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Aviva Rubin

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Real Soldiers Don't Get PTSD

Posted: 05/07/2012 10:32 am

I was momentarily heartened on Friday when I heard that amidst the federal government's deep cuts was some trimming of the defense budget. A little balance, I thought. So far, the slashing of the civil service has fallen heavily on policy makers, statisticians and folks that run emergency oil spill offices.

My sense of relief lasted until the headline was over.

Turns out the Department of National Defence (DND) is eliminating the jobs of medical professionals involved in suicide prevention and monitoring post-traumatic stress disorders (PTSD). They are closing an Ottawa clinic serving these clients, and shutting DND's Deployment Mental Health Research Section, cutting specialists and epidemiologists who research and monitor PTSD rates, trauma and depression. What did I expect?

These cuts come shortly after the release of a department report on the increase of suicides in the Canadian Military, and in the midst of a military complaints hearing examining how the Forces dealt with the suicide of Afghanistan veteran Cpl. Stuart Langridge. In the U.S. since 2009 the suicide rate of veterans and soldiers exceeds the number that have died in active duty.

A press conference was thrown together and Canada's Chief of Defence Staff, General Walter Natynczyk, responded to public criticism of the cuts with praise for Minister Peter MacKay, saying the government welcomes media scrutiny of the forces' treatment of mentally damaged warriors.

According to Senator Romeo Dallaire, who is moderately critical of the cuts, Canada has one of the best records in NATO for its treatment of soldiers with PTSD. Still, he argues that it's not good enough.

Smells a bit like the arguments hurled at striking students in Quebec to stop whining because they already have the cheapest education in North America. Perhaps the government figures there's wiggle room for cuts before we look as bad as our fellow NATO members.

Natyncyzk, using a blame-the-victim argument, told a Senate committee that despite the gold standard of recruitment and all of the screening techniques available, it is impossible to identify every vulnerable soldier. This implies it's not the traumatic experiences of being in places like Afghanistan, but the weakness of the men and women themselves that is to blame.

He justifies his cuts to research staff by arguing, "Due to financial restraints, we are looking for ways and means to make our non-clinical support, our non-front line support, more efficient so we can focus our efforts where they need be -- the medical care of our military members and their families."

"Due to financial restraints." Like "due to bad weather," it implies our fiscal situation is an act of God that befell the government, not due to a set of choices they made. Interesting also that the argument is made in tandem with significant cuts to precisely the health services they claim they are trying to protect. Or maybe, even more troubling, they don't consider PTSD and related mental health disorders to be medical at all.

The military is closing an Ottawa clinic for PTSD cases with no clear plan for patients being transferred to the 6,000 member base in Petawawa which has no psychologists and just one working psychiatrist. And she devotes only a quarter of her time to treating patients.

I don't get it. Aren't these cuts a little short-sighted? Clearly the Harper government plans to stay in the business of sending Canadian soldiers into dangerous situations to defend and build democracy. Wouldn't it serve us well to be prepared not only to deal with the psychological trauma that results, but to undertake scientific and social research to identify and reduce risk factors contributing to PTSD and other mental illnesses?

It's hard to not read the situation as federal government indifference toward traumatized soldiers who are no longer active contributors, but a burden to the military. Usually celebrated by Conservatives, our soldiers are of value only while in the field. Once damaged and home they are whiners -- much easier to ignore. If provincial health budgets, or no one at all, can be left to pick up the slack, why not save the money?

At the press conference Natynczyk did toss out a bone of hope to address the problem. He appealed to Canadian psychiatrists and psychologists to come help out the military and volunteer to work at more remote bases such as Petawawa, Ont., and Gagetown, N.B. Now there's a thoughtful strategy our vets can count on.

 

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I was momentarily heartened on Friday when I heard that amidst the federal government's deep cuts was some trimming of the defense budget. A little balance, I thought. So far, the slashing of the civi...
I was momentarily heartened on Friday when I heard that amidst the federal government's deep cuts was some trimming of the defense budget. A little balance, I thought. So far, the slashing of the civi...
 
 
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11:55 AM on 05/12/2012
Ms Rubin,

Your statement, "Natyncyzk, using a blame-the-victim argument, told a Senate committee that despite the gold standard of recruitment and all of the screening techniques available, it is impossible to identify every vulnerable soldier. This implies it's not the traumatic experiences of being in places like Afghanistan, but the weakness of the men and women themselves that is to blame." has proved rather problematic to the online veterans' community - https://www.facebook.com/groups/CdnVetsAdvocacy/.

Would it be possible for you to clarify this section of your article? We are looking for the actual quotation of what was said by the CDS, and the context in which it was said. If full disclosure is provided by you in your article this should clear up assertion that he used a “blame-the-victim” argument and your assertion about “the weakness of the men and women themselves that is to blame.”

Thank you in advance.
09:42 PM on 05/09/2012
The Cons follow the Bush policies: demagogically praise the military, but dont give a hoot about the wounded or the victims of post battle stress.

