Evidence of meeting #76 for National Defence in the 41st Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was treatment.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Phil Upshall  National Executive Director, Mood Disorders Society of Canada
Louise Bradley  President and Chief Executive Officer, Mental Health Commission of Canada
Zul Merali  President and Chief Executive Officer, University of Ottawa Institute of Mental Health Research, As an Individual
Don Richardson  Consultant Psychiatrist, Canadian Psychiatric Association

4:15 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative James Bezan

I'm going to call this meeting to order.

We're going to be interrupted here in about half an hour for votes, so we will to try to get as much testimony in as possible.

With that, I'm going to ask our witnesses to keep their opening comments as succinct as possible. If you have recommendations to make, make sure you put those on the record. Then we'll go to a five-minute round of questioning by members and see how far we can get.

Appearing today we have Zul Merali, the president and CEO of the University of Ottawa Institute of Mental Health Research; from the Mental Health Commission of Canada, we have Louise Bradley, president and CEO; from the Canadian Psychiatric Association, we have Don Richardson, consultant psychiatrist; and from the Mood Disorders Society of Canada, we have Phil Upshall, national executive director.

We welcome all of you to the committee and thank you for helping us with our study on the care of our ill and injured Canadian Forces members.

With that, I'm going to ask Mr. Upshall if he could lead off the testimony.

4:15 p.m.

Phil Upshall National Executive Director, Mood Disorders Society of Canada

Thank you, Mr. Chair and members. We certainly appreciate the opportunity to have the time we do today to present to you some issues that I think are worthy of your indulgence. With that I'll give you a very brief background on the Mood Disorders Society of Canada.

We're a virtual organization. We work with families and people living with mood disorders, depression in particular. We have a very active website, and we're very involved in trying to get help for people who need it. We're also a collaborating organization that works very closely with the Mental Health Commission of Canada, the Royal Ottawa Institute of Mental Health Research, and all of the professional medical associations.

Our interest in this particular subject flows from the fact that a few years ago we had a research study undertaken that showed that mental health care was really a stigmatized issue within the health care profession itself. As we delved into that, we found that our health care providers required better education. As a result we developed an anti-stigma continuing education course for Canada's 76,000 family physicians.

We did that because over 85% of Canadians suffering from a mental illness and anyone needing any form of health care go to their primary health care physician first. So we felt if we could get to them first and get them to change their mind about how to deal with people with mental illnesses, it would be of benefit. It has turned out to be of benefit.

Shortly thereafter, along with the commission and the institute, we held a meeting at the War Museum called “Out of Sight, Not Out of Mind” dealing particularly with PTSD. I think some of you were at that meeting. I'll read you the recommendations that came out of it so that they're in the record.

The recommendations presented in the report are aimed at reducing and eventually eliminating the stigma surrounding PTSD; enhancing the knowledge of physicians on the identification and treatment of PTSD, including information on available resources and support networks; educating PTSD sufferers and their families on available support networks and resources to improve their accessibility, the last of which is a huge issue; promoting ongoing collaboration and dialogue amongst government and leaders in the field of mental illness specializing in PTSD, including health care providers, innovators, and researchers; improving educational platforms for children and parents suffering from PTSD; and enhancing research efforts to further understand triggers and optimal treatments of PTSD.

Those recommendations led to our brief to the parliamentary committee, the pre-budget brief that we presented two years ago, which resulted in the funding of the Canadian Depression Research Intervention Network. That funding of $5.2 million was announced last year and we are currently finalizing the development of the agreements with Health Canada. The context of that is that two of the issues that the Government of Canada asked us to specifically attend to were PTSD and suicide. They are both high on our radar screen.

The budget announcement also provided $200,000 for the Mood Disorders Society of Canada to develop, in collaboration with the commission and the institute and the Canadian Medical Association and others, a continuing medical education program directed at Canada's 76,000 family doctors, developing the theory of stigma but also advising them on how better to treat PTSD.

