Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for inviting me here today, and thank you for all the good work you're doing in studying the care of the ill and injured members of the Canadian Forces. As you may remember, I appeared before you last November with the surgeon general, and I'm delighted to be back.
To give you some of my background, I worked as a nurse in mental health for nine years before entering medical school. I worked as a civilian psychiatrist for about 10 years at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto before moving to Ottawa. I first took a position in the Canadian Forces health services centre mental health clinic in Ottawa in 2003 as a civilian psychiatrist. In 2006 I decided to join the CF.
Part of my motivation for joining was so that I could deploy to Afghanistan, which I did in 2009 to 2010. In many ways this deployment experience was the high point of my career, though when I think about it, the past 10 years I've spent serving our military members, both in and out of uniform, have really been the overall highlight of my psychiatric career.
Besides seeing patients, I've been the program manager of our operational trauma and stress support centre since 2003, and since joining in 2006 I've been the clinical leader for all mental health services in the Ottawa clinic, which is considered the flagship clinic in Canada. It is the largest with a staff of 35 mental health clinicians.
With my experience working in both the civilian and military health care systems, I must tell you that I'm impressed every day with the level of accessibility, quality of care, the cooperation, and facility of communication among the different parts of our health care system. For instance, in the civilian world I had never had the kind of access and close relationship with the family doctors of my patients that I now enjoy. The family docs live only one floor above us and it's not unusual for me to see one of my clinicians running upstairs to discuss a complex case that they share with one of our doctors or physician's assistants, or one of our nurse practitioners.
As well, in mental health we work on multidisciplinary teams where the care of each patient is shared by psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, and mental health nurses, and where we have access to specialists in addictions. We have a chaplain on our team, a pharmacist, and when needed, we have case managers and peer-support workers.
I'd like to focus for a minute on the operational trauma and stress support centre, or OTSSC, in Ottawa. These centres were first stood up in 1999 as specialized clinics within mental health services to serve the needs of the members who suffered mental health problems following those difficult deployments of the early and mid-1990s to Rwanda, Somalia, and Bosnia.
The OTSSC is a multidisciplinary team of highly skilled, flexible, and creative clinicians who assess, diagnose, and treat members referred for mental health problems. But the OTSSC also responds to outreach requests from members, the chain of command, or at times, from outside agencies. For example, for two years, from 2007 to 2009, before an OTSSC was stood up in CFB Petawawa, members of my team did satellite clinics for three out of every four weeks of a month, so we could help meet the mental health needs of the people in Petawawa.
As well, for over a decade the Ottawa OTSSC has run a week-long care for the caregivers retreat for all CF chaplains who have returned from deployment in the previous year.
We've established partnerships with many organizations outside of the CF, including the Veterans Affairs OSI clinics across Canada, and most particularly with our clinic here at the Royal Ottawa Hospital, with which we have a close and collaborative working relationship. We're regularly approached by some other sister organizations, including provincial police, RCMP, and most recently, Ottawa Fire Services, to brief them on our approach to issues like critical incident stress, suicide, and managing mental health issues in the workplace.
I'd like to touch on another important issue as I conclude. I believe that in previous testimony you have asked the question, who helps the helpers? Well, that's a pretty important question and hopefully we'll have a chance to discuss that in the next hour. What I have learned from my 10 years with the CF is that one of the most important ingredients to preventing burnout in clinicians is to work in a team environment with the support of colleagues, a common focus, and an idealistic purpose.
In our clinic, I'm happy to report we have these ingredients in spades.
Thank you.
:
Mr. Chair, members of the committee, I would like to thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak to you about the alliances and the partnerships that the Health Services have established with the civilian community in the field of health.
First, the Canadian Forces Health Services Group is legally responsible for delivering care to Canada's military personnel at home and abroad. However, the closure of military hospitals in Canada has resulted in the Canadian Forces becoming increasingly reliant on a wide variety of civilian health care agencies to fulfil its mission in providing this health care. In fact, the group lacks a number of components, which makes it reliant on the civilian health care network, with which it must establish partnerships with regard to these components. Accordingly, partnerships and alliances with civilian organizations are core to the Canadian Forces Health Services Group's strategy, as it is often the only way to access some of the required resources and health-related services delivered in civilian settings.
In 2003, the Canadian Forces Health Services Group implemented the national Health Services Civilian-Military Cooperation, or the HS CIMIC: a unique capacity-providing expertise with no equivalent in the civilian sector. This section comprises one national manager — a position I have held for the past four years — who operates out of the Canadian Forces Health Services Group Headquarters in Ottawa, and regional coordinators operating in various regions of the country, each with an assigned geographic area of responsibility.
