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Wearing a mask triggers flashbacks of rape. Woman says her refusal to wear one led to her being denied treatment in Ottawa hospital

Melanie Mills wore a face shield when she went to the Ottawa Hospital for a routine epidural to treat chronic pain in her lower back and legs.

Despite a posted policy specifically asking visitors to wear face masks during the , Mills had no problem getting into the hospital or making her way up to the neurology department for her appointment last August. But when the 58-year-old met her doctor, she says, he denied her the epidural unless she swapped her face shield for a mask. She struggled to explain why she couldn’t wear one, she says, but the doctor insisted and kept saying, “I don’t know what to tell you.”

The conversation frazzled Mills so much she couldn’t stop herself from telling the doctor exactly why she couldn’t wear a mask: that decades ago she was raped, her face pushed to the bed, and the feeling that she would suffocate remains so severe that her post-traumatic stress dampens every day of her life.

“I couldn’t think about this, talk about this, without crying,” says Mills of her interaction with the doctor, which she’s anxiously been replaying in the lead-up to her next scheduled appointment.

Face masks are one of the most visible symbols of the pandemic, proven to be one of the in curbing transmission rates even as they’ve become a individual freedoms. Debates still rage over whether businesses have the to unmasked customers. But even in places like Toronto that have adopted mandatory mask policies, those policies for people with medical conditions.

And yet, when it comes to underlying conditions, asthma is more likely to come to mind. Rape is not.

But sexual violence is common and women like Mills should not be put in a position where they have to defend their need for an accommodation, says Megan Walker, executive director of the London Abused Women’s Centre, in London, Ont. “The automatic response should be, ‘OK, how can we help you?’”

Michaela Schreiter, a spokesperson for the Ottawa Hospital, said she couldn’t comment on specific cases, but noted that when people are unable to wear a mask “staff will work with the patient to evaluate all options and find a manageable alternative solution.” Variations of that policy are in place at major hospitals across the province, including the University Health Network in Toronto and Hamilton General Hospital.

Walker notes that with help, sexual assault survivors might be able to cope, but for Mills “to have to defend to a complete stranger why she’s not able to wear a mask because of that… [it] can do great damage to that woman’s psychological and emotional health.”

Given that there’s no indication people are faking accommodation needs to avoid a mask, Walker says health-care providers should be taking women like Mills at face value when they say they need it and make a new plan. In the U.K., a sexual assault survivor whose PTSD is similarly triggered by having her mouth and nose covered, is advocating for clearly labelled that people could wear in public to avoid having to repeatedly justify why they aren’t wearing a mask.

Mills knows masks work and she knows face shields don’t provide equal protection. Indeed, numerous studies so far indicate face shields are not as effective as masks in preventing droplet transmission, although as a stopgap measure in cases where a person’s underlying medical condition makes mask-wearing impossible.

After being turned away at the hospital in August, Mills, who lives in Lanark County outside of Ottawa, received an alternative pain treatment from a local doctor, but says it’s “maybe 40 per cent as effective” to treat the spinal stenosis she’s had for 22 years.

Mills doesn’t work because of her disability, which requires her to use a cane, and a pain flare-up sometimes confines her to a wheelchair. The epidural offered at the Ottawa Hospital, which , typically provides pain relief within a few days that can last for months at a time.

When she is feeling well, Mills spends as much time as she can helping with community projects, everything from disability advocacy to food security and women’s issues, especially sexual violence. She says she was raped by someone she had previously been in a relationship with and that her rapist never faced any repercussions.

Mills is supposed to go back to the Ottawa Hospital for the specialized treatment in December, but first wants assurances they’ll accommodate her.

After her August appointment, Mills sent an email to patient relations: “I cannot negotiate a mask,” she wrote. “If there is no other way, I will forego treatment.”

In response, a triage co-ordinator wrote back to apologize “for the added stress the situation caused [her]” and said the office would set up a meeting to speak further.

Mills says her three children are some of her fiercest advocates. Her daughter, Meghan Valvasori, responded on her behalf, saying that while she understood the safety considerations, she urged patient relations to advocate for those with mental health disabilities who need medical care.

“[My mother’s] trauma is rooted in feelings of helplessness and entrapment,” Valvasori wrote. “This trauma is triggered, as she also details below, in response to activities that restrict her breathing, involve her mouth or face, or — and with respect, I gently point this out to you — when a detailed description of her disability is described as ‘concerns’ and her response as ‘added stress.’”

That was more than two months ago and Mills says a meeting has yet to happen.

Jennifer Hollinshead, a clinical counsellor who works with victims of sexual assault at the practice she founded, , says health-care providers sometimes need a reminder that mental health is not a sidenote to physical health and putting people into positions where they feel they need to justify their trauma response can have ripple effects.

“It can worsen physical health outcomes because the person might not want to engage with the medical system,” says Hollinshead, who is based in Vancouver.

