If you are in an emergency, in crisis or need someone to talk to, there is help.

View Crisis Resources
Skip to content
  • Contact Us
  • No One Left Behind
  • Join our team
  • Referral Form
  • Virtual Urgent Care
  • Accessibility
CAMH logo
  • Patients and Families
    • Main Page
    • Access CAMH & Referral Form
      • Access CAMH

        Centralized information, intake and scheduling. Access CAMH makes it easy to find support – simply call 416-535-8501, option 2.

      • Referral Form

        For mental health services, a referral form needs to be completed by a healthcare provider. For addictions services, patient can self-refer.

    • Programs & Services
      • Addictions/Substance Use
      • Alzheimer’s & Dementia
      • Anxiety & Depression
      • Concurrent Disorders
      • Developmental Disabilities
      • Mood & Personality Disorders
      • Problem Gambling
      • Schizophrenia & Psychosis
      • Trauma & Stress Disorders
      • Virtual Mental Health and Outreach
      • Other
    • Information for Patients
      • Patient Wellness and Patient Engagement at CAMH
      • What to expect
      • Your Rights
      • Patient and Family Feedback
      • Visiting CAMH

        Planning on visiting CAMH? Find contact information, directions and accessibility for each of our three main sites.

    • Information for Families
      • Family Resource Centre
      • Patient and Family Feedback
      • Visiting CAMH

        Planning on visiting CAMH? Find contact information, directions and accessibility for each of our three main sites.

    • Patient and Family Engagement
      • Patient and Family Partners Program
      • Information and resources
      • Get Involved in Research
      • Volunteer at CAMH
    • Visiting CAMH
      • Visiting CAMH

        Planning on visiting CAMH? Find contact information, directions and accessibility for each of our three main sites.

        Read More
    • MyCAMH
  • Health Info
    • Main Page
    • Mental Illness & Addiction Index
      • Conditions & Disorders
      • Medication Therapies
      • Substance Use
      • Types of Treatment
      • Information in Other Languages
    • Mental Health 101
      • Mental Health 101

        Use this series of free online tutorials as the starting point to learn about and understand a wide range of mental health topics.

        Read More
    • Guides & Publications
      • Guides & Publications

        Accessible, reliable, professionally produced resources on an array of mental health topics for patients, families, students and professionals.

        Read More
    • Crisis Resources
      • Crisis Resources

        If you are in an emergency, in crisis or need someone to talk to, there is a list of resources available for areas in and around Toronto.

        Read More
    • CAMH Store
      • CAMH Store

        The CAMH Store offers a wide array of mental illness and addiction resources for patients, families, students and professionals. Search or browse our catalogue of brochures and booklets, textbooks, manuals and assessment tools.

        Read More
    • CAMH Library
      • CAMH Library

        Open to professionals and the general public, our comprehensive resources and services support and enhance CAMH's research and clinical programs, and they facilitate learning, dynamic knowledge exchange and health promotion initiatives.

        Read More
    • Workplace Mental Health Playbook
    • Mental Health and the COVID-19 Pandemic
      • Coping with stress & anxiety
      • Quarantine & isolation
      • Stigma and prejudice
      • Loss, grief and healing
      • Covid-19 Resources for Health Care Workers
  • Research
    • Main Page
    • Research to Drive Change
    • The Discovery Fund
      • The Discovery Fund

        Fuelling the next generation of groundbreaking research and innovation dedicated to finding the causes of and cures for mental illness.

        Read More
    • Research Centres
      • Azrieli Adult Neurodevelopmental Centre
      • Azrieli Centre for Neuro-Radiochemistry
      • Brain Health Imaging Centre
      • Centre for Youth Bipolar Disorder
      • Cundill Centre for Child and Youth Depression
      • Institute for Mental Health Policy Research
      • Krembil Centre for Neuroinformatics
      • Slaight Family Centre for Youth in Transition
      • Tanenbaum Centre for Pharmacogenetics
      • Temerty Centre for Therapeutic Brain Intervention
      • The Margaret and Wallace McCain Centre for Child Youth & Family Mental Health
    • Clinical Divisions
      • Addictions Division
      • Adult Neurodevelopmental and Geriatric Psychiatry Division
      • Child and Youth Psychiatry Division
      • Forensic Psychiatry Division
      • General and Health Systems Psychiatry Division
      • Psychology Division
      • Schizophrenia Division
    • Participate in Research
      • Research Connect FAQs
      • Research Ethics
    • Research Ethics
    • Koerner Centre for Research Training
      • Koerner Centre for Research Training

