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Canada’s National Approach to Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder. Jocelynn L. Cook, Ph.D. FASD Team, Health Canada. Government of Canada (GoC) Investment To Date . 2001 Speech from The Throne Budget First Nations On-reserve $10 M 2002/3 $15 M On-going. 2002 Speech from
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Canada’s National Approach to Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder Jocelynn L. Cook, Ph.D. FASD Team, Health Canada
Government of Canada (GoC)Investment To Date 2001 Speech from The Throne Budget First Nations On-reserve $10 M 2002/3 $15 M On-going • 2002 • Speech from • The Throne • Commitment to • Provide Aboriginal • Communities with • the tools to address • FAS and its effects 1996 Joint Statement Health Canada, Cdn Ped. Society + 17 Orgs. /NGOs 1999 Budget $11 M Over 3 yr $5 M on-going 2000 F/PT ECD Agreement $2.2 B to P/Ts (FAS a priority for some)
How we Came to Be…….. • Born from 1999 budget • Part of Canada’s Prenatal Nutrition Program • National Advisory Committee was formed by the Minister • Work closely with First Nations and Inuit Health Branch
Speech from the Throne 2002 • Commitment:provide Aboriginal communities with tools to address FASD • Building on linkages and partnerships already in place • Low cost initiatives – for example, disseminate tools • Work with partners to explore new possibilities • Homelessness Secretariat, Justice, Solicitor General • Federal Regions, NGOs
Ethel Blondin-Andrew Secretary of State for Children & Youth Health MinisterAnne McLellan Mapping Health Canada’s FASD Initiative Health Canada National Advisory Committee on FAS/FAE PPHB FNIHB HECSB General On-reserve Labeling & Population & & Inuit FAS Treatment Surveillance Steering Committee Regional Children’s Programs Other Federal Departments (IWG sub-committee on FASD) Provincial & Territorial Governments (F/P/T Table on FASD)
Key Activities Underway • What is happening now? • Community Capacity-Building • Strategic Project Fund • Public Awareness and Education • Awareness campaign (limited to date) • Professional Awareness and Education • Health Professional Survey • Training • Diagnosis • Surveillance and Epidemiology • Maternal experiences survey, NLSCY. • Coordination and Collaboration • Communities, experts, governments
Who Does What? • National Advisory Committee • Provides advice and recommendations for program and policy development • National Capital Region (Ottawa) • Co-ordinates, facilitates, and funds projects that are pan-Canadian in nature • Responsible for National level strategies • Acts as support for the regions • Regional Offices (10 Provinces/3 Territories) • Co-ordinates, facilitates, and funds projects within their province • Act as a liaison with provincial government colleagues • Co-ordinates/sponsors provincial conferences and workshops
Building Relationships between National Office and Regional Offices • Regional leads invited to meetings of the National Advisory Committee • Quarterly teleconference calls between National Office and Regions for updates and information-sharing • Teleconference calls or face-to-face meetings for planning or programs and policies • Both offices work together for events
Ethel Blondin-Andrew Secretary of State for Children & Youth Health MinisterAnne McLellan Mapping Health Canada’s FASD Initiative Health Canada National Advisory Committee on FAS/FAE PPHB FNIHB HECSB General On-reserve Labeling & Population & & Inuit FAS Treatment Surveillance Steering Committee Regional Children’s Programs Other Federal Departments (IWG sub-committee on FASD) Provincial & Territorial Governments (F/P/T Table on FASD)
National Advisory Committee (NAC) on FASD • Ministerial committee comprised of National Experts on FASD • Physicians, Psychologists, Researchers, Members from the community, Families • Provides advice/recommendations to the Minister • Acts as a forum to develop recommendations to effect an integrated, coordinated and sustainable Canadian response to FASD • Provides strategic advice and expertise to Health Canada on FASD-related issues • Supports the effective and efficient implementation of the FASD Initiative
National Advisory Committee • Reporting • Annual Report 2000/2001sent to the Minister • Links to First Nations and Inuit FASD Steering Committee • Liaison representative - role to be re-affirmed • Expert panel on FASD in First Nations and Inuit communities • Strategic planning for next steps
National Framework for Action • Aiming toward a National vision: “to develop a broad based collaborative effort to prevent FASD and improve the quality of life of people and families affected across Canada” • Common goals and objectives • Consultations have been held in each province by individuals from National Office and Regions • National forum planned to develop a National Plan of Action
Collaboration with the U.S. • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) • The U.S. FAS Centre of Excellence • Both working with Health Canada on joint screening and diagnosis • Canada and U.S. taking similar courses of action: • Expert advisory committees • Concerned with national guidelines for screening and diagnosis • National government policy and program development • Interest in collaboration
Lessons to be Learned • Seek advice from experts in the community, researchers, all relevant stakeholders • Foster COMMUNICATION and COORDINATION between all levels • Agree on guiding principles for working together • Develop common goals and objectives • Be sure that roles and responsibilities of provincial leads and staff at National Office are clearly outlined to prevent overlap and to foster team-work • Work together to develop policies and programs