Times Colonist

Women a growing group of Canadian military veterans, but services lagging

Support systems needed for female, gender diverse and LGBT vets, N.S. legislatur­e committee told

- DANIELLE EDWARDS

Halifax artist Jessica Wiebe served eight years in the Canadian Armed Forces as an artillery gunner, often the lone woman in a male-dominated environmen­t. Now she draws on that experience, and her mental and physical struggles after leaving the military, to create her art.

“I really want to bring awareness to the fact that female narratives of war have been largely omitted from dominant discourse historical­ly,” Wiebe said in a recent interview.

“Bringing female narratives to the forefront is really important to understand the needs of female vets as they transition out of the military.”

Maya Eichler, a professor at Mount St. Vincent University in Halifax and Canada Research Chair in social innovation and community engagement, echoed that sentiment in testimony this week before a Nova Scotia legislatur­e committee.

She said women are the fastest-growing segment of veterans in Canada, but support systems have historical­ly been designed around men.

Eichler told the standing committee on veterans affairs there’s a lack of support and services for women veterans and others, including gender diverse and LGBTQ veterans, as well as veterans who suffered sexual trauma while serving in the military.

While informatio­n about under-represente­d groups in the military and veteran community is scarce, she said the data available show women are more likely to leave the military with medical releases, and they experience steeper declines in income.

“We face gaps in knowledge about women veterans. We face gaps in services specifical­ly tailored for women veterans. All of this can lead to increased rates of injury and illness and decrease the well-being of women veterans,” Eichler said Tuesday.

Women veterans are also more likely to have complex trauma histories that health providers struggle to understand, Eichler told the committee. She added that there is potential for unintended “discrimina­tory and inequitabl­e outcomes” for women, gender diverse and LBGTQ vets.

“‘A veteran is a veteran is a veteran’ is kind of the old way of how we’ve thought about veteran issues,” Eichler said in an interview after her testimony. “And we’re now beginning to recognize that there are distinct and unique veteran experience­s and needs based on things like gender or sexual orientatio­n or race, Indigeneit­y and so on.”

Wiebe said she struggled to get a diagnosis for PTSD when she developed an eating disorder after she was medically released from service in 2014.

“It was very hard to get any diagnosis that was connected to my military experience,” she said, adding that her symptoms didn’t line up with what doctors knew about the mental health disorder, which was based on the experience of male veterans.

“As a female in the combat arms, there’s not as many of us, and often we’re the only woman with a larger group of men,” Wiebe said.

“I felt very alone in the things that I struggled with when I was medically released from the military, and it wasn’t until I started going to group therapy with other female veterans with very similar experience­s that I realized I was definitely far from alone.”

The federal government is taking steps to address the needs of women veterans. In 2019, Veterans Affairs Canada opened the Office of Women and LGBTQ2 Veterans with a mandate of addressing issues specific to sex, gender identity and expression and sexual orientatio­n.

The office’s senior director, Christina Hutchins, said in an interview that there are some key difference­s between the needs of women, LGBTQ veterans and their male counterpar­ts. Hutchins said these groups tend to leave the military with more mental health conditions and may face more difficulty in the transition to civilian life.

“They want to be recognized for their service equally to their male counterpar­ts and make sure that the services and programs that we offer are equitably accessible to meet their needs,” she said.

Rebuilding trust between Veterans Affairs Canada and these groups will involve becoming more alert to the trauma they have experience­d, Hutchins added.

In Nova Scotia, Eichler said the province’s standing committee can start by being mindful of the difference­s in veteran population­s and considerin­g them in future discussion­s.

“The committee can, moving forward, really pay more attention to issues such as sex, gender and sexual orientatio­n and diversity more generally,” she said.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Jessica Wiebe poses for a photo at Long Lake in Halifax last week. The former artillery gunner in the Canadian Armed Forces says she struggled to get a diagnosis for PTSD when she developed an eating disorder after she was medically released from service in 2014.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Jessica Wiebe poses for a photo at Long Lake in Halifax last week. The former artillery gunner in the Canadian Armed Forces says she struggled to get a diagnosis for PTSD when she developed an eating disorder after she was medically released from service in 2014.

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