From 2004 to 2008, I worked as the HS CIMIC cooperation coordinator for the Quebec region, returning to this role three weeks ago. From 2008 until this past April, I was, as I mentioned earlier, the national manager for the team. Over these past several years I have gained solid experience in the development and maintenance of strong and efficient civilian-military alliance networks and at securing access to high quality care for ill or injured military personnel.
HS CIMIC ensures and facilitates access to care in the civilian sector either as a complement to day-to-day in-garrison care or urgent care in relation to operations or exercises. In 2006, as a complement to Canadian Forces Health Services Group's support to Operation Athena, HS CIMIC was formally mandated to develop and implement the strategy for securing the care of ill or wounded soldiers in Canadian health care environments, for example, acute or trauma care in Canadian civilian hospitals, rehabilitation services, mental health services and other specialized services such as home care. Particular efforts have been oriented to mental health related initiatives for ill or injured military personnel and their families.
HS CIMIC is also responsible for securing education and training opportunities in civilian francophone and anglophone settings for Canadian Forces Health Services Group personnel. As of today, 154 memorandums of understanding were negotiated and formalized in relation to a mandatory program held in hospitals or ambulance services. The objective of this program is to maintain clinical skills of Canadian Forces health care providers so that all can provide care to ill and injured CF members, at home or abroad.
The Department of National Defence and the Chief of the Defence Staff both consider care offered to injured or ill members of the Canadian Forces to be a priority. Furthermore, the Canadian Forces Health Services Group has a firm resolve to provide the highest quality health care services available to military personnel. In this respect, the continuous and fruitful relationships established with civilian health services in Canada, as well as with other departments with a health mandate at the federal and provincial levels through the section that I led, play a key role in following up on this priority.
Thank you.
:
Thank you for the question.
There are two parts to that. First of all, the wait times, and then the difference I've seen in how people suffer from the days when I first started working in this field until now.
I gave the example from the Royal Ottawa hospital, of the difference, at times, being 12 weeks in our system to 12 months in the provincial health care system. One of the problems for a lot of the organizations that you're talking about is that they fall under medicare. They fall under the provincial health care system, and they don't have their own internal health care and mental care like we do in the military, so it becomes much more difficult.
We've instituted programs where, for example, we will see the RCMP members who have deployed with us. We will prioritize them and see them for assessment. We will then give back recommendations to their physicians so that they can start getting treatment. It's because it was taking so long for them to get services in the civilian world, and of course, they had deployed with us and had put themselves in harm's way, the same as CF members had.
In terms of the difference, that's a really good question. One of the things that I remember from when I first started working in the OTSSC, was that when members came in and I took their history, it wasn't uncommon for them to tell me that they had not slept through a single night in 10 years since returning from Rwanda or from Somalia, and that they had nightmares for almost all of those nights.
I have to tell you, as a civilian psychiatrist first starting to see people, I was taken aback. It was a bit hard for me to believe. But, of course, I had so many people who came in over and over again telling me that same story that I realized it was, in fact, true. These people had suffered in silence for years and years, had continued to work, and were stoic. I often needed to get their spouses in to get the real story of how much they were suffering because they didn't want to say very much.
Now it's much more the case that people come in six months to a year after returning from tour if they find that they are still having nightmares or still having an exaggerated startle response. I think they are much more willing to come in. There seems to be less stigma associated with this. I think part of it is that often their partners are much better educated now. They won't let them stay in the basement and drink for 10 years anymore. They say, "Hey, you're going to go and get some help.”
Thank you to you both for coming.
We had Lieutenant-Colonel Grenier here a few weeks ago, and what added particular poignancy and credibility to his testimony were his own experiences with mental health issues. If this is an inappropriate question, tell me that it's an inappropriate question, and we'll move on. It's sometimes true that, looking at it from the other side of the gurney, the belief about your clinic, etc., is different, maybe not even quite as good. If appropriate, have either of you received treatment for issues relating to mental health?
An hon. member: That's inappropriate.
Hon. John McKay: I gave them the option. If in fact it's inappropriate, say so, and I'm happy to move on, but it is quite relevant, because you speak about the burnout of clinicians, and it's true.
What we've been getting in a lot of this testimony has been people who are the providers of the service, or they are responsible for the providers of the service. We haven't been hearing so much from the people who are the recipients of the service. If it's inappropriate, just tell me so, and I'll go on to another question.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Mr. Chairman and members of the committee, on behalf of Wounded Warriors Canada, we are truly honoured to be invited to appear before this committee and to be part of a very important discussion on the care of ill and injured Canadian Forces members.
By way of introduction, my name is Derrick Gleed, and I am the vice-chair and CFO of our board of directors. I am joined today by Captain Phil Ralph, padre and program director.
