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Good morning, folks. We have another veterans affairs meeting.
I would like to welcome Monsieur Gaudet back. He's been away; I understand that the other committee he was with has finally put its report in to the House. We're very grateful to have his familiar and smiling face back at our committee table.
I would like to welcome our witnesses this morning from the Department of National Defence. We have Ms. Margaret Ramsay, Major Chantal Descôteaux, and Dr. Marc-André Dufour.
You can collectively have 20 minutes, or you can have snippets thereof, or you can slice it however you wish. Afterwards these folks on the standing committee get a chance to ask you questions and pick your brains. We also, at the end, have a motion from Mrs. Hinton to deal with today at our committee.
I give it over to our witnesses. Please go ahead with your presentation.
Mr. Chairman and members of the Standing Committee on Veterans Affairs, my name is Margaret Ramsay. I'm the acting senior staff officer for mental health services within the directorate of general health services. As such, I'm responsible for the administrative issues related to mental health services across the Canadian Forces.
With me are Major Chantal Descôteaux and Dr. Marc-André Dufour. Chantal is the base surgeon at CFB Valcartier and has the overall responsibility for all medical services at the base, including mental health services. Dr. Dufour is a clinical psychologist and is the practice leader for psychology within mental health services at Valcartier.
We're pleased to have this opportunity to meet with you today. I would like to brief you on the CF mental health services. The purpose of this briefing is to provide you with an overview of how mental health services are delivered within the Canadian Forces. As you may know, we are currently in the middle of a five-year project, called Rx2000, to markedly improve these services. Among other things, the five years will see an increase from 229 to 447 in the number of mental health providers available to our CF members.
Mental health care is provided in an interdisciplinary fashion in the Canadian Forces. Disciplines involved in this care provision include family practitioners, psychiatrists, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, social workers, mental health nurses, psychologists, pastoral counsellors, and addiction specialists.
I just want to go over a bit of background with you. In 2001 the Canadian Forces coined a new term, “operational stress injuries”, OSI, that regrouped several mental health conditions that are often the result of stress and trauma. OSI is not a medical term. “Operational stress injury” is officially defined as any persistent psychological difficulty resulting from operational duties performed by a CF member. The term OSI is used to describe a broad range of problems, including PTSD, which usually result in impairment in functioning.
In 2002 the Canadian Forces medical services contracted Statistics Canada to conduct a mental health survey of CF members to determine the prevalence of PTSD and other mental health disorders. This study found that 2.8% of the regular force and 1.2% of the reserve force reported symptoms consistent with a diagnosis of PTSD at some time during the year preceding.
Over the course of their lives, 7.2% of the regular force and 4.7% of the reserve force would have met the diagnostic criteria. The survey determined that depression and panic disorder were significantly more prevalent in the Canadian Forces than in the civilian population. The survey also revealed that regular force lifetime prevalence of PTSD, post-traumatic stress syndrome, equates to that found in the Canadian general population.
Levels of service within the CF—Mental health care is organized into two levels of service provision. This organization is differentiated by the degree of specialization of the service and is defined as either being primary care or secondary care in its delivery. Primary-level mental health care is denoted as psychosocial care. The psychosocial service is the first level of mental health clinical services and functions with the patients care unit delivery, which is called a CDU. In addition to a crisis intervention service, it provides a number of social work administrative services.
Psychosocial services are considered to be brief interventions. Higher degrees of specialization—secondary care—are called mental health services and are accessed through referral from primary clinical services. These secondary services are organized as a series of programs of various degrees of specialization.
Some of these programs consist of the operational trauma and stress support program, the general mental health program, and the addictions treatment program. These are three of our most common programs that are utilized.
Another basic principle of mental health care delivery is its use of regular interdisciplinary case intake and review. Care provided both within the Canadian Forces health care clinic and by external service providers is regularly reviewed. In this way, CF members can be assured that their care is of the highest quality, consistent with evidence-based best practices.
As to service locations, to address the medical needs of Canadian Forces members, mental health clinical services are available in all medical clinics across Canada. As well, the Canadian Forces has five large clinics that offer a full range of mental health services and include operational trauma and stress support centres. These centres are located at Halifax, Ottawa, Valcartier, Edmonton, and Esquimalt. Geographically, they're placed across the country to provide service regionally.
