Involuntary Treatment: Navigating the Line Between Care and Control
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What does it mean to force someone to get better — and does it work?
In this episode, host Lynda Steele sits down with Guy Felicella, a harm reduction advocate and addiction educator, whose life story resists easy categorization. Over nearly two decades, Guy cycled through addiction, homelessness, gang involvement and incarceration, surviving six overdoses before finding his way to recovery. Today, he speaks publicly and passionately about stigma, trauma and the urgent need for a full spectrum of care.
The conversation centres on one of Canada's most contested policy debates: involuntary care. Should governments have the authority to compel people living with severe addiction or mental illness into treatment — even against their will? And if voluntary systems are underfunded, inaccessible or failing, does that change the calculus?
Lynda opens by sharing her initial position — and invites Guy to weigh in. What follows is a meaningful exchange, shaped by lived experience and an honest discussion about the limits of any single answer.
Together, they explore:
- How trauma underlies addiction in ways that policy often fails to address.
- The difference between compassion and coercion — and when one becomes the other.
- What the research and real-world evidence actually shows about forced treatment.
- Why Guy believes involuntary care is not a simple solution — and what he'd put in its place.
- What recovery actually looks like, and the role of love, support and dignity in getting there.
At the heart of this episode is a thread Guy returns to again and again: "If you don't deal with trauma, it's going to deal with you."
This is not an episode that tells you what to think. It's one that asks you to be curious, to listen and to make room for the full humanity of people caught between addiction, policy and survival.