From Catherine Jarvis:
2019-05-10
We are a group of
physicians working in the Montreal neighbourhoods of Cote-des-Neiges and
Parc-Extension. These vibrant neighbourhoods include over a quarter of a
million people from diverse backgrounds and have a population density between
7,500 and 8,600 persons per square kilometre. Between 40-60% of the adult
population have a college or university education. Nearly fifty percent of the
population are immigrants. The languages spoken by the population are
roughly divided with ⅓ francophones, ⅓ anglophone and ⅓ allophones.
On any given day,
physicians in our clinics interact with people from a variety of places, in a
variety of languages, and with a variety of different beliefs. All the
people have chosen to be part of Quebec society. The neighbourhood and our
clinic thrive on a pluralistic model that accepts differences yet finds common
ground. Our neighbourhoods and clinics function because each citizen
respects Quebec's Charter of Human Rights which includes the right to life,
liberty, freedom of expression, equality before the law, economic rights,
including the right to work, and the right to education. The people of Cote des
Neiges and Parc Extension enrich Quebec society and model the best of our
collective efforts to live together in harmony.
The signatories of this
letter are physicians, but also medical educators and teachers. Although we are
not currently identified as being affected by this bill, as teachers we are
mindful of the message Bill 21 sends to students, including our students, the
future family physicians of Quebec. Many of our learners are themselves
immigrants or the children of immigrants. These young physicians most of whom
have done their primary and secondary education in Quebec have been promised
that their embrace of the French language and culture would give them a full
and equal place in Quebec society without religious or cultural
discrimination. Bill 21 sends them a very different and distressing
message. We support the right of all people to work in Quebec without
discrimination on the basis of their religious practise.
As physicians with
expertise working with migrant populations, we know all too well the barriers
faced by this population as they try to integrate into Quebec society. We
respect and champion the need for a secular government to ensure that all,
including minorities and new immigrants are equal before the law and are
supported in their efforts to integrate into Quebec society. However, forcing
integration, restricting charter rights without due cause, and providing no
avenue for challenging these limits before the law will not promote the
cohesive communities we want in Quebec. We raise significant concerns
that Bill 21 in fact discriminates against minority communities. Bill 21
rejects the fundamental charter rights of freedom of conscience, freedom of
expression and freedom of religion and expressly plans to limit these freedoms
by invoke the notwithstanding clause. We oppose this measure and
reiterate the need to re-enforce and champion Quebec's Charter Rights.
We want to highlight the
fact that there is absolutely no evidence in any academic literature to
supports the government’s position that the wearing of religious symbols has a
detrimental effect on society. We do note however that there is a
significant amount of research strongly showing "that discrimination can
exacerbate stress. Moreover, discrimination-related stress is linked to mental
health issues, such as anxiety and depression."1 These health-related
issues are seen in both adults and children who experience discrimination.2-6
We urge the government to
consider the health impacts of Bill 21 and the negative impact this bill will
have on minority, religious and migrant communities in Quebec.
Dr.
Catherine Jarvis, MD - CLSC Côte-des-Neiges
Assistant
Professor, Family Medicine, McGill University
Dr. Perle
Feldman, MD – CLSC Park Extension
Associate
Professor, Family Medicine, McGill University.
Dr Namta
Gupta, MD – CLSC Côte-des-Neiges
Associate Professor, Family Medicine, McGill University
Associate Professor, Family Medicine, McGill University
Dr. Daniel
Ince-Cushman, MD - CLSC Côte-des-Neiges
Assistant
Professor, Family Medicine, McGill University
Dr. Helen
Mavromichalis, MD – CLSC Côte-des-Neiges
Faculty lecturer, Family
Medicine, McGill University
Dorothy Opatowski ,
Psychologist – CLSC Côte-des-Neiges
Dr Gaël
O'Shaughnessy, MD – CLSC Côte-des-Neiges
Dr. Helene
Rousseau , MD - CLSC
Côte-des-Neiges
Former Assistant Dean for Rural
Education, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University
Dr.
Heather Rubenstein, MD – CLSC Côte-des-Neiges
Assistant
Professor of Family Medicine, McGill University
Dr. Pierre-Paul Tellier, MD - CLSC Côte-des-Neiges
Dr. Pierre-Paul Tellier, MD - CLSC Côte-des-Neiges
Associate Professor, Family
Medicine, McGill University
Dr. Hannah Shenker, MD -
CLSC Côte-des-Neiges
Assistant
Professor, Family Medicine, McGill University
References
- American
Psychological Association Website https://www.apa.org/news/press/releases/stress/2015/impact
- Dovidio JF, Penner LA, Albrecht
TL, Norton WE, Gaertner SL, Shelton JN. Disparities and distrust: the
implications of psychological processes for understanding racial
disparities in health and health care. Soc Sci Med. 2008:67(3):478–86.
- Luo Y, Xu J, Granberg E,Wentworth
WM. A longitudinal study of social status, perceived discrimination, and
physical and emotional health among older adults. Res Aging.
2012;34:275–301. doi: 0164027511426151.
- Pascoe EA, Smart RL. Perceived
discrimination and health: a meta-analytic review. Psychol Bull. 2009;135(4):531–54.
- Anderson, K. F.
(2013). Diagnosing discrimination: Stress from perceived racism and the
mental and physical health effects. Sociological Inquiry, (83),
55–81. doi: 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2012.00433.x
- Sirin,
S. R., Rogers-Sirin, L., Cressen, J., Gupta, T., Ahmed, S. F., &
Novoa, A. D. (2015). Discrimination-related stress effects on the
development of internalizing symptoms among Latino adolescents. Child
Development. doi: 10.1111/cdev.12343
Statistics can be found at
https://www.centris.ca/en/tools/community-profile/montreal-island
Thanks for this. Powerful arguments, powerful words
ReplyDeleteI want to be you when I grow up Cathy. Thanks for your passion, advocacy, and determination. As your sister, I know better than to get in your way when you have a mission. :-)
ReplyDeletehold on there. you told me you wanted to be ME when you grew up! sigh. your affiliations have changed. well. i get it.
DeleteI love the description of your community, Catherine. I will always remember the outreach during December where on Christmas Day volunteers gather at a Catholic community hall and feed thousands. Yours is a community people dream of having.
ReplyDelete