        Each year CAMH provides opportunities to the next generation of scientists: today’s undergraduate students, graduate students and postdoctoral researchers. Train in a unique learning environment and help contribute to the breakthrough mental health research and treatments of tomorrow

        Read More
    • Science & Research Staff Directory
      • Our Scientific Staff
      • Research Chairs at CAMH
    • Industry Partnerships & Technology Transfer Office
      • Spinoffs
      • Co-Development and Commercialization
    • Digital Innovation Hub
  • Education
    • Main Page
    • Continuing Education Programs and Courses
      • Find the Course That's Right for You

        Browse our entire selection of certificate programs, webinars and workshops.

      • Workplace Education and Consulting Services

        View our full list of workplace mental health workshops and consulting services

    • Collaborative Learning College
    • Simulation Centre
    • TIDES
    • Student Centre
    • Clinical & Research Opportunities for Professionals in Training
      • Clinical Psychology Training Programs
      • Community-Based Research Fellowship
      • Graduate & Post-Doctoral Fellowships in Public Health Policy
      • Clinical & Research Opportunities for Professionals in Training

        Study in a world-class setting to become a leader in the field of mental health.

    • Research in Education
      • Academic & Education Research Excellence
      • Health Equity and Inclusion Framework for Education and Training
    • Evaluation
    • Workplace Mental Health Workshops and Consulting
    • CAMH Education Contacts
  • Professionals
    • Main Page
    • Treating Conditions & Disorders
      • Adult ADHD
      • NAVIGATE - Treating Psychosis in Youth
      • CARIBOU - Treating depression in youth
      • Alcohol Use
      • Anxiety Disorders
      • Dementia
      • Depression
      • Suicide Risk
      • Fundamentals of Addiction
      • Intellectual & Developmental Disabilities
      • Mania
      • OCD
      • Opioid use and opioid use disorder
      • Perinatal Mood & Anxiety Disorders
      • Personality Disorders
      • Psychosis
      • Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
      • Sleep Disorders
      • Smoking Cessation
      • Virtual Mental Health
    • Professionals Projects
      • Climate Change and Mental Health
      • Health Care Access Research and Developmental Disabilities
      • Immigrant and Refugee Mental Health Project
      • Opioid Use in Primary Care Conference 2024
    • Networks
      • Psychiatry Partnerships with Northern Communities
    • Covid-19 Resources for Health Care Workers
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
  • Get Involved
    • Main Page
    • Ways to Donate
      • Give Monthly
      • Give In Memory or In Honour
      • Start a Fundraiser
      • Gifts of Celebration
      • Leave a Gift in Your Will
      • Employee Giving
      • Donate Goods & Services
      • Gifts of Securities
      • Canvassers & Callers
      • Make a one-time donation

        With your support, CAMH researchers are revolutionizing the ways we diagnose, treat, and prevent mental illness. Donate today.

    • Join the Cause
      • Corporate Partnerships
      • Business Leaders for Mental Health
      • CAMH Engage
      • womenmind
      • Visionary Society
      • Michael Wilson Society
      • Volunteer at CAMH
    • Making a Real Impact
      • Making a Real Impact

        Real stories of courage, hope and discovery. Made possible through your continued support of CAMH.

        Read More
  • Driving Change
    • Main Page
    • About CAMH
      • Leadership Team Directory
      • Performance & Accountability
      • The Role of CAMH Foundation
      • For Reporters
      • Events Calendar
      • For Our Neighbours
      • Contact CAMH
      • Careers at CAMH

        By working at CAMH, you can help people affected by mental illness and support their recovery. Join the team. Everyone who works at CAMH becomes an advocate for mental health.

    • The Crisis is Real
      • The Crisis is Real

        We are in the grips of a crisis that ruins health, threatens lives and hurts economies. Knowing the facts is the first step in creating hope.

      • Mental Health Statistics

        The latest facts and statistics on mental illness and addiction, who's affected and their impact on Canadians.

    • Addressing Stigma
      • Addressing Stigma

        Challenging the stigma associated with mental illness takes understanding, education and a closer look at our own attitudes toward health.

        Read More
    • The Mental Health Facility of the Future
      • The Mental Health Facility of the Future

        Turning what was once a walled institution into a symbol of hope for the future of mental health care.

      • Vision & Guiding Principles

        How do you replace an institution with an urban village? Lots of planning, imagination and a long-term commitment to serving patients, staff and the community.

