:
I call the meeting to order.
Thank you very much for coming to the defence committee today.
I would like to introduce Brigadier-General Hugh MacKay and Colonel Andrew Downes. Thank you very much.
Before we start with your opening comments on the “2016 Report on Suicide Mortality in the Canadian Armed Forces” and the ensuing conversation, I want to let the committee know our agenda.
We'll go for about one hour and 45 minutes, and then we'll suspend and go in camera for 15 minutes for committee business.
This has been working for me, so if you ever see this piece of paper come up, you don't have to stop immediately, but you have about 30 seconds to wind down on your thought because then I'm going to have to give the floor to somebody else, and it just makes it a more smooth transition. This paper is the 30-second warning.
Gentlemen, thank you very much for appearing today.
General, you have the floor.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
Mr. Chairman and members of the Standing Committee on National Defence, thank you for the opportunity to present the results of the “2016 Report on Suicide and Mortality in the Canadian Armed Forces”.
[Translation]
Every suicide is a tragic premature loss of life which we all mourn; it has far-reaching negative repercussions on the lives of family, friends, the military community, and health care providers. This is an issue that is of great concern to the military leadership, and has been a particular focus of attention within the health services group for many years.
[English]
The Canadian Armed Forces has a strong and comprehensive suicide prevention program, as noted by the 2009 Canadian Forces expert panel on suicide prevention, and the implementation of recommendations from that panel have enhanced it even further.
We have a nationally and internationally recognized resiliency training program called “the road to mental readiness” and a suite of health promotion programs that include such topics as stress management, addictions awareness, mental fitness, and suicide awareness. Those who are suffering with mental illness are at risk of suicidality, so it is critical that we get them the support they need and get them into care.
We have accessible primary care clinics on bases across the country and several overseas, most of which have a multidisciplinary team of mental health clinicians. We also have our seven specialized operational trauma stress support centres distributed across the country at our larger centres. We have implemented telemental health within the system to improve access to care from more remote locations, to provide care in the language of choice, and to help improve access to care. We have also installed virtual reality systems in our larger clinics to help better treat people with operational stress injuries, and we have implemented a project to include direct entry mental health notes into our electronic medical records.
Military personnel have access to support from the Canadian Forces members assistance program 24-7, or they can access emergency medical care at civilian medical facilities after clinic hours.
[Translation]
Mental illness and suicide are complex problems and, unfortunately, there is still much that we have to learn. So we conduct research to better understand the health issues within our Canadian Armed Forces population, like the 2013 mental health survey that was conducted on our behalf by Statistics Canada. We are also exploring new ways to improve the quality of care available in our clinics.
[English]
The Canadian Forces health services group tracks all suspected suicides and sends out a clinician team to gather information related to each case in order to better understand the circumstances surrounding the event and to learn lessons that may prevent future suicides.
Information gathered from this process and other sources is collated and analyzed annually, and a report is produced. The report we are discussing today is one of these, and it includes data from 1995 to 2015.
It's important to know that the analysis is done on data from regular force male suicides, as the number of regular force female and reserve suicides is too low for proper statistical analysis, and reporting on them could actually breach privacy rules.
[Translation]
We know that suicide is a multidimensional event in which many factors contribute. These include biological, psychological, interpersonal, and social-cultural aspects, and this complexity can make it difficult to predict who is ultimately going to die by suicide. Most people who die by suicide have symptoms of mental illness, and typically experience one or more acute stressors such as marital breakdown, or legal or financial problems. People in crisis feel overwhelmed and hopeless, and have trouble seeing a better way out of their situation.
However, there are some who show no signs of distress even to their closest friends. Thinking about suicide is not uncommon in people with mental illness, but most people do not act on these thoughts and reach out for help. I am saddened every time I hear of another suicide death, knowing that help was just a call away and knowing that we have the resources that could have saved their life.
[English]
The overall suicide rate in the Canadian Armed Forces is largely unchanged over the past 20 years. However, over the past five years we have seen a significant increase in the suicide rate specifically among those serving in the army command as compared to other commands, such as the air force or navy. The reasons are not fully understood, especially given that all elements of the Canadian Armed Forces share the same recruiting, administrative, and disciplinary processes and have the same health care system.
