Just on the first one, I have two things on the fact that we can't find professionals out there. An OSI clinic opened in Fredericton two weeks ago. Psychiatrists, psychologists times three, social workers times two--found, hired, and in that clinic. VAC found them. Why can't DND find them?
As for the training, there is next to no training psychologically for the soldiers on their pre-deployment training. It's focused on the mission. They don't sit down and say “Okay guys, if we have an IED and one of us is turned into a pink mist, we're going to be able to handle it this way”. They don't do that. I was told by a commanding officer that when I want to brief them on OSIs, brief these young officers leaving the infantry school to go to units, we don't want to teach them to surrender. That was his view of what I was going to teach them.
But when I went through all my therapy as a serving soldier, I wished I had some of those skills they taught me in therapy, how to de-stress, how to focus, how to ground, how to deal with boredom, how to deal with loneliness. There's nothing voodoo about it. I'm better armed now to deal with things like that than I ever was.
So the pre-deployment training is fighting and dying stuff. That's what it is. As for the threats, be it IED, be it somebody with a rocket-propelled grenade, be it somebody with a rifle, it's the threat to life, regardless of which way it comes. It doesn't matter. That's one of the prime things of PTSD--it's the threat of losing your life. You could be sitting in a camp and hear booms miles away. That will trigger the fear that this boom may get closer some day. If you sit there for six months dwelling on that fear, guess what? It's going to manifest, and you're going to end up with a sick soldier.
That's why we have cooks with PTSD. They never leave the camp. How does a cook get PTSD? He's not outside the wire. He listens to things. He gets little snippets of conversations in the meal line, “Boy, we were lucky to get through that today”. So they're getting all these little bits. He goes back after his shift and sits in his bed space at two in the afternoon because he's got to get sleep because he's on at four in the morning and the little wheels start turning. The fear is there; it manifests. That's how a cook gets PTSD.
As the doctor said, there's no way to train a soldier on what a dead body looks like. We can't do it. It's impossible. There's no way to explain what it's like to have one of your friends killed. There's no way to train to see what it's like to come under artillery fire, to hear bullets really coming, to see those puffs of smoke beside you, because we don't want to kill our soldiers in training. Therefore, the learning curve is when they hit there.