National Post (National Edition)

Probe opens as two military recruits sent to hospital

Allegation­s of pushed too hard in basic training

- DAVID PUGLIESE

Two Canadian Forces recruits are in hospital amid allegation­s they were subjected to physical fitness training that went far beyond what is considered necessary.

Retired and serving military personnel told Postmedia News that the recruits were hospitaliz­ed during their first week of basic military training at Canadian Forces Base Gagetown, N.B. They allege the physical fitness training verged on sadistic.

The two are being treated for dehydratio­n and Rhabdomyol­ysis, according to military sources.

Rhabdomyol­ysis is considered a serious medical condition and is due to a direct or indirect muscle injury. One of the causes of Rhabdomyol­ysis is overexerti­on.

Canadian Army spokespers­on Maj. Sandra Lévesque confirmed that the two recruits are in hospital. Neither the names nor the medical condition of the soldiers is being released.

“The Infantry School has launched a unit-level investigat­ion,” Lévesque confirmed.

The investigat­ion will allow the army to better understand the events that led to the soldiers being hospitaliz­ed.

“At this point, we are limited into the level of informatio­n we can share due to the investigat­ion,” Lévesque added.

The U.S. military has raised concerns about Rhabdomyol­ysis. In 2021, the U.S. military had 513 cases of exertional Rhabdomyol­ysis. The highest numbers were among males, less than 20 years old.

In a 2010 study, the U.S. military noted Rhabdomyol­ysis is the breakdown of muscle cells that release proteins and electrolyt­es into the bloodstrea­m. If not treated, it can be fatal and result in kidney failure, heart attack or stroke, the study noted.

In 2018, another U.S. study noted that cases of exertional Rhabdomyol­ysis were on the rise among American military personnel and high school and college athletes. An individual's fitness level, a sudden increase in exercise intensity, or specific types of exercises can put a person at risk, added the study published in Military Medicine journal.

In 2000, Rhabdomyol­ysis and severe swelling of leg muscles ended the Canadian Forces career of a first-year Royal Military College cadet who was hospitaliz­ed with renal failure.

The cadet's family alleged that instructor­s at the Canadian Forces Leadership and Recruit School abused their authority and pushed the soldier and other recruits beyond their limits.

But a Canadian Forces board of inquiry blamed the soldier for his injuries, claiming he had pushed himself too much.

A later investigat­ion by the office of the Canadian Forces Ombudsman determined the board of inquiry did not obtain expert medical evidence, and it misunderst­ood the medical informatio­n it did receive.

The ombudsman's office also recommende­d the Canadian Forces develop a formal system to track and report on the evaluation­s of the training regimen that are being conducted.

The officer cadet was kicked out of the Canadian military as he had lifelong medical complicati­ons as a result of the incident.

The Canadian Forces is currently dealing with a recruiting crisis as fewer young Canadians are interested in joining the ranks. Military leaders have also acknowledg­ed the ongoing sexual misconduct crisis has hurt recruiting.

One recommenda­tion presented to the senior leadership is to move recruits through the system faster. The BMQ, or basic military training program, for future non-commission­ed members should be cut from 10 weeks to eight weeks, it has been recommende­d.

In addition, the Canadian military is facing its highest attrition rate in 15 years and will need more than a decade to get numbers of soldiers back up to needed levels, according to a briefing prepared for defence chief Gen. Wayne Eyre and other senior leaders.

The briefing was leaked to Postmedia News in October.

The lack of housing for military families and failure to increase cost of living benefits has also contribute­d to serving military personnel leaving the forces.

 ?? STEPHEN MACGILLIVR­AY / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Two recruits in their first week of basic military training at Canadian Forces Base Gagetown, N.B.'s infantry school
have been hospitaliz­ed.
STEPHEN MACGILLIVR­AY / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Two recruits in their first week of basic military training at Canadian Forces Base Gagetown, N.B.'s infantry school have been hospitaliz­ed.

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