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The Mental Health Crisis Response (MHCR) Applied Training and Education Program is a scenario-based, community co-designed curriculum that offers enhanced training in de-escalation tactics and communication for all officers in Ontario. Developed and tested over an eight-year period, the MHCR is an evidence-based curriculum vetted by diverse experts.
More information will be posted as it becomes available. Complete the to stay informed about the program, including webinars, pricing, and information kits.
The MHCR features:
The program is guided by the DePICT™ model, a built-in and validated assessment tool that measures de-escalation competencies specific to policing and highlights targeted skills integral to working with people in crisis. Trainers assess and evaluate trainees through a comparative analysis of pre- and post-scenario training competencies while providing a guide for targeted debriefing to support formative learning, reinforce de-escalation techniques, and identify specific areas to focus on for continued skills development.
The MHCR evolved through a community co-design framework. This approach is characterized by a working relationship between professionals and citizens, where each party plays a pivotal role in informing best practices to improve the quality of life for people and communities (Slay & Stephens, 2013). Collaboration cannot be understated with respect to mental health and substance use crises, given that these particular concerns exceed the capacity of any singular discipline and are community-based issues.
As such, the MHCR was created by a trans-disciplinary team of over 40 individuals including:
Consequently, the program focuses on the relational policing approach, which emphasizes a genuine and personalized response.
Relational policing is:
The MHCR is a homegrown curriculum that is culturally, geographically, and jurisdictionally relevant to the needs of Ontario citizens and police officers. The program offers a rigorous response and demonstrates a commitment to addressing the recommendations made in the Ontario Ombudsman’s (2016) report “A Matter of Life and Death: Investigation into the Direction Provided by the Ministry of the Solicitor General to Ontario’s Police Services for De-escalation of Conflict Situations.”
This domestic approach to crisis de-escalation is particularly important given the unique landscape of policing and mental health in Canada. As a community-designed curriculum, the MHCR reflects local training priorities, protocols, vocabulary, and province-wide stakeholder investment. It emphasizes relational policing, an award winning framework centred on officers offering a genuine and personalized response to people in crisis, conveying empathy and concern for wellbeing, and taking the necessary time to cultivate a connection and build trust while managing safety risks.
A hallmark of this approach is encouraging the person in crisis to collaborate on ways to peacefully resolve the situation together with the officer. Relational policing is multifaceted in its approach and includes humanized, person-centred, procedurally just, empathetic, informed, and culturally safe modes of engagement (Lavoie et al., 2022).
Leveraging hybrid learning models, the MHCR offers foundational knowledge in de-escalation and mental health crisis response accompanied by state-of-the-art scenarios in virtual reality (VR) for high-fidelity, scalable applied learning.
The current MHCR package contains a total of six scenarios (three forum, three evaluation) with an additional eight scenarios in development. Currently, one forum and one evaluation scenario are available in VR, with four more in development for future training cycles.
At this time, MHCR is only being offered to Ontario police services. If you are a professional from another sector (e.g., corrections, EMS) who would like to receive information about future developments, complete the to receive updates.
The MHCR training package features an innovative, blended learning approach that takes learners through online modules, applied learning in group problem-solving sessions, and an evaluation scenario for formative assessment intended to guide continued learning and improvement in de-escalation competencies.
As a comprehensive training and assessment package, the MHCR allows the province of Ontario to establish a professional standard in de-escalation and mental health crisis response.
The MHCR program learning objectives and delivery are guided by the De-escalating Persons in Mental Health Crisis Competencies Tool (DePICT™), the first validated evaluation framework for police training in de-escalation and mental health crisis response.
Prior to engaging in applied, scenario-based learning, officers move through four online modules that offer foundational knowledge in de-escalation and mental health crisis response.
Focuses on understanding the current context of mental health calls made to police services, the nature of mental illness and mental health crisis, how to identify them and common misconceptions.
Focuses on approaches, tools, and techniques that can help de-escalate and safely resolve mental health crisis situations. De-escalation and non-escalation techniques are introduced.
Examines societal attitudes toward people with mental illness, and how beliefs, attitudes, and bias can impact interactions.
Focuses on interactions between police and racialized persons in mental health crisis. Explores how citizens’ attitudes and beliefs about police can affect an encounter and how bias can impact risk assessment.
Designed to replace lecture-based learning on mental health crisis response, this 90-minute problem-based scenario training engages observational, group problem-solving and applied learning methods. Trainees move from being observers of the scenario to participants, engaging in stop, rewind, and playback techniques that provide repeated opportunities to test approaches and try alternative crisis resolution strategies.
Trainees engage in competency-based rehearsal learning while guided by integrated, in-scenario video feedback from subject matter experts, ranging from people with lived experience of mental illness and clinicians to police trainers.
Trainers assess officers’ skills acquisition in a 10-minute scenario followed by a five-minute debrief using the validated, observer-rater DePICT™ evaluation framework. This assessment tool captures 14 distinct competencies and each item is scored on a four-point scale. The post-scenario debriefs ensure they serve as a formative learning exercise and an opportunity to identify specific competencies needing improvement and further practice.
The trainee must achieve a score of “Satisfactory” in 11 of the 14 DePICT™ competencies. If this minimum standard is not met, the trainee is required to repeat the scenario focusing on the debrief feedback and the competencies requiring attention.
As of April 1, 2024, the MHCR is mandatory training for all officers in Ontario with required requalification training every 12 months, as outlined in the (CSPA). To be compliant with the legislation, MHCR training must be provided by an instructor certified through 51本色’s MHCR Train-the-Trainer (MHCR-T3) program.
To meet the regulatory and requalification requirements, all officers must complete the following.
Requirements |
Estimated Duration |
4 online modules with passing grades on quizzes |
4 hours, 40 minutes |
1 Forum Scenario online primer module |
25 minutes |
1 Forum Scenario (in person) |
90 minutes |
1 Evaluation Scenario (in person) |
20 minutes |
Requirements |
Duration |
Passing grade on 4 online quizzes |
40 minutes (10min per quiz) |
1 Forum Scenario (in person) |
90 minutes |
1 Evaluation Scenario (in person) |
20 minutes |
Contact Us:
E: MHCR@wlu.ca