Canadian Forces members and families can also contact the Canadian Forces member assistance program—CFMAP—a 24-hour, seven-day-a-week confidential referral system. This is a 1-800 number. This program provides external short-term counselling for members and their families initially more comfortable in seeking assistance outside the direct military health services.
That concludes my brief for this morning.
Thank you for your presentation this morning.
You mentioned a number of things. I'll go to your last comments first, if that's the way I could do it.
You talked about the service locations. Some of us here serve in northern Ontario, and we realize that there are no bases—or no base in my neck of the woods, in the Kenora riding. You talked about the clinics. You mentioned there are five across Canada. The two closest I see to us would be probably Ottawa and Edmonton.
What happens when there's a service member who needs service and he's sent back to one of the communities, like my own home community, Dryden? He's a thousand miles away from any type of help. There's not much support network in his peer group there. Because there are no great numbers of people living there, there aren't great numbers of people who serve.
So what happens? Are there services provided locally, where someone would come in? Could you run us through what happens if there's a member there who needs to be helped?
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Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.
Chantal and Marc-André: I want to speak mostly to you. I apologize for calling you by your first names, but being 66 years of age, I feel that I may do so.
I was sickened, some weeks ago, when Ms. LeBeau, whom you no doubt know and who works for OSISS, the Canadian Forces Operational Stress Injury Social Support Program, came here to testify. She told me more than once that before CF members are deployed, they get approximately three and a half hours of training during which they are told a little bit about the problems that may occur in relation to PTSD. I cannot comprehend this.
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That is not what I'm talking about.
You know Pascale Brillon. She goes to your base, Valcartier, and I think we can recognize that she knows a great deal about this subject. She is recognized not only in Quebec, but also nationally and internationally. So, I take what Pascale says as gospel. I don't know whether your soldiers have red Pascale Brillon's guide for sufferers. Pascale told us that we need to treat PTSD as soon as possible.
How many psychologists are there in Afghanistan, for example? How many psychologists will follow the Royal 22nd on site? They must be treated within the 24 or 48 hours following or as soon as possible after experiencing a stressful event.
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Indeed, the project is going to be validated. Soldiers who underwent the tests before being deployed are also going to take the tests upon returning from their mission. It is a matter of assessing the efficiency of the measures, which are meant to be preventive.
We are talking about stress, but as has been raised by chaplains, there's also a component regarding the combatant and death. We talk about death, and the link between armed combat and death, which is a possibility. We lead the soldier into thinking about the meaning attached to the mission. He will be making more money, of course, and that's nice, but given the context in which he is being deployed, he must be asking himself questions that go above and beyond that fact.
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Chantal, I want to come back on what you said about the psychological profiles drawn up before hiring a soldier. I am fully aware of what this is about, because since I was elected in 1997, post-traumatic stress disorder among young people has become an issue of particular concern to me.
I know that the RCMP has a program that allows for the psychological profiles of members to be drawn up. I also know that the value of these profiles has not led to a consensus among psychologists and researchers. I understand your situation. Another issue you confront, as does the RCMP, various police forces and firefighters, is access to information. If a soldier or a police officer wishes to forego a test, you cannot force him to undergo it: he is protected by the Canadian Constitution. Breaching this right may even lead to lawsuits.
When I think about all of these problems, an image pops up in my mind. I met a young soldier at the Valcartier base. He talked to me about the stairway of shame, referring to the stairway that leads to the second-floor offices of psychologists. One must not forget that these young people are macho—pardon the term—young men who see themselves as strong and for whom the concept of death is unfathomable. We were the same when we were their age.
I wish to congratulate you, because at least you are working in the right direction. However, you still have not told me how many psychologists are actually on site.
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I suggest all of us read it, because it really puts into light what we ask our Canadian soldiers to do. For those of us who are parents and those who know kids, I cannot imagine what it would be like to have your ten-year-old boy say, “If you die in Afghanistan, I'm going to be mad at you for the rest of your life.” Talk about suffering PTSD before you even go. I read this article, and it's extremely moving.