      • History of Queen Street Site

        Our history—evolving from an asylum into a modern health facility with patients at the centre of care—is the history of mental health care in Canada.

    • Influencing Public Policy
      • Influencing Public Policy

        CAMH advocates for policies that are responsive to the needs of people with mental illness and addictions.

        Read More
    • Health Equity
      • Health Equity

        CAMH believes in the principle of equity. We respect the diversity of the individuals and communities we serve.

        Read More
    • Shkaabe Makwa
    • CAMH News & Stories
    • Strategic Plan
    • Contact Us
    • No One Left Behind
    • Join our team
    • Referral Form
    • Virtual Urgent Care
    • Accessibility
IRMHP Newsletter - January 2021
National GAR Case Management – Client Support Services

CAMH Logo
  • GARS and System de sante - IRMHP Newsletter
Back to top
  • Home
  • Professionals
  • Professionals Projects
  • Immigrant and Refugee Mental Health Project
  • Newsletter
  • Promising Practices
CAMH logo
  • IRMHP Home
  • About
  • Courses
  • Webinars
  • Toolkit
  • Newsletter
Back to top

National GAR Case Management – Client Support Services 

Location:  Greater Toronto Area, ON

 

Quick Facts
  • Audience: Settlement, social, and health service providers
  • Population of Interest: Government assisted refugees
  • The Need:  Exploring the impact of an intensive case management framework for high needs GAR clients. Prior to the CSS program, there was not a standardized model that combined case management with other holistic methods to support GAR settlement in Canada, or a formal network for settlement agencies to share information and best practices.
  • What's Promising:  The CSS program is unique in its flexible, client-centered approach to supporting GARs.
  • Key Takeaway:  1) Working collectively is a benefit to everyone involved in the refugee resettlement sector; 2) A standardized national approach also allows our national coordination team to target common issues with training, research and consultation to come up with creative solutions.

National GAR Case Management – Client Support Services (CSS) is a national program providing specialized settlement services to meet the complex needs of government assisted refugees (GARs) in their first 12-24 months of resettlement in Canada. Program partners are 16 organizations in provinces across the country.

CSS was developed by the YMCA of Greater Toronto in 2005 as a pilot project in partnership with COSTI Immigration services in Toronto and 70 GAR clients with complex needs, with a goal of exploring the impact of an intensive case management framework for high needs clients. The pilot found that using a case management framework that includes continual reassessment of needs, a focus on holistic community development to increase knowledge, and working in a mobile and desk-free environment significantly improved clients’ ability to achieve short- and long-term goals. Following the pilot, funding was expanded to a regional program and, in 2017, a national program.

The CSS program is unique in its flexible, client-centered approach to supporting GARs. Prior to the CSS program pilot, there was not a standardized model that combined case management with other holistic methods to support GAR settlement in Canada, or a formal network for settlement agencies to share information and best practices. As a nationwide program with a coordination team and standardized database and needs assessment, we have a unique ability to track and report on GAR needs and gaps in settlement services. Our network of service providers connects regularly through working group meetings, management best practice information sharing, professional development trainings and annual meetings. These connections result in better service provision, and creative solutions to common issues in serving GARs.

CSS’s holistic model is based around three key components:

  • Intensive Case Management: providing GARs with client centered assessments, planning and support in a flexible, mobile environment, connecting them to supports within the community in their first 12-24 months post arrival.
  • Community Capacity Building: working to strengthen community understanding of GAR needs and barriers, and aiming to increase ability to provide culturally sensitive services.
  • Coordinated Approach: The YMCA of Greater Toronto coordinates the CSS program nationwide, and engage GAR serving agencies through community of practice model, providing database development and support, program evaluation, reporting and development.

 

Supporting the mental health of refugees

There is broad data within the social service sector that speaks to the positive mental health impacts of client centered models on service consumers: greater independence, higher client satisfaction, and ultimately, better outcomes for settlement and increased belonging within settlement community. Our model allows for flexibility between different communities and organizational models, giving service providers the opportunity to use CSS framework in a way that fits with their clients, communities and regional realities.

Another way that the CSS program seeks to address refugee mental health needs is by empowering and training service providers to improve collective knowledge. These trainings are funded through our CSS coordination team budget from IRCC, and are free for network members. Some examples of recent and upcoming trainings include Trauma-Centered Crisis Intervention, ASSIST, Gender Based Violence, Client Caseworker Boundaries and Anti-Oppression / Anti-Racism.

