National Post (National Edition)

Demand outstrips resources at veterans’ mental-health clinics

- Lee Berthiaume

OTTAWA • Demand for service has been outstrippi­ng the resources available to a network of mental-health clinics set up across the country to help veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder and other psychologi­cal trauma, an internal government report suggests.

As a result, the report warns, many veterans in places like Quebec City, Vancouver and Edmonton have been forced to wait longer before seeing a mentalheal­th specialist or psychiatri­st, despite the importance of timely interventi­on.

The wait-time challenge is separate from the backlog of 29,000 requests for disability benefits at Veterans Affairs Canada, and follows a previous warning from the federal auditor-general about former soldiers facing long waits for badly needed mental-health services.

Veterans Affairs acknowledg­ed Monday the challenges posed by mental-health services, which it hopes to address by hiring more staff, expanding Operationa­l Stress Injury (OSI) existing clinics and opening new satellite offices.

“In cases where clients require urgent psychiatri­c expertise,” added department spokesman Marc Lescoutre, “they are prioritize­d to ensure timely access to treatment.”

But the report also says Veterans Affairs is reviewing its own standards and could accept longer wait times as the norm, even though “shorter delays minimize client distress and are critical to optimizing positive mental health outcomes.”

That has raised alarm bells for at least one veterans’ advocate, who says the answer isn’t making veterans wait longer to access mental-health services.

“There is a need that exists across the country for OSI support, and we feel it too,” said Scott Maxwell of Wounded Warriors Canada, which offers various mentalheal­th programs such as service dogs to veterans.

“But at the end of the day, everybody wants to see veterans have access to the OSI support they deserve and need. That’s got to be the goal.”

The internal report, obtained through the Access to Informatio­n Act, was produced in January and examined performanc­e at 10 of the department’s OSI clinics during 2016-17, the most recent year for which data was available.

First establishe­d in 2002, the clinics are now located in most major cities across Canada and include a team of psychiatri­sts, psychologi­sts, social workers and other specialize­d mentalheal­th profession­als.

Each clinic is designed to assess and treat the mentalheal­th needs of veterans as well as serving other military personnel and RCMP mem- bers through one-on-one therapy and group sessions.

Getting through the door didn’t appear to be much of a problem, the report suggests: the majority of veterans received their first clinical visit within 15 days of a referral, at which time they were assessed for risk and any specialize­d treatment.

Accessing specialize­d and psychiatri­c treatment, however, was a more drawn-out affair for many veterans.

Only 27 per cent who needed specialize­d treatment without a psychiatri­st were seen within 30 days of a referral, the report said — well below the department’s target of 80 per cent.

While the results were better for psychiatri­c treatment — 56 per cent of veterans were seen within 60 days — it also fell short of the 80-per-cent target. Actual wait times varied considerab­ly, depending where the clinic was located.

Veterans in Winnipeg and Ottawa, for example, could expect speedy access to a psychiatri­st while those in Edmonton, Montreal and Vancouver, in particular, could expect to wait much longer.

The report specifical­ly blamed an “unpreceden­ted growth in new referrals” for the difficulti­es, which it pegged at 42 per cent over the previous year, saying the influx “is impacting the network’s ability to meet service standards.”

More than once, the report indicates that Veterans Affairs is reviewing its service standards “to determine if they are appropriat­e.”

 ?? COLIN PERKEL / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Canadian soldiers on patrol in Afghanista­n in 2009. Programs to help veterans with PTSD are under strain.
COLIN PERKEL / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Canadian soldiers on patrol in Afghanista­n in 2009. Programs to help veterans with PTSD are under strain.

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