In our capacity as board members, I am proud to say we have been able to oversee the implementation of a robust slate of programming, benefiting our ill and injured Canadian Forces members.
To briefly introduce you to our organization, Wounded Warriors Canada was founded in 2006 by Captain Wayne Johnston, a distinguished serviceman with four decades of service within the CF, and is most widely know as the repatriation officer for the fallen in Afghanistan. Through a wide range of programs and services, we help find solutions where gaps have left our CF members in need, be they full-time or reservists.
With the majority of our troops having returned from Afghanistan, our primary focus has shifted from physical injury support to mental health, and as a result to the staggering impact of PTSD, perpetrated by operational stress injuries.
Overall, however, our mandate is to help any injured veteran in need as they transition into civilian life. We are a not-for-profit corporation operating exclusively as a result of donations made by Canadians and Canadian businesses from coast to coast to coast. One of our guiding principles is to keep our annual operational expenses below 20% of our annual revenue. Further, we work diligently to ensure the hard earned funds of our donors are allocated to best make a difference to the lives of our ill and injured soldiers, and their families.
The following is but a sample of our programs this year.
We launched Ontario's first veteran transition program as part of our $100,000 contribution to British Columbia's veterans transition network. At the end of May, we will be taking a team of CF members, who are battling with mental health, on the Big Battlefield Bike Ride, cycling from Paris to London. This is but one of our mental health challenge programs and follows the overwhelming success of our ride last year.
We contributed $50,000 toward Wounded Warriors Weekend, a provincially designated event in Nipawin, Saskatchewan, that brings together more than 130 Canadian, American, British, and Australian wounded soldiers for a weekend of camaraderie and mental healing. We've entered into partnership with a pioneering PTSD elite service dog program, which operates out of Manitoba. This year we will provide close to $100,000 in funding, targeted to assist this program for its national expansion.
We have partnered with an organization called Can Praxis, an innovative equine program in Calgary that uses horses and the staff's extensive experience in communication to promote personal renewal and improved quality of life for veterans coping with PTSD. We just recently launched a national awareness partnership with the Royal Canadian Legion, highlighting the support services available at all 1,450 Royal Canadian Legion branches in Canada.
On May 15, we will be launching a 10-year, $400,000 Wounded Warriors Canada doctoral scholarship in veterans mental health. This is in partnership with Queen's University and the Canadian Institute for Military and Veteran Health Research. Just this week, we provided $15,000 in support funding to Fay Maddison's Natasha's Wood Foundation, aimed at assisting the children of service members affected by PTSD and related issues.
Much of our work, as our diverse slate of programs and initiatives highlights, is targeted toward ensuring our returning veterans, suffering from a range of personal, health, and financial issues, are supported as they transition to civilian life. Given the fact that we are not clinicians, psychologists, therapists, or even financial advisers, we put our money in the hands of the best people to deliver programs and ultimately the best results for those who need our support.
As you're all aware, the unique circumstances of military service, coupled with personal and environmental factors, affect and shape members of our Canadian Forces. It is understood that everyone is affected by the world they interact with. When CF members return home, they have been changed by their service. For some, these changes are as obvious as the physical scars they bear. Some have learned to appreciate life all the more. For others, their scars are invisible. In some ways, it is as if they left a part of themselves over there.
Friends and loved ones of those members affected by operational stress injuries often remark to us that the person who returned is not the same person who deployed. Having listened to the stories shared by our soldiers, their families, and their friends, that is the reason we've built into our mandate a simple yet powerful guiding ethos: honour the fallen, help the living. We seek to uphold this by doing our very best to empower members suffering from operational stress injuries and related conditions to return home in a holistic manner, psychologically, physically, financially, and spiritually.
Of course, developing partnerships is most critical when dealing with issues of this scope and scale. We not only partner with independent groups, we also work in conjunction with those who provide care to Canadian Forces members from VAC, including CF health services, OSISS, unit chaplains, and DCSM. In all, we seek to encourage members to avail themselves of the programs and services that are in place while providing a healthy environment to assist in their recovery.
Of particular importance related to partnerships, I am proud to state today, and as you will hear publicly in the coming days, that Senator Roméo Dallaire has accepted the position of national patron for Wounded Warriors Canada, an extreme honour for our organization, as you can well imagine.
It is also important to note that since our founding, we have paid particular attention to the well-being of our primary reserves. Anyone affected by an OSI faces a number of obstacles and challenges on their road to recovery and transition to civilian life. However, within the Canadian Forces community, these challenges are particularly daunting for members of the primary reserve. The often unspoken reality is that members of the primary reserve, whom Canadian Forces leadership have spoken of as being essential to their ability to accomplish the most recent mission, return home with little requisite support to manage the transition to civilian life.