You said that OSI actually results from operational duties performed by a CF member, but is it not possible that they could have these stress-related duties before they even go?
At the Phoenix Centre now there's assistance. Petawawa made a lot of news recently, and I know that the federal government has now made an arrangement with the province to do something, but it took an ombudsman report and media coverage to get both governments moving, which I find quite shameful.
But in a situation of this nature, which I'm sure is not an isolated incident, what specifically are the military and the various bases—public or private—doing to assist this family, more specifically?
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I think you've raised a really important question and a problem we have. The families do need a lot of support.
I don't know if you realize it or not, but the military is not mandated to treat the family. We can provide supportive care to the family, but it is still up to the provinces to provide care for the family. So we're caught in this kind of back-door support to the family.
Legislation is probably needed to change that, but we have no power over that. We try to support the family in every way, and it does have great repercussions. We have added 25% more resources in our project for mental health care providers and social workers to try to provide that support to families.
It's not just a Petawawa issue; it happens at all bases.
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I'd like to answer that. For physicians and mental health practitioners working in the CF, our life has been very difficult, since a military member can apply for a pension while still serving. This is very important for you people to understand. If you could take this point, I think we would be very pleased.
When I started to practise medicine, the patients I was seeing wanted to get better, to stay active, and to go back to their normal military life. Now that they can access a pension while serving, they are looking for a benefit, money, so they will come more often to see me about this ankle that is not so bad any more, or for that little cut, or for their hemorrhoids, because they want a pension. It's the same for mental health problems. If you know that at the end you could have that big amount of money if you were diagnosed with very severe PTSD, what is the advantage of your getting better?
This has been a big struggle for us, trying to cope with these two elements. I preferred the way we were doing it before. If you were still serving, you were getting your care, but if you were found not able to continue in the CF and had a permanent disability, then you could apply for a pension, and the process would start and move on to VAC, etc.
Now that they can do that while still serving, it is difficult for us to see who is playing the system and who is really sick. For those who are really sick, we're almost
[Translation]
rewarding them for being ill. Unfortunately, it is more advantageous to be ill because of the monetary benefits provided for such reasons.
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It's a struggle for the mental health people and for the general practitioner, because we're not in the business of giving a diagnosis to someone that will make money for him. We're in the business of saying “you're back to being okay”. There's a kind of expertise needed when someone wants a pension.
A psychiatrist, psychologist, or GP may get involved and say yes, he's got severe PTSD, but if I say no, he doesn't have severe PTSD, he has light PTSD, and he can get better, my relationship with my patient can change, and he can no longer want to be with me just because of that.
It's a bit like in the civilian sector. Expertise is given by experts, but if you are the treating physician, you are treating the patient to get better. This is a big struggle for all of us. We really wish that the system would change and go back to being that you ask for a pension when you're due to get out of the military. I think the Americans are not doing it the way we're doing it. They're still doing it the way we were before.
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There truly has to be an independent process. Currently, they use our progress notes, psychological reports, in addition to the medical doctor and psychiatrist's report, as well as therapeutic material and clinical documents to determine the sum of money.
There are cases of soldiers who come back angry because they did not receive the compensation they thought they were entitled to, in light of the level of suffering they feel. They ask why we're not listening to them and what we have not understood. As providers of treatment, that puts us in a very uncomfortable situation.
We must truly separate the evaluation related to the treatment, that is the work that I carry out, in addition to that done by other Defence mental health professionals, from the assessment, the procedure used to establish the monetary amount of the pension. This must really be separate in order to avoid that type of situation.
I also want to point out that we are not saying that soldiers are manifesting symptoms in order to receive money. This is not the case. In fact, it's absolutely human. I believe that a soldier is financially penalized if his state of health improves. There is a financial penalty associated to improved health. It is the system which is detrimental to the treatment. There is no trace of bad intentions or manipulation, but if a soldier sees one of his colleagues receiving compensation, he will naturally ask why he hasn't received as much. Therefore, he challenges the treatment, the work of the professionals, whose job it not to establish the amount of money.