What is infinitely disturbing is the total, blind algignment of the Harper government on the failed and decried policies of the Bush-Cheney administration.
07:46 PM on 05/08/2012
This is absurd! As a spouse of a serving military member who has 3 tours in Afghanistan as an infanteer on the front lines and suffers from PTSD, I find this appalling. My husband took the initiative and responsibility to seek help, however it was not until I persued help on his behalf, when I could no longer manage living the nightmare, that his needs were taken seriously - in my opinion. Treatment became regular and more aggressive. Clearly the people making these cut-back decisions do not understand PTSD, how it affects soldiers or how it affects their families. And he IS a REAL solider! How about they(those making these decisons) live with a severely depressed, anxiety ridden, short tempered, night terror suffering solider or better yet themselves experiece it and see how well they manage without care! If they want to send our men and women into Combat Missions they must be willing to support the consequences too.
05:35 PM on 05/08/2012
make the cuts, save some money, fund the ministry of truth and put some positive spin on this
01:55 PM on 05/08/2012
I am ashamed to death of our government, shamed and angered. I have shared this article with OccupyMARINES. This regime that calls itself a government MUST GO NOW, they have in one long awful year shamed us in the eyes of the world.
12:34 PM on 05/08/2012
It is unacceptable to have this very real psychological trauma acknowledged and addressed. I have been addressing soul pain following trauma since 1999. These people need to know that there is help out there that can make a difference. I developed training programs on how to heal the soul pain of trauma which I deliver to professionals nationally and internationally. I have two books on this topic Journey to the Sacred: Mending a Fractured Soul and Setting the Captive Free, two award wining videos Listening to Soul Pain and Healing Soul Pain that have been used by many professionals and lay people alike to find language for what they may be experiencing. I encourage you to learn more at www.takingflightinternational.com
Dr. Jane Simington PhD.
09:47 AM on 05/08/2012
Real soldiers don't get PTSD? Our son has received the Medal of Military Valour from Governor General Michaelle Jean for actions in Kandahar. He also suffers from PTSD. You would not want to stand face to face with him and tell him he isn't a real soldier. Most soldiers who have been in Afghanistan are suffering from PTSD. This isn't like the old tours to Cyprus, Germany or the Caribbean. They were not much more than a holiday away from home. Afghanistan is for real war. Everyone should be letting their MPs know how they feel......if they actually care enough.
01:00 AM on 05/08/2012
As a Afghanistan vet i can tell you that we are treated like shit, not only by the government but also most other people in this country.
10:35 PM on 05/08/2012
1st. Thank you for your service. You did some dirty work, so that 'we' don't have to.

2nd. I find it unbelievable that we send our troops in arms way. That we ask them to do violence on our behalf... yet, we are not doing all we can to help them when they come back.
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Jack Hope
Occasionally quoted by Mainstream Media
07:42 PM on 05/07/2012
Remind me again, Conservatives, about how you support the troops. It's on bumper stickers all over the place.

I guess that support doesn't extend to helping them recover from the wars we ask them to fight.

Disgraceful.
04:11 PM on 05/07/2012
The good General is simply referring to a form of malingering. Sadly, most Canadians also take a sceptical view of any form of mental infirmity. The military said exactly the same thing regarding how Russell Williams slipped through their screening process.

Someone gonna try to tell me that National Defence recruiters don't have quotas, officially or implicit? Has there ever been any bullying or hazing that's gone on in the Canadian Forces? Any reason for a soldier to hide a weakness from his so-called brothers and sisters?

There's No Life Like It!

General, your outfit's got more than a P.R. problem.
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albertarick
These are questions for wise men with skinny arms
02:56 PM on 05/07/2012
Cutting funds for the research and monitoring of PTSD rates, defunding statisticians and those that run emergency oil spill offices, examples of the Harper governments dogmatic elimination of factual information that may interfere with their ideological wishes. The tough on crime, big on the military, fiscally conservative (kidding), Conservatives don't want to have to deal with the complexities of real life. Better to just eliminate the collection of information, so questions cannot be answered.
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Graham Gemmell
Student, teacher, writer, reader, critical thinker
12:47 PM on 05/07/2012
I'm surprised to see Dallaire not come out more strongly on this, seeing as how he's a PTSD survivor.
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SeeTheFnords
Look out - there's one behind you!
04:59 PM on 05/07/2012
Same here - he's usually far more outspoken on things like this that adversely affect Canadian military personnel.
06:02 PM on 05/07/2012
We know what General Dallaire has already said. Lets allow him to take a breather and say it for him and our fellow compatriots who can't speak right now.
12:31 PM on 05/07/2012
Please, please explain to me how going into a place like Afghanistan is going to 'defend and build democracy'. Was the reason for going in there the same as GW Bush - that there were WMD's, where there wasn't? When has war ever favoured anyone but the dead who are blissfully well out of it. When will the killing stop? Only when politicians send their own sons and daughters to be fodder for the cannons. And even then...who knows?