raise awareness, and help end stigma.

 

Stay tuned for our next bulletin coming in the Spring of 2024! If you have any colleagues or partners who may be interested in receiving information and updates from Healthy Communities, please share this bulletin and encourage them to subscribe through our online subscription form.

Hastings Prince Edward Public Health is situated and provides services on the traditional territory of the Anishinaabe, Huron-Wendat and Haudenosaunee people.