All of this confusion leads us to say that the two processes, that of the Department of Veterans Affairs, and ours, should be distinct.
I pulled up the story that Mr. Stoffer's referring to, just so I could get a bit of background. Apparently, the family you're referring to, Mr. Stoffer, has been getting therapy for over a year now. I would like to point out that the federal government put $230,000 into the Phoenix Centre to help families such as these. So we are doing our part. I know that the panellists here are doing their part to serve our military. I appreciate that very much.
There are a few questions that come to mind. We've listened to a number of witnesses now who have been discussing PTSD. It's obviously a very difficult disease to deal with and to diagnose, as well. I'm getting the impression, from listening to the witnesses, that there is really no predictor for who might or might not come down with PTSD. It seems to be—
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When we talk about operational stress more than about post-traumatic stress, we are moving forward on the issue. There is no doubt post-traumatic stress exists—it is a clinical diagnosis. Operational stress is a very interesting concept. In my view, it would be difficult for any member of the force who experiences operations and situations in Afghanistan—I hear the stories they bring back—not to be traumatized. However, operational stress is normal. Stress is presented as a combat weapon. That means it's part of the game.
I have not practised with the Forces for very long, but on the basis of what I hear some long-serving members of the Forces and corporals say, they experienced extremely stressful situations but had no right to respond. They had no right to be stressed. If they exhibited stress, they were excluded and set aside. They did not even have the right to talk about it.
Now, they are told that they should not put their heads in the sand, that they will experience stress, that they will be afraid, that the enemy's goal is to make them feel afraid, and that they will experience stress. When we explain ways they can use to respond to stress, we give them the right to have a reaction to stress.
In the past, two things happened in the Canadian Forces. Members of the Forces experienced extremely stressful events, and—what I would call the second level of trauma—had no right to respond and were perceived as cowardly if they did speak out. Well, I can tell you that, with this kind of message, a soldier will not speak out and will become withdrawn. That's why today, we still see soldiers who served in the former Yugoslavia, and 10, 12 or 13 years after the facts, after losing two families, two houses and so on, come to see us for the very first time because they are completely destroyed. Those soldiers were told that if they talked about it they were weaklings. They were not supposed to talk about it. The whole thing festered inside them, became part of their personality. They became adapted to their trauma. In their heart of hearts, they end up believing that it is normal for veterans to live that way. It's dreadful.
Now, we tell them that those feelings are normal, that they are part of the mission, that they will feel stress. Even as we teach them to handle their C-7, we tell them that they also have to learn to handle and manage stress. We give them preventive tools and tell them that professional help is available if those tools don't work. That's when we move out of the pathology. We are trainers, who don't show them how to shoot—we show them how to breathe. It seems a bit strange when you first hear it, but that is what we talk about.
We say that operational stress is normal, that they will experience it, and that there are professionals there to help. As a result, military personnel come to us much more quickly, and we are seeing that. We are starting to see people who are coming back from Afghanistan. I can tell you that this is very different from what we saw with soldiers stationed in Yugoslavia. They have been living with their trauma for 10, 12 or 13 years, and it has become entrenched. Now we see much less avoidance, with anxiogenec situations well targeted. We can work much more easily with that. We can identify the trauma military personnel experienced in a certain vehicle, and establish a gradual scale of exposure—Pascale Brillon might have talked about this—so that we can gradually desensitize the member to the situation that first engendered the anxiety. With this approach, therapy takes much less time and has a much higher success rate. So we should encourage members to ask for help by normalizing stress reactions. That is the angle we need to take, and that is angle we do take.
Thank you very much to our witnesses today.
Dr. Descôteaux, I'd like to pursue your very interesting and almost startling information about incentives.
This is no disrespect to military personnel who feel they are ill, but if our policies somewhat skew the system, we are in fact using resources that should go to those who need to pursue the benefits route, and we're using other resources for those who pursue getting better. We have to better differentiate that, because the goals are different.
If your resources and your team resources are mixed, and at the intersection of your service the two are colliding, we're not really serving either of the two streams of personnel in the best possible way. Sometimes the best-intentioned policies have an unintended consequence.