The expert panel is just being put together, but it will be a panel of significant scientific and clinical knowledge.

I think I should stop there, because that's five minutes. I have a bunch of other notes I'd be happy to reference. Perhaps what I could do, if I might, is to read into the record the focus of the Canadian Depression Research and Intervention Network.

Our focus in relation to prevention is that CDRIN is concerned with the identification and development of policy- and program-based initiatives that contribute to reduced incident rates for depression and depression-related suicide and PTSD. In relation to treatment, CDRIN will focus on developing improved approaches and protocols for the screening and engagement, diagnosis, treatment, and reintegration of people experiencing depression and PTSD. So our continuing medical education, CME, regarding PTSD is ongoing.

Our project manager, Richard Chenier, is here. The reason I point him out is that he was an RCMP officer who, in the early seventies, saw his partner shot to death in front of him. He became an alcoholic and was rousted from the RCMP. He had some significant difficulties in life, recovered as best he could, became a deputy minister in the government of Manitoba, had some other significant difficulties, became a child and youth mental health expert in northern Ontario and subsequently started to work with the Mood Disorders Society of Canada.

As he worked with us it became clear that Richard was an exceptional person, but there was something more. It was only five years ago that he was identified as suffering from PTSD, and only three years ago did he stop dreaming about his partner being shot to death and his brains being blown all over him, as he did for 35 or 40 years, however long that was.

That's the balance of my brief, Mr. Chair, and I'll turn it over to Louise Bradley.

4:20 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative James Bezan

Thank you.

Ms. Bradley.

4:20 p.m.

Louise Bradley President and Chief Executive Officer, Mental Health Commission of Canada

Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and members of the committee, for this opportunity to speak this afternoon. As you've heard, I'm the president and CEO of the Mental Health Commission of Canada. We're a little more than halfway through the mandate that takes us up to 2017. I'll speak a little bit more about that mandate in a moment.

I just want to reference that in my career as a registered nurse, I was also head of a very large hospital in Edmonton. We had members of the Canadian Forces come back to us, where they received the very best of care—the very best of physical care. At the time, I worried about the psychological part of it.

In addition to that, I was happy that a year later I was also a part of the opening of the OSI clinic in Edmonton. I won't regale you with the stories I've heard. I'm sure you have heard many such stories from people who have had to access OSI clinics across the country.

The commission last year released Canada's first-ever mental health strategy. Within the strategy we've identified many recommendations that look at improving the lives of people with mental illness in all spheres across the country. Certainly, we have a real interest in what happens to people with PTSD, and of course, their families.

The commission very much works in a collaborative fashion. We're happy to collaborate with CDRIN, which my colleague Mr. Upshall just referenced. We have a number of other components in the strategy. I would be happy to provide you with copies, should any of you wish.

We've also done a number of projects with the Canadian Forces. You've heard testimony from Lieutenant-Colonel Stéphane Grenier. We very much acknowledge the peer support work he has done, and the commission has certainly benefited from his expertise.

I mentioned the families. This is really critical, and it's something I want to make you aware of. The commission, within the next short while, a number of months, will be releasing national guidelines for family caregivers. This will hold recommendations on types of services and supports for people looking after people with mental illnesses. The principles within the document will certainly be helpful in matters of PTSD as well.

The other item we are working on with the Department of National Defence is our stigma program. I'm sure you've heard much about the impact that stigma and discrimination have on people with PTSD. Again, I read the testimony from Stéphane Grenier, and he acknowledged the difficulties he and his colleagues have had because of this serious issue.

The commission has decided to take a novel approach to stigma. We're evaluating programs to see what works. We're very happy to report that the road to mental readiness program is looked upon quite highly and is regarded quite well. The outcomes of that evaluation are also available.

I have some final comments in terms of health human resources. Mental health has been referred to as the orphan of the health care system, and this still very much holds firm today. There are a number of items within the strategy and elsewhere in the work of the commission that speak to ways of managing this and of helping out with it.

