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The Patients We Fear: Life in a Forensic Psychiatric Hospital | ENDEVR Documentary

ENDEVR | May 16, 2026



The Patients We Fear: Life in a Forensic Psychiatric Hospital | ENDEVR Documentary

After the Psychosis – When a Violent Patient Seeks Freedom: https://youtu.be/GW0JFAA29Gk

Behind the locked doors of a forensic psychiatric hospital, people who have committed violent crimes while suffering from severe mental illness struggle for a second chance. With unprecedented access to the Brockville Mental Health Centre, this documentary follows patients undergoing treatment in an institution rarely seen by the public. Over 18 months, both patients and staff reveal the realities of life inside—where recovery, responsibility, and risk are constantly weighed.

As some patients prepare to return to society, the film raises a difficult question: can those who committed violent acts while mentally ill truly be rehabilitated—and will society ever accept them?

This documentary first aired in 2014

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Written by ENDEVR

Comments

This post currently has 44 comments.

  1. @ENDEVRDocs

    May 16, 2026 at 6:56 am

    Behind the locked doors of a forensic psychiatric hospital, people who have committed violent crimes while suffering from severe mental illness struggle for a second chance. With unprecedented access to the Brockville Mental Health Centre, this documentary follows patients undergoing treatment in an institution rarely seen by the public. Over 18 months, both patients and staff reveal the realities of life inside—where recovery, responsibility, and risk are constantly weighed.

    As some patients prepare to return to society, the film raises a difficult question: can those who committed violent acts while mentally ill truly be rehabilitated—and will society ever accept them?

    Documentary first aired 2014

  2. @kimberlymercer7107

    May 16, 2026 at 6:56 am

    I worked chronic units and foresenic units at a Californian State Hospital for 14 yrs and then moved on the California Department of Corrections Rehabilitation which I traveled to Ca Prisons for 6 yrs. Now I'm doing adolescents. With all the years and all the experience I have in psych I always say it can be explained but never really understood. I really have a bleeding heart and empathize with individuals suffering from MI. It's so complicated especially Borderlines. They extremely can be challenging.

  3. @EmilyKayTV

    May 16, 2026 at 6:56 am

    45:20 This is similar to how my late grandmother was described. She'd hang out at the nurses' station like she's their best friend, then 5 min later, she'd walk past them all and flip them off while shouting obscenities. She was a wild card, and I wish these mental disorders were better understood when she was growing up. I didn't get a grandma, my dad and his brothers didn't get a mother, and she didn't get a chance at a quality independent life. RIP Linda

  4. @louannramirez4278

    May 16, 2026 at 6:56 am

    Retired RN here. One of my nursing jobs was in MH for about 15 years. From an acute care hospital on a locked unit to a MH unit in the prison system. I fell into it by accident and fell in love. It is the MOST heartbreaking illness a person can get.

    I live in the US and I noticed this was filmed in Canada. I wish we had better services here. We need better in-patient, long term care, and better community follow up. The funds are just not there and rarely does the patient have the funds. Unless there is a wealthy family member. By the time they are in the system there is no health insurance or finances for them. With all the State Psychiatric Hospital closures they are now the majority of our homeless or in the prison system. The system is really broken here

    The tears fell through this documentary, bringing back so many memories. The good, the bad and the ugly. It’s all there. But the most rewarding thing I have ever been a part of is to watch a floridly psychotic person, living in a hellish world made by their illness, become stable and then with good follow up care, live in the community, a productive and happy life. As a society we need to do better for this disease. It is our obligation to help those that truly cannot help themselves without intervention. They get passed by. It’s truly the most heartbreaking and shouldn’t be.

  5. @norae.6393

    May 16, 2026 at 6:56 am

    a very touching video when it comes to seeing the suffering of families knowing their loved ones are gone to a dark place. may their lives get better somehow.

  6. @sproutbaby

    May 16, 2026 at 6:56 am

    As a diagnosed SchizoAffective I approve of this film. I had to take 2 pauses while watching because I just needed to step away, I even started cleaning my shower 😆 I finally came back to finish. I've been hospitalized 3x and I understood Justine well about being out of hospital and on your own.. you have your freedom, but where are your people whom you have come accustomed to. Where is the routine. It is nice once out, but can be brutally lonely too. 💚

  7. @sarahhale-pearson533

    May 16, 2026 at 6:56 am

    As the relative of a violent person with schizophrenia, the aim should not be to put them back into society. Humane treatment yes. Care in the community ( neglect in the community in reality), no.

  8. @GOSOPRO

    May 16, 2026 at 6:56 am

    Very informative and expanding. It seems that we get so wound up in our own petty lives that we forget how many of our fellow travelers have real problems.

  9. @karenacton3854

    May 16, 2026 at 6:56 am

    Michael is a very tortured young man and beats himself up every day. He is extremely well spoken, although tentative in sharing his story and his pain. The acceptance and love his family give him is phenomenal and he truly appreciates it. I hope the day comes when he can be released, regardless of his father’s comment, but he has a lot of baggage at this time. I’m glad doctors see the potential in Michael because they are his support system.

  10. @cynthiawoodburn977

    May 16, 2026 at 6:56 am

    My sister is 43 and has borderline personality disorder. She self harms, drug use, and yet very smart. She could sell you water front property in the desert. She lied and faked having cancer to get drugs and money. She stole a doctors prescription pad. Recently she stole over $35,000 from my parents and drugged my mom. Yet she can charm you and you can fall for her lies. She needs to be put away. That will never happened. She was just arrested for 2 counts elder abuse, felony larceny and felony conspiracy. This was against my parents who are in their 80’s. When arrested she faked seizures to get out of jail. She has tormented our family for years.

  11. @davidcarver2241

    May 16, 2026 at 6:56 am

    When they put me in a Ausilm I was the only one violent. I was still in my army uniform. 13 month deployment to iraq. Came back and started seeing thing and hearing things. I was trained to be violent

  12. @JesterMoon-l3i

    May 16, 2026 at 6:56 am

    Take A Moment
    The world is not as nice as you might have thought. I'm Capt Sir Andrew James Henry Pickering-Crookes RAF retired after 28yrs and enjoy PTSD after 42yrs of being lied to by the 'management' of the death culture we live with every bloody day.
    At 15 minutes in I'm crying Help not Hate. It could happen to anyone, anytime.
    Take Care
    Stay Safe and Stay Free Unless Trump destroys the planet first

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