I'd like to underline for our researcher that this is an important area for our committee. Thank you for raising it.
In respect to those two streams, do you have any suggestions on how it can be better done? Is it a matter of reverting to the old way of doing it, distinguishing between those who can get better and those who say they give up getting better and want to go the benefits route? Are there some solutions you can offer?
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In our military medical system, someone who comes for help and needs to be restricted in some areas gets a temporary medical category. For the first six months we will say okay, you're unfit for deployment, you have to see someone in the mental health department weekly, and are not able to lift 30 pounds, etc. We write down all the limitations. This is for the first six months. Then there is a second six months if we have not succeeded in curing him.
After a year, or a year and a half, depending on the problem, then we usually say whether the restrictions are permanent or not. If they are permanent, then the person has a permanent category, and there's a process in the medical system and the administration system by which he will know if he's going to be released or not from the CF—retained with his restrictions or released medically. When this message comes in, this is when it would be best for someone to have permission to ask for a pension, because up until that moment, efforts will be made to cure him, to help him get better.
Once it's determined the limitations are permanent, then with permanent limitations it's okay to ask for a pension. If you are allowed to ask for a pension for your knee while you're in your twelfth year of service, and yet you still serve until you reach your 25 years of service, what kind of a permanent injury is that if you're able to continue to run and do forced marches? That doesn't make sense to us. Yet we have these patients who are active duty members and who are getting their snow plowed in winter because they have a pension, which we know about, for their back, and yet they're still on fully fit duty, working as an infantry guy. This is ridiculous. We have examples of this. We're looking at that and asking, what is this? The individual is being paid for his back and we're paying to mow his lawn and whatever and he's an active duty person. It makes no sense. It should only be when we determine there are permanent limitations.
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As Ms. Ramsay said, we're not responsible for treating families. It is important to make that point. I would like to treat families, but then I would have to treat the children, the wife, the husband, and there are already clinics to do that. Treating someone is not just a matter of treating his or her mental health. We also have to take into account the biological, psychological and social aspects involved. We are not equipped to do that at present.
Some services are provided for families, however. Each base has a family support centre. Frequently, those centres provide the services you mentioned—in Valcartier, for example—and they work very closely with us.
Here is what we can do with regard to treating the family. If a military person experiences operational stress and might benefit from our seeing his spouse or children so that they can understand what he is going through, then we will do that to the extent that we can.
But you will understand that I have to tell my staff to give priority to forces personnel coming back to Canada. I do recognize, however, that treating a member of the forces also means treating his family and those around him. If we cannot treat them ourselves on site, we make sure that we route them to appropriate resources, such as the family centre where psychologists and social workers are available, or to some centres in town.
Briefing sessions are provided for all spouses before forces members leave, in cooperation with the family centre. Unfortunately, family members are not all military personnel and we cannot force them to attend. Frequently, they don't show up to the briefing sessions.
There are Internet sites available for them as well, with Web cams and all kinds of things. Between the time I was first deployed and today, there are much greater possibilities for armed forces members to talk to their families. There are a number of services, but the members and their families do have to use them.
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Thank you very much for coming out. This is a great opportunity for us to find co-relation.
I found your comments in your presentation about the things that are changing interesting, Ms. Ramsay, in terms of, over the next five years, the increase in terms of health care services, also in terms of the connection that we need to continually make between Canadian Forces, Defence, and VAC. I think, quite honestly, we need to do that. I want to turn more toward the VAC and some of your thoughts about that, because that's actually what our mandate is.
Everyone talks about how we need to do more. I don't know that we ever will get to wherever the “more” is, but it does not take away from our desire to be fair and to provide our veterans with the services, the protection, and the health care they need.
I'm wondering if you can just talk a little bit about the relationship that has changed between National Defence and VAC in terms of being able to provide better services as that transition happens. We get caught in this in-between, transitional period; it was brought up by Mr. Stoffer and confirmed in some clarifications by Ms. Hinton. Would you comment quickly about that relationship change, if there has been any?
