Ottawa Citizen

Study paints refined picture of military suicides

Brief analysis sees PTSD in three of 10 cases

- MURRAY BREWSTER

Post-traumatic stress is thought to have played a role in only three of ten suicides in the Canadian military last winter, and the majority of soldiers who took lives were not in danger of being kicked out.

The informatio­n is contained in a brief statistica­l summary obtained by The Canadian Press under access-to-informatio­n legislatio­n.

Senior brass cobbled it together as they tried to wrap their heads around what was causing a spate of deaths between November, 2013, and February, 2014, and the data paint a counter-intuitive portrait of the crisis.

Public perception has been that the suicides were a direct result of the Afghan war, when in fact only five of the 10 had served in the wartorn country — and the majority of those for one tour.

Military medical officials cautioned reading too much into the summary, saying little can be “concluded about suicide trends,” but the informatio­n is consistent with what investigat­ors and health officials have uncovered.

Maj. Nicole Meszaros said it’s “incredibly difficult to predict who will take their lives.”

The figures show the bulk of the soldiers, although being under care for various conditions, were being retained in the military “without restrictio­n” and no significan­t career changes were on the horizon.

Seventy per cent of them did not have a known history of suicide attempts.

In terms of a social profile, seven of the 10 were divorced or separated. Most came from the army and only a handful had any legal or disciplina­ry issues within the past two years.

“It is not unique to the (Canadian Armed Forces) or uncommon in Canadian society to have somebody externally appear and report to be doing well and responding well to treatment, tragically suddenly take their life,” Meszaros said in an email.

The military’s deputy surgeongen­eral, Col. Colin MacKay, in a Feb. 21, 2014, email obtained under access to informatio­n, told the chief of military personnel, Maj.Gen. David Millar, that the analysis represents a “shallow dive” into the issue and more study would be needed.

The suicide crisis last winter gripped the attention of the nation and prompted National Defence to begin filling long-vacant positions within the mental health branch, as well as to make several public appeals for troops suffering with mental illness to come forward.

The suicide analysis, along with figures released last week by Statistics Canada and comments last spring by the military’s top doctor, suggest the root causes of the tragedies may run deeper.

The 2013 Health and Well-Being of Canadian Armed Forces Veterans found regular force veterans upon leaving the military rated their health more poorly than the general population.

It found their sense of community belonging was lower and they were “less often satisfied with life than most Canadians.”

The study said almost a quarter of those leaving the military reported both physical and mental disorders.

Testifying before the all-party House of Commons defence committee last spring, the military’s surgeon-general, Brig.- Gen. Jean-Robert Bernier, said that depression, especially among male Forces members, is double that of the civilian population.

It represents a “major concern,” he said.

Roughly 7.8 per cent of the military reported episodes of depression.

But that snapshot was taken prior to the Afghan war and Meszaros said Friday those numbers are being updated.

Medical profession­als draw a direct link between instances of depression and suicide.

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