Helping families navigate divorce and separation

 

Divorce and separation can be one of life’s most stressful events, especially for families with children. It not only has legal implications, but can impact the physical, mental and financial health of those involved. For this episode of LawCast BC, we invited family lawyer and Bencher Tanya Chamberlain and Dr. Ramneek Dosanjh, both members of the Health Justice Alliance, to speak about the intersection of law and health during separation and how parents can help their children navigate this stressful life change.

The Health Justice Alliance was formed in 2022 as a partnership between physicians and lawyers who serve BC families experiencing high conflict separation and divorce. Through this alliance, physicians and lawyers come together to learn from each other, work together to help patients and clients going through high conflict separation and divorce, and to take action to address the public health issue of the immediate, long-term and intergenerational impacts of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs).

In April, the FamiliesChange.ca website was relaunched with new resources to help parents support their children’s well-being through a separation or divorce. We encourage lawyers to share these resources with clients, colleagues, friends or anyone going through a separation or divorce to help them navigate this significant change and stressful transition.

FamiliesChange.ca website was developed by the Justice Education Society of British Columbia with support from the Department of Justice Canada and the BC Ministry of Justice. Resources were developed by the Health and Justice Alliance, along with the Shared Care Committee, the Law Society of BC, Justice Education Society of BC and other partners. 

Speaker biographies

Dr. Ramneek Dosanjh is a family physician, hospitalist and child and youth mental health advocate. She is currently the President of the Federation of Medical Women of Canada and has been a participant at the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women for the last two years. She was instrumental in the recent healthcare reform in British Columbia and on the negotiating team for the creation of BC's new payment model. She is an active member of the Indigenous Specific Anti Racism Committee. Dr. Dosanjh has been involved with the Health Justice Alliance since its inception, facilitating its first dialogue between physicians and lawyers in 2022. She is passionate about social justice, equity and fiercely dedicated to the reform of antiquated systems. 

She has previously served in executive leadership roles such as President of Doctors of BC and BC Family Doctors. She was also a member of Doctors of BC’s Representative Assembly, Digital Health Collaborative and BC coroner's toxic drug supply steering committee. She previously served as a board member for her Division of Family Practice and on the Child Health BC board for four years. She has been involved in her hospital, health authority, UBC, and the Medical Council of Canada. Dr. Dosanjh was the physician lead for Child/Youth Mental Health Substance Use Collaborative in White Rock/South Surrey and has been a consultant with the White Rock South Surrey Child youth mental health Triage consulting team since its creation. She was also appointed to the Transform the Family Justice System Collaborative Strategy Committee.

Tanya Chamberlain is a family law lawyer who was called to the bar in BC in 1995. Tanya’s family law practice is focused on consensual dispute resolution. She is a collaborative lawyer, family law mediator, arbitrator and parenting coordinator, and prepares Hear the Child Reports. In 2021, Tanya was elected as a Bencher of the Law Society and is currently the Chair of the Access to Justice Advisory Committee and a member of the Discipline Committee and the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Committee. Tanya is a member of the Health and Justice Alliance Steering Committee, a collaboration between lawyers and doctors working to reduce the harm British Columbians experience when going through relationship break down. She is a Board Member of the British Columbia Collaborative Roster Society and a co-chair of the Pro Bono Collaborative Committee.