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There definitely has been a change, I would say, over the last four or five years. We've just signed a memorandum with VAC. It's called the operational stress injury network, and what we're trying to do is work closely on a network of clinics right across the country. VAC has opened up five more OSI clinics, and we have our five. We're trying to cover off the whole country and have equal access to each other's clinics.
This is a work in progress, and there are going to be all kinds of things we have to work on, like priority access and clinical procedures of assessment—whether we agree, and who should get assessed at which clinic. But it's definitely a work in progress. We meet regularly with VAC—I'm meeting with a group from Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue this Friday—and we talk about these issues.
We're going to set up an advisory committee to meet every three months to advise the steering committee that meets in Charlottetown, and DND and VAC are represented there. But it's a close network.
We've also included the RCMP in that operational stress injury network. They're the other organization that uses the VAC services as well, and they're out there with similar injuries as our own soldiers'.
I'd say the relationship is good. It's a work in progress, and we meet regularly.
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For the situation we have in Valcartier, which is the biggest army base in Canada—and I want to point that out—this is where the gap is. When I have a really sick patient who is going to be released because of operational stress, or whatever, I need a good set-up team that can take over the care of this patient.
As you know, in Quebec, anyway, it's very hard to access a psychiatrist and a GP. A psychologist is not too bad. But we need interdisciplinary care for very difficult patients and right now it's difficult to find that. So often you will hear from veterans that the difficulty they had is when they left the military because of that hole, that gap there.
The clinic we have in Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue is a good start, but it's in Montreal. It's not in Quebec. It's not in Edmonton. It's not in Petawawa. So close by our big army bases, at least, we need clinics like Paul-Triquet, which is one we have in Quebec, but it's partly provincial and it's not working out. They have three offices in there. I know they're moving towards having something better, a big building and facilities, but that's where the gap is.
When we determine that someone has a permanent category and is going to be released medically, I need, while he's still serving, to switch the care to these people downtown so my team and I can work on the active members and get them to stay in the military.
If we are very busy with very sick people who are just waiting to be released--and this is too long a process in our system—my staff is booked weekly with those chronic cases, and the waiting list to see the sick people quickly who are new to the program is too long. So I need the care of these very sick people to be taken over by a team that is ready to do this so I can better concentrate on those who need it. That way we can have better success in treating it, if we're not too late in intervening with that.
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Reservists coming back will have a screening by us, the supporting base, but they go back to their downtown area very quickly. I recommend we don't let them go back downtown, that they stay with us and work for another year, so we can have them close by. They're getting paid and we're there, we can support them. We can screen them better. They stay in a group. They can vent with people, not be somewhere where nobody understands what's going on with them.
That's our first recommendation. The second one is that if they're sick, they should come back to let's say Valcartier, to be assessed. That's what they should be doing. We assess them. We give the diagnosis and then we set up care near their home. But unfortunately, the way it's working out with VAC—that's another thing—is that sometimes they will not come back to us. They're still reservists, but they will go downtown. They will get a phony diagnosis, an incorrect diagnosis made by someone downtown who is not used to this.
Let's say they get an incorrect diagnosis of PTSD and not the proper care for what they have, which is really an adjustment disorder with a personality disorder. Then we're stuck in a bit of a fight with the patient. Patients come back to us and say they should have a medical release because of the diagnosis they were given downtown, and here's what we should be doing. We get into a fight.
It's not well set up. They should come back to us. They should not be allowed to go on pension yet. We give the diagnosis. We treat them as best we can and then we set up their care downtown and VAC takes over. That's another point where we have problems with reservists.
The other thing with reservists is it's not clear, to me anyway—
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And the quality of care given to these areas is even more important to look after and to supervise, as Marc-André was saying.
It's very difficult to treat PTSD patients. It's sometimes easier for a family physician to say if they want sick leave, here it is, take that pill, and for psychologists to say they feel sorry you. That's not how we are supposed to deal with that.
So we have created a bunch of people who think they are worthless, not able to work any more. They just want to say they have not been treated well, etc. This is not the way it's supposed to be. People can get better and can be active again in society. It's an issue. We need to look at how care is given everywhere and we need to be able to supervise that as much as we can, with people like Pascale Brillon and Stéphane Guay.