Finally, the Community Capacity Building aspect of our program allows for diverse connections within partner agency communities that help service providers of all types better understand refugee needs, including mental health care providers. Through initiatives like collaboration with community-based service providers to meet client needs, organizational advocacy through policy and structural changes, and other related practices, we’ve found we’re better able to support clients in getting the best care possible. Increased knowledge of the unique intersection between refugee status and various health needs allows (mental) healthcare providers to better serve this community, and account for their needs in staff training and broader organizational development.

Transitioning service provision due to COVID-19

Since our sites are located across the country in areas with varying COVID risk levels, there have been a broad range of changes made to provide safe, effective services to clients. Sites are taking innovative steps to support both clients and staff in staying healthy, including initiatives like:

Developing partnerships with regional hospitals to conduct weekly voluntary COVID testing for RAP clients and agency employees, and support clients in receiving fast-tracked mental health services with culturally sensitive service models.
Conduct interdisciplinary case management team meetings (CSS, refugee clinic, mental health) to discuss complex cases and better delegate work to parties with the training to best support clients.
Hiring a wellness advocate to support both clients and staff in meeting their health needs through internal practices and community resources.
Implement a staff debriefing initiative to support staff in reflecting on high stress or complex cases.
All sites in our network have transitioned to either a fully virtual, or hybrid model of service delivery in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. We’ve also seen an increase in the mental health and compassion fatigue support for front staff, as the impacts of this work grow and the ability to separate work and home life becomes less clear. Practices like bolstered wellness programs, increased workplace flexibility and targeted professional development opportunities have been implemented by leadership staff to support their teams.

Key takeaways

Above all, working collectively is a benefit to everyone involved in the refugee resettlement sector. Working with different organizations across the country allows us to see this in action. People in our network are dealing with different realities based on their location and funding, but we experience many of the same issues.

A standardized national approach also allows our national coordination team to target these common issues with training, research and consultation to come up with creative solutions. Ultimately, we have an opportunity to work behind the scenes and come up with broader practical changes that are preventative to certain issues re-arising, which is impossible to complete internally in many of our partner sites due to size and funding. I would encourage other service providers to make building connections within their field a priority, and use them to support you in making both small- and large-scale changes to how you serve your clients, staff and community.

Community of Practice

Available for course participants, the Community of Practice (CoP) is a virtual community where service providers who support immigrant and refugee mental health can stay up-to-date on new events and resources. 

Continue your learning and networking by participating in the CoP discussion board . 

Newsletter

 Sign up for the IRMHP newsletter .

 

In Webinars
  • Upcoming webinars
  • Specific populations and issues
  • Support and treatment considerations
  • Successful or promising practices 

Disclaimer: The views expressed in the webinars are those of the presenter(s) and do not necessarily represent those of the Immigrant and Refugee Mental Health Project, CAMH, our funders or partners. Information provided in the webinars is for professional development and educational purposes only.

 

Government Funding Logo

Can we count on your support?

Donate to help us improve mental health care for everyone.

Follow us
  • Patient and Family Care
  • Health Info
  • Science and Research
  • Education
  • Professionals
  • Get Involved
  • Driving Change
  • About CAMH
  • Job Openings
  • Purchase Publications
  • Referral Form
  • For Reporters
  • Donor Services
  • Events

CAMH Switchboard

From the GTA: 416 535-8501


Toll-free: 1 800 463-2338

To Access CAMH Clinical Services

416 535-8501, press 2

We have multiple locations. Find directions.

Map of CAMH's Queen Street Site
  • Staff Tools

Copyright 2025 CAMH

  • Terms of Use
  • Accessibility
  • Site Map

Keep in touch with CAMH

Keep your finger on our pulse – latest CAMH news, discoveries and ways to get involved delivered to your inbox.

Please select a newsletter

Please complete the following:

    Required Fields

    Please select a newsletter option

    Please input a first name

    Please input a last name

    Please input an email address

    By clicking Sign Up below, I consent to receive electronic communications (as selected above) from CAMH and CAMH Foundation. To unsubscribe at any time click the link in our mailing or email: unsubscribe@camh.ca

    Please agree to the Terms of Use

     

    Thanks for Subscribing.

    We look forward to keeping you informed, inspired and involved in all things CAMH.

    Help us change mental health care forever.

    Every donation moves us closer to a future where no one is left behind.

    $
    Other Ways to Give