We've recently done a great deal of work on mental health in the workplace. Of course, the workplace is everywhere; it's not just an office building. In particular for the military, that definition expands considerably. And we are embarking on suicide prevention strategies.

With that, our recommendations are, really, to access the work that we have done as a catalyst throughout the country. We look forward to any report and recommendations that this committee will develop and would be very, very happy to provide any kind of support and assistance that we can with the development or dissemination of that important report with our knowledge exchange centre, and the results that will come out of it at the end.

I thank you most kindly.

4:25 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative James Bezan

Thank you.

Dr. Merali.

4:25 p.m.

Dr. Zul Merali President and Chief Executive Officer, University of Ottawa Institute of Mental Health Research, As an Individual

Thank you very much.

Good afternoon and thank you for giving us the opportunity to express our views on a very critical issue facing Canadians.

As you have heard, I'm the president and CEO of the University of Ottawa Institute of Mental Health Research, but I'm also the scientific director for the Canadian Depression Research Intervention Network, called CDRIN. The conceptual framework for CDRIN, as a pan-Canadian network, was transitioned into a real entity with the infusion of $5.2 million by the federal government in the previous budget, as Dr. Upshall mentioned. The mission of CDRIN, as endorsed by the government, is to focus on depression, but also on related issues that include post-traumatic stress disorder and suicide.

We are in the process of building this network, with the close collaboration with the Mental Health Commission of Canada and the Mood Disorders Society of Canada. We will bring the best minds together from coast to coast to coast.

Excellence in research is really what's going to take us to the next step. We have already enrolled over 150 of the brightest minds into this network. By working together collaboratively, rather than competitively, we hope to transform how we prevent, how we detect, and how we treat mental illnesses. Through the network approach, we hope to make major advances brought to the field as they have done through a network approach for cancer and cardiac health.

We would like to recommend that the CDRIN serve the Government of Canada and the Department of National Defence to help find research-informed solutions for post-traumatic stress disorder, suicide prevention, and depression.

We would also like to recommend that more attention be focused on understanding brain circuits contributing to mental illness. As you may have heard, the Obama government has recently launched a major approach on this front, a major assault, and has declared the brain as the next frontier. We are all part of the same wave and we need to be doing what's essential for Canadians.

We would like to recommend also that more attention be paid to sleep disturbances, that are so tightly associated with post-traumatic stress disorder. For a full recovery, if you're not able to address those issues, it's very difficult.

Finally, we would like to recommend that the government consider establishing research chairs as a way to bridge the military and the armed uniform services with civilian research enterprises. This is one way we can enhance the collaborative effort to really solve the problem that is not just facing the people in uniform but, really, facing the country at large.

I'm going to stop there and would be happy to answer any questions that you may have.

Thank you.

4:30 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative James Bezan

Thank you very much.

Dr. Richardson.

4:30 p.m.

Dr. Don Richardson Consultant Psychiatrist, Canadian Psychiatric Association

Thank you.

Mr. Chair, I'd like to thank you for this opportunity to speak with you and the members of the committee. The CPA shares your interests regarding the mental health needs of the men and women in uniform and the veteran population.

As clinicians and researchers, we have seen advances in our understanding of the effects of psychological trauma on both the mind and body. Evidence has shown that PTSD can be treated with evidence-based treatments, including pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy, which is talking therapy.

Unfortunately, treatment outcome research has consistently shown that military-related PTSD does not respond to treatment as well as civilian PTSD. The exact reason is unknown. However, it might be related to the type of trauma or the higher rates of co-morbidity seen in military-related PTSD.

Co-morbidity is when PTSD and other psychiatric illnesses or substance abuse occur together. Military-related PTSD rarely occurs in isolation, but often occurs with other psychiatric illnesses, including major depressive disorder, other anxiety disorders, and addictions. Therefore, significant work is still needed to better understand the poor treatment response in the military and veteran population and how to match the various treatment modalities to the individual seeking treatment.