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Your information was a lot more encouraging regarding the deployment of soldiers and exactly the kind of training that you give them to be more resilient, as you had mentioned.
You had alluded to this, but I just want to be specific: Is there research going on right now on two things, the first one being to broaden the predictors? Most of the predictors are extraneous, they're external—right?—substance abuse, whether the person was abused earlier in life, that kind of thing. You only mentioned one, a rigid personality as far what's happening existentially in their mind. Is there research going on right now to broaden the base of predictors so that psychiatrists and psychologists can maybe train those social workers in order to dig deeper to determine whether someone is going to react? That's really the nature of it. It's a reaction to the trauma that is non-resilient and becomes, of course, a behavioural problem or a psychological problem. Are you aware of more research going on?
As to the second one, has there been some research to date about sensitizing, or whatever terminology you want to use, but exposing the soldier to the stress that they're going to experience, in order to give them the capability of being more resilient when that comes? I know they do training, war games so to speak, but that's with their own personnel. That's not, as one witnesses said before, seeing a young boy who is nine years old strapped with munitions and actually killing people. That's something that is absolutely obscene in our culture.
So I'll leave those two with you.
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In Valcartier there is a research centre next to us. They have a cyber room. Again, that's another initiative we have. We attended a cyber therapy meeting and the American army was there to train people. You go into a cyber chamber and you're 3D—on the ceiling and the floor. And you are in the theatre. This is where we would like to connect with the research centre, and we have started to do so. But again, it is on our own free time, which we don't have.
One of our psychologists is trying to see if we could do a training program that could help with people's resiliency, by maybe seeing dead people and reacting— We would also like to use the same centre to screen people before they go. If they don't react well to the cyber room, they are probably not fit to go.
There are avenues in which we could go, but right now we do not have enough people to do all that. We wish we could. There is research being done, but not on our part for now.
I think we are going to cooperate with that research centre for that cyber room. Research will come out of that.
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As public service employees, we have access to employee assistance programs which enable us to consult health professionals. With such a heavy mandate, we need teamwork in the real sense of the word. We have significant interdisciplinarity in our work. For instance, if a patient's case is particularly difficult, we can discuss it with our colleague, who is in the next office, and who is a psychiatrist and is also seeing the same patient, or we can raise the matter with the social worker who knows the family, etc. Resources in the civilian sector do not have this capacity.
The psychologist in private practice sits in his office, isolated, and also sees many other patients. He may telephone his colleagues, but we know that the physical distance creates a barrier, so that he may not dare to place the call. As a team, we have the advantage of having regular meetings where we can share our ideas about difficult cases and we also give ourselves the right to “vent”, as we say in our jargon. We have the freedom of saying that we find this hard and we may say things that we obviously would not say in front of the patient. The meetings also serve as a safety valve, which is very, very important.
With the increase in the workload, we now have the problem of no longer being able to talk to each other. At Valcartier, for instance, generally speaking anywhere from 25 to 35%, if not more, of the staff are unable to attend our meetings because they are busy training soldiers who are leaving on mission or conducting pre-deployment or post-deployment interviews. This is creating a situation where we are no longer able to catch our breath, and unfortunately, our work is now somewhat similar to that done in the civilian sector.
This situation must not occur. We must ensure that we have a working environment where we can say that people are dedicated to the clinic but that they have time to meet and that this time is sacred. We are not, however, able to do this because we are too busy.
Contrary to the situation in a hospital or in the civilian sector, as health professionals it is part of our job to meet with the soldiers and to prepare them for their mission. Prevention is very important. Part or our job is to meet with them before they leave on a mission and to talk to their spouses to make sure that everything is in order. Part of our job is also to meet with them when they get back. Right now, 2,400 soldiers are getting ready to leave, which is a great many people. If we are to do 75-minute pre-deployment interviews for 2,000 individuals, and on top of that deal with people who are undergoing therapy, it is going to get very difficult to juggle everything and we run the risk of burning out.
This has been very interesting today. I have never had witnesses sit in here who I haven't found interesting, but this has been very educational as well.
