Dr. Stan Kutcher, a professor in 窪蹋勛圖厙Medical Schools Department of Psychiatry, has been named to the Senate of Canada.
He was among four new appointments announced last week by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. Hell serve as an independent senator representing Nova Scotia.
The at 窪蹋勛圖厙 and the IWK Health Centre, Dr. Kutcher is the former director of the World Health Organization Collaborating Centre in Mental Health Policy and Training at 窪蹋勛圖厙 and the IWK Health Centre. In 2014, he was inducted into theOrder of Nova Scotia.
Dr. Kutcher says he was gobsmacked to receive the phone call from the Prime Minister informing him of his appointment to the Senate, but he didnt have much time to reflect on the news.
I was leading a training program with the Pan American Health Organization in Belize when I got the call, he says. We had a good chat, then I called my wife to share the news. Then I went right back to work.
He says stepping out of a training session to take the phone call in brilliant, hot sunshine with Christmas carols in the background made getting the news all the more surreal.
Improving the lives of young people
The chance to help shape public policy led to his decision to apply to the Senate.
Ive spent my whole professional career working to try to improve the lives of young people and their families, says Dr. Kutcher. Ive done that through research, administration, service delivery and, most recently, through education. The area that Ive not yet had an opportunity to really dig into has been the level of policy development.
Its important that all public policy, not just health policy or health-related policy, be based on the best available evidence so that decisions arent made in a data-free zone.
Dr. Kutcher says that that commitment to basing decisions on the best available evidence is one of the main things hell bring to the Senate, along with a mental health perspective that cuts across all boundaries and over 20 years of international experience.
Representing Nova Scotia
A Hamilton, Ontario native who moved to Nova Scotia in the mid 1990s after completing medical school at McMaster University and residency training in psychiatry at the University of Toronto, Dr. Kutcher is proud to represent his adopted province in the Senate.
This appointment gives me an opportunity to improve the lives of young people in my home province, and by extension, all of Canada.
The Senate appointment caps a year filled with recognition for Dr. Kutcher. In May, he was named among theby the Canadian Alliance on Mental Illness and Mental Health, and in September he received thefrom the Canadian Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry for his efforts to improve mental health literacy in schools.