At the same time, though, we have noted a small increased risk of suicide in people who have a history of deployment and also in combat arms occupations. It is reasonable to hypothesize that these groups are at higher risk for psychological trauma during operations, which would increase the risk of developing mental illness. However, there may be other explanations that we have not been able to accurately measure, such as adverse childhood experiences, which we know to be higher in military members than in the general Canadian population. It is known to be a risk factor for both mental illness and suicide.
In looking at specific, diagnosed mental health conditions in those who complete suicide, depression and substance use disorder are seen most frequently, followed by anxiety disorders, with post-traumatic stress disorder being the fourth most common. This is important because it highlights the need for a broadly focused mental health program.
Within the Canadian Forces population, the most common life stressor that likely triggered the suicide was a failed intimate partner relationship. Other stressors associated with the suicides were work-related, debt, and legal problems. These suggest that the opportunities for early suicide prevention go far beyond health care. The Canadian Armed Forces does have many programs and services to help address these types of stressors. As is the case in the civilian community, about half of those who complete suicide are in care, but the other half are not. While the care available within our health services is central, there are also suicide prevention opportunities for leaders and peers to assist members in distress and to encourage them to seek care. The Canadian Army's sentinels program is one such example.
In summary, through ongoing suicide surveillance as well as through rigorous reviews of suicides, the Canadian Forces continues to evaluate and improve policies and procedures to refine its suicide prevention activities.
I would also like to add that we recently convened a second expert panel on suicide prevention. We are still awaiting the report, however, following that review of our suicide prevention activities. We also have work under way now to develop a Canadian Forces-wide suicide prevention strategy.
Thank you for your attention, and we are happy to take any questions you may have.
One of the recommendations the military ombudsman made was that:
...the Canadian Armed Forces retain medically releasing members until such time as all benefits and services from the Canadian Armed Forces, Veterans Affairs Canada, and Service Income Security Insurance Plan have been confirmed and are put in place.
Part of that would be to allow the findings of the clinicians. When they determine that somebody has to medically release and that the injury was as a consequence of service duty, he's recommending that this adjudication apply for their back pensions, their medical pensions. Right now, upon release, they have to apply to Veterans Affairs for the different benefits, so there's a gap.
In essence, they've been evaluated by a military doctor, but then upon their release or upon their trying to apply for veterans benefits, they have to go through another system and prove to a Veterans Affairs doctor that this injury was indeed as a consequence of service.
Do you see any reason that we couldn't use the evaluations of the military clinicians for the purposes of the pension adjudication?
:
Thanks very much, Mr. Chair.
Thanks to our witnesses for being here today.
I'm going to start by saying something I know I've said before. I think the Canadian military is ahead of a lot of other sectors in our society in tackling some of the difficult questions, whether it's sexual misconduct or suicide, so I want to give credit to the Canadian Forces for doing that.
That said, then you get held to a higher standard. When others don't address these problems, they can throw up their hands and say they don't really know the nature of the problems. Now I'm about to hold you to the higher standard you established for yourself.
I want to go back to the question of health professionals. It seems, over the last couple of years, that the record on filling the vacancies has improved. If so, if that's true, can you tell me why that's so?
Welcome, Mr. MacKay, and thank you for your testimony.
I will ask my questions in French.
In recent months and years, a most pressing question has been about the difficulty that former members of the Canadian Armed Forces experience in making a smooth and effective transition from military life to civilian life. But it now also seems, in the light of the recent cases of suicide among new members of the armed forces, that the transition from civilian life to military life also presents our young recruits with significant challenges.
Can you tell me if any thought has been given to people making the transition from civilian life to military life? If so, can you tell me the precise aspects that you are currently exploring? In your view, what possible solutions could we look at to better prevent cases of suicide among our recruits?
Thank you very much, General MacKay and Colonel Downes. Thank you for your service. Thank you for being here and for your important work.
I want to touch upon an issue that you addressed briefly in the written submissions, and that's our reserves.