These are just my thoughts. Sometimes self-examination, as well, helps you realize that you have stress or that you have a problem you need help with. I'm wondering whether that's encouraged. That would be a question I'd like to ask.
This is just a comment, and it may sound silly, but when the microwave goes off at home, it makes me anxious. I couldn't understand why until I did a little self-examination one time. If you're a member of Parliament, your life is ruled by bells. They ring, and the quicker they ring, the less time you have to get there. It causes some anxiety. You don't want to be late for this, that, or the other thing. One day when this microwave went off, my husband asked me why it bothered me so much, because it's such a minor thing. And I finally realized that this was exactly what it was; it's because of the bells that happen here. You know, it's that old Pavlov's dog-training kind of thing.
There have to be a number of instances with military personnel when something that is just a normal, everyday occurrence that happens all the time triggers some sort of reaction in the individual. I would be interested in hearing what the major or Mr. Dufour—
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The Resiliency Training Program that I talked about earlier also includes a peer support component. Even if military personnel are not fully aware of what they are experiencing, we try to train people within the units, ideally people of the same rank, to alert one another. We call this the buddy system. In other words, people are assigned to pay attention to another person, his or her buddy, in order to be able to tell that person when something is not right, when the person is not behaving normally, and ask whether the person is aware.
At Valcartier, we also have suicide prevention committees and committees on violence in which military personnel in the units can participate. These act a bit like eyes and ears for us on the ground, if you like. They can recognize when someone is not doing well. We even make sure that the therapists' photos are posted somewhere. That way, military personnel can identify, for example, the addictions counsellor.
During the post-deployment interview, when military personnel return to Canada, they fill out a self-evaluation questionnaire that describes various symptoms. They have to indicate for example, if they react strongly to a given situation and if their reaction corresponds to one or another of the reactions described. So this is done when they return and it is important because they do not always have the time to stop and be aware of what they are experiencing. Our presentations focus on this to some extent. The military personnel recognize themselves. Mr. Castro's Battlemind, which I mentioned earlier, is an example. I have clients who have seen that presentation and really identify with this because, for example, they see a military member speaking to his son the way he would speak to a subordinate. He uses a harsh, directive tone which would be totally appropriate in an operational theatre, but when he is talking to his five-year-old son who wants to play with him, he needs to change his tone. He needs to adapt. These are scenes from people's lives, so it is easier for members to recognize themselves in these situations. It promotes self-examination and encourages people to ask for help, obviously, because the health services are being promoted at the same time. We need to be able to fulfil our mandate.
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I think that if we look not in that book but the other book, of Pascale Brillon, she's reported a few studies. You could have percentages, but it varies in studies. After being exposed to a trauma, there is about a 15% chance of developing post-traumatic stress disorder, whether you're in the military or not. I think, if I remember correctly, she points out a few traits, so there must be something out there, but I'm not sure.
The StatsCanada study has not looked into that, but they took a very good sample, which is 5,000 people, but of the 5,000 people, how many were from the navy, the air force, and the army? This is another thing that I would just point out. If the 5,000 are from the army, maybe the numbers would be different now.
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I am going to be accused of speaking too much and too quickly.
Chantal, I really appreciated your great presentation. You complained, no doubt rightly, that funding was inadequate. I would not say that I am uncomfortable, but I wonder how it is that National Defence, which is prepared to invest billions of dollars for planes, tanks, shoes, boots and uniforms, cannot set aside 0.5% or 1% of its budget for mental health.
I would like you to look into that and send me a letter or a report indicating how many thousands, tens of thousands or millions of dollars should ideally be spent for mental health. I would like to have the numbers. I know it is not easy.
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Do I wish to speak to it? Well, yes.
It's pretty straightforward. I think it's important for us as a committee, since it was referred to us as a committee, to discuss Mr. St. Denis' private member's bill. Because of our agenda we haven't gotten to it yet. In order to get to it, we require a 30-day extension.
I think any member who puts forward a private member's bill has the right to have that bill discussed in committee when it's sent to committee, and we've done a disservice to Mr. St. Denis if we don't do that, so I'm asking for a 30-day extension so that we can have it on the agenda and discuss it.