Those who have provided 30% of the effective deployed forces return to a civilian society ill-equipped to appreciate, recognize, or deal with their needs. Further, should they seek to access the programs that are in place, they often feel abandoned due to the realities of time and space, coupled with the pressures of trying to provide for themselves and their families. In addition, members of the primary reserves face the real risk of losing their civilian job due to injuries resulting from their service. This is particularly true with respect to mental health injuries. Finally, they face real challenge getting on reserve-force compensation, commonly referred to as “dis comp”, when a mental health issue manifests itself after their final 30 days of class C service.
In summary, we consider ourselves to be a grassroots charity, interacting, listening, and responding as best we can to the needs of the men and women who so bravely serve our country. From our day-to-day interactions with our veterans and their families, we would be remiss if we did not offer some practical suggestions as to where the CF can work more effectively to address the needs that exist, for example, elimination of the long administrative delays for receipt of awards and compensation.
SISIP needs to be broader in their coverage definitions, particularly in the area of education, both in terms of programs offered and durations covered. CF should also improve retraining in education by providing the tools, such as laptops and related tools of their chosen trade, to enable them to complete their education and compete in the real world. Finally, the shift from the pension system to the lump sum payment as part of the new Veterans Charter is commonly brought to our attention as something requiring review.
In closing, we thank the committee for the invitation, and we wish you every success as you work on behalf of our veterans. We remain at your disposal should the committee have further questions now or at any time in the future.
Thank you.
:
In a nutshell, when somebody has augmented from the reserve force and has deployed with the regular force, when they return to Canada they get a brief post-deployment screening, and then they have to take their leave. They have a couple of days at the reserve unit, where they parade half-time and have to be seen, and then they have to use up their leave. There's their 30 days.
They're asked questions right off the bat about having any symptoms. They go through the screening tools, but as we know—it's pretty common knowledge—mental health issues, as you said, sometimes take months and sometimes years to manifest themselves.
Once you've finished your 30 days and the class C contract ends, you're back, ostensibly, to civilian life. You might go back to being a class A soldier where you're parading at the regiment once a week and training on a monthly basis, but for the rest of your life you're out there in the workforce trying to make a living and provide for your family, for yourself, etc. If the mental health issues begin to surface as a result of your service, it's really difficult, especially for reservists.
There are two issues: time and space. If you're from Flin Flon, Manitoba, all these wonderful centres we hear about are kind of far away, so getting access from there is one issue. Secondly, because you are now a class A soldier, you come in and you sign into the regiment and you work with them on your Friday night or your Thursday night, whatever your parade night is, and that's your military service. However, your problem now is that you're having mental health issues, you need to get treatment, and you need to get issues looked at, but you're still trying to provide for your family, hold down your civilian job, and do all the things that everybody else has to do, and yet you have this additional problem.
You're right. My parents taught me when I was a kid that if I broke something, I had to fix it. I think that as the Canadian Forces it's incumbent upon us, if we break something in this context, we need to address it. I've seen soldiers, especially those with physical health issues, and they get addressed within that 30-day period. Great, you have an injury, we're going to treat it, extend your contract, give you a place to hang your hat, and make sure you're still getting paid. We're going to treat you and get you all the way through to recovery. That works really well in that model.
With mental health issues, they may come up six or eight months later. Try to get them back onto a contract and have the system take care of them; it's near impossible. I know. I've tried.
Thanks to you both for your testimony and for the work of the organization.
I think it's a particularly powerful example of the response of Canadian society because of your beginnings in 2006 when we were, for the first time in decades, in serious, large-scale combat in Kandahar. We were doing that on behalf of Canadians but in the context of a NATO mission where the NATO forces had never been in combat as NATO forces, and we needed a response from Canadian society above and beyond the response from the government.
Everyone has been changed by this experience—I totally agree with that assessment—and in some respects for the better. Experience is always a great school. But clearly with the clients you're dealing with, who are close to our hearts for the purposes of this report, they have been changed in ways that have generated suffering and need, to which you have responded.
Thank you for describing the evolution.
Give us a sense of what your vision is for Wounded Warriors in the next four or five years.
Also, to what extent do you formally or informally try to ensure that roles and responsibilities with regard to those in need across Canada are more and more coherently shared among the many organizations that are out there, some of them very small scale, and some of them very local, and some of them absolutely national? Do you have a formal process of consultation?
I know that we all see each other—True Patriot Love, Soldier On, yourselves, and many other organizations—but how comfortable are you that a serious discussion about roles and priorities is taking place within that community?