As a national organization, the CPA has been a vocal advocate in promoting evidence-based treatment for PTSD and operational stress injuries. In February 2009 the CPA devoted its February publication of Canadian Psychiatry Aujourd’hui to the theme of mental health and the military. Last year, in collaboration with Veterans Affairs Canada, the CPA delivered a PTSD module as part of its “Perspectives in Mental Health Care”. The perspectives program offers a series of continuing medical educational programs aimed at both psychiatrists and family physicians across Canada. This year's perspectives in mental health care program will again provide an update on PTSD, focusing on military-related PTSD and its effects on veterans and military members.

The CPA is also working closely with military and civilian psychiatrists to establish a CPA military and veterans section. This section will bring together both researchers and clinicians working with veterans and military members to collaborate on and provide evidence-based care and research.

The CPA would like the committee to consider four recommendations. The first is regarding screening. Although still-serving members receive post-deployment screening, periodic screening for PTSD and common co-morbid conditions such as major depressive disorder, addictions, and suicide would enhance early detection and facilitate treatment.

As well, reserve members and many still-serving members with PTSD are released and living in the community. Encouraging primary care physicians and specialists to ask patients “Have you, or anyone close to you, ever served in the Canadian Forces?” would help open up the dialogue for primary screening of operational stress injuries. This question has been very successful in the U.S.

The next recommendation involves knowledge dissemination. Military members and veterans need to know that PTSD can be treated successfully with evidence-based treatments, including pharmacotherapy and/or psychotherapy. Clinicians also need to be aware that PTSD rarely occurs in isolation, but often presents with co-morbidity. This co-morbidity needs to be treated aggressively in order to optimize treatment outcomes, especially if they are going to get involved in trauma-focused psychotherapy—that is, talking about the traumatic event in treatment.

The next area of recommendations focuses on research. Most treatment guidelines focus on PTSD and not co-morbidity. Treatment outcome research is desperately needed to enhance our understanding of military-related PTSD and how to best tailor treatment, including pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy. Research is needed to enhance our understanding of the neurobiology of PTSD, as already indicated, risk factors and resiliency for PTSD, and how psychological trauma affects other medical conditions, such as chronic pain and cardiovascular conditions. Also, more research is needed to better understand the specific needs of reserve members.

Finally, and also very important, there is the whole issue of family support. PTSD and operational stress injuries not only affect military members and veterans but also his or her family. Often spouses and children struggle to obtain services in the community. Enhanced services to spouses and children and improved coordination with provincial community services are crucial to better meet the needs of the families, and by extension, military members and veterans.

Again, I thank you for your ongoing interest and support in the mental health of military members and veterans, and I'd be more than happy to answer any questions.

Thank you.

4:35 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative James Bezan

Thank you.

We're going to go to our five-minute rounds.

Mr. Harris.

4:35 p.m.

NDP

Jack Harris NDP St. John's East, NL

Thank you, Chair, and thank you all for your presentations.

First, I have to say that you all have a lot to offer, and we don't have much time to hear the great things you have to say.

Dr. Richardson, if I may ask you first, you said with respect to military circumstances that they don't respond as well to PTSD treatment as in other circumstances.

Does that mean it takes longer to achieve results? And does that have implications for the kinds of programs that ought to be available, depending on how much time it does take to deal with treatment of PTSD of military members?

4:35 p.m.

Consultant Psychiatrist, Canadian Psychiatric Association

Dr. Don Richardson

That's a very good question. It's not necessarily that it might often take longer, but when they've studied veterans and combat-related PTSD, the civilian studies show that the outcomes of people who have civilian types of trauma tend to be better, when looking at one study compared to the other.

But, clinically, what we tend to see is that because a lot of the military-related PTSD