This committee has received evidence from other witnesses on the state of our reserves. Mr. Robillard just made a comment in terms of the difficulties for people transitioning from civilian to military life. For reservists it can be even more challenging to do this repeatedly, especially for reservists who are employed in overseas combat operations. A significant percentage of folks who fought in Afghanistan were, I'm told, reservists.
Are there special considerations, special factors, for reservists with respect to mental health? What is the suicide risk? Is the transition to civilian life on an ongoing basis, on a repeated basis, a positive factor, or does it represent an additional challenge that has its own complexities?
My thanks to the brigadier general and the colonel for their remarks.
I would like to go back to the primary causes of suicide. In your presentation, you mentioned various causes. You said that the main cause is a breakup with an intimate partner.
Having served during two operational deployments, I know that we sometimes wondered who would be the first to be left by their spouse. Between 50% and 60% of the members of the battalion went through breakups during the mission. During missions, the pressure is enormous because of those domestic partnership issues.
It is easy to think that the deployment produces combat-related post-traumatic stress, but can the pressure that comes from one's personal life also have a devastating effect on forces during deployment?
Can the family centres on military bases really provide effective assistance in preventing suicides with support to spouses, so as to prevent, or help to prevent, breakup situations?
In listening to the discussion, I understand that debt is one of the issues that causes suicide or can be a contributing factor. I see some people here from the veterans affairs committee. You had a Dr. Donald Passey, a psychiatrist, testify. He'd be the one who wrote a letter to the Somalia inquiry asking to testify, to inform the inquiry as well as members of the government and the Canadian Forces medical systems about the effects of mefloquine and his thoughts that it was affecting the Canadian Airborne Regiment members and their behaviour in Somalia up to and including the death of Shidane Arone. About a week later, the Somalia inquiry ended abruptly. An election was called. The Airborne Regiment was disbanded.
In any case, that's the background with Dr. Donald Passey, and he testified in committee that in addition to debt, the denial of claims has a huge impact and increases suicidal risk in veterans.
Earlier, Mr. Chairman, in answering my question about whether or not there would be anything preventing the clinicians from using the clinicians' reports to adjudicate a pension, the surgeon general said that clinicians do not attribute causal relationships to service. The military ombudsman also identified this, and he made a recommendation stating that he should be determining service attribution for medically releasing members. He recommended that the Canadian Armed Forces determine whether an illness or injury is caused or aggravated by that member's military service and that the Canadian Armed Forces determination be presumed by VAC to be sufficient evidence to support an application for benefits so that they don't have to go through everything in duplication and all the hardships that entails.
That being the case, on November 15 I tabled the motion that the Government of Canada immediately begin to take the measures necessary for the full implementation of all recommendations in the two reports of the National Defence and Canadian Forces Ombudsman that were tabled in 2016 and “that the Government implement all of [those] recommendations as the best way forward to support Canadian Armed Forces members and veterans, particularly those in transition” and that the office of the ombudsman provide a progress report to the committee on a monthly basis.
It would seem that everybody wants to do the right thing by our soldiers and veterans, so since we are on the topic, I would like to get the chair to call a vote to agree to that motion and push it forward so we can go forward. We learn in the news, sometimes on a weekly basis, of different suicides and suicide attempts. To stem these tragedies from happening, let's get on with this now so that the government can do its work and the surgeon general and his clinicians...and adjudications can be used to help them along their way in financial instances, so we'll resume debate of the motion.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair. General and Colonel, it's nice to see you again.
I want to go back to your chart, in which you talk about suicides increasing and mefloquine dropping. That's a beautiful pictorial, but the reality is that you're making the assumption that if you take mefloquine, you're going to have suicide. That's a one on one.
When we're talking about mental illness and the potential of mefloquine being possibly toxic, the potential for long-term.... We actually see the increase, the spike of suicide later, and it might be a cause as we factor in all the other aspects, such as debt, family relationships, etc.
I don't see that same analogy that you might, where one going down and one going up is a reason to say it's not an issue. From a statistical point of view or a research point of view, you're sitting there saying that.... Is there not a potential that we should be looking at this and asking if there is a potential for that to happen, and can we rule it out?