It’s a human rights issue full-stop, says Walker.

Broadly requiring people to wear masks for legitimate health reasons is not a human rights violation, according to Rosemary Parker, a spokesperson for the Ontario Human Rights Commission. However, she says that “unless it would amount to undue hardship based on cost or health and safety,” organizations have a duty to accommodate individuals who cannot wear masks because of a disability, be it physical, developmental or mental.

“An inability to use a mask or other equipment must not lead to automatic negative consequences such as complete denial of service,” Parker says.

Mills says her pain cuts into her sleep and limits how much she can do. She’s hoping she’ll be able to go back for an epidural next month, but she meant what she said in her email to the hospital: if they can’t accommodate her, she’ll stomach the pain.

“As a woman who has experienced a lifetime of trauma and a lifetime of being dismissed as not important… I had to fight really, really hard to make myself believe that I’m not worthless,” she says.

“[That doctor] immediately dismissed me and it put me right back down to that place.”

Southern Ontario police see surge in carjackings, chases and more

Police and residents from Hamilton to Peel Region, Toronto and as far north as Wasaga Beach have been raising concerns about a recent uptick in armed carjackings, high-speed chases through city streets, stunt driving and general disregard of some modified-vehicle enthusiasts for restrictions on gathering sizes, forcing Ontario’s premier to threaten throwing the book at rule breakers in recent weeks.

Peel Regional Police, York Regional Police, Toronto Police Service and the OPP are joining forces to address the disconcerting trend. During Friday’s Peel police board meeting, Chief Nishan Duraiappah said recent driving fatalities, speeding and street racing “is a significant problem.”

The joint operation was announced just two days after a 20-year-old man from Brampton was charged with allegedly stealing a luxury vehicle and taking police on a high-speed chase through Vaughan and Peel Region.

“On top of that are these violent robberies (organized carjackings) and theft of vehicles that we’ve seen,” Duraiappah said at Friday’s meeting. “There has been a significant increase, particularly during the pandemic, right across the GTA, for these types of thefts.”

According to Peel police, since March there has been a large increase of high-end vehicle thefts, with suspects often using weapons and threatening violence.

Jotvinder Sodhi and other members of the Homeowners Welfare Association and Concerned Residents of Brampton raised concerns about armed carjackings, deadly collisions, speeding and stunt driving in a deputation to the Peel board.

“People are being killed and injured every day on our roads,” Sodhi told the Star Monday. “This is a problem for the entire GTA.”

Sodhi said public concern has been elevated since the horrific death of elementary teacher and her three young daughters.

“We need better response and police presence on the roads,” Sodhi said. “Youth engagement is also something that we have to work on.”

Brady Robertson, 20, of Caledon, has since been charged with four counts of dangerous driving causing death and impaired driving causing death in connection with the collision that killed Ciasullo.

Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown said Sodhi raised some legitimate concerns, adding that whether it’s street racing or brazen car thefts, “we have to stem that.”

As of Sept. 14, Toronto police have laid 714 charges for stunt driving, which includes excessive speeding.

Nicole Saltz, a 34-year-old writer, has lived on the third floor of a highrise overlooking the Don Valley Parkway at Broadview and Danforth Aves. for eight years has never had a problem with traffic noise from the DVP before. However, this year there have been loud motorcycles and cars speeding by every night into the early morning.

“If they stop at 4 a.m., that’s a good night,” she said.

Saltz has tracked down people involved in racing events on social media and says the late-night DVP speeding is organized. She and her neighbours have started a Facebook group to track the incidents and have complained to the police, but she said the force told her officers have limited ability to catch the offenders in part because police are prohibited from engaging in high-speed chases for safety reasons.

“Someone’s not doing their job. And it’s to the detriment” of law-abiding residents, she said. “Not to be a drama queen, but it really is ruining my life in a lot of ways. It’s horrible.”

Ontario Provincial Police were on the scene on the weekend in Wasaga Beach where hundreds of modified cars descended this weekend for stunt driving, racing and more at an unsanctioned car rally. Dangerous driving, lack of physical distancing and disregard for public-gathering limits led the OPP to start turning motorists away from the beach town on Saturday night.

The OPP said in a statement Monday that “all available resources” were needed to maintain public safety during what the police service called “an unsanctioned car take-over event.” In all, police issued 172 provincial offence notices and laid charged including stunt and careless driving and speeding.

Some vehicles were seized and 11 tickets were issued the Reopening Ontario Act, which limits outdoor gathering sizes.

The event follows on the heels of a car rally in Ancaster drawing hundreds of people, who had to be dispersed with the help of police forces from across the GTA.

With files from the Star’s Ben Spurr and Wendy Gillis, and Shane MacDonald, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Barrie Advance.

Jason Miller is a Toronto-based reporter for the Star covering crime and justice in the Peel Region. His reporting is funded by the Canadian government through its Local Journalism Initiative. Reach him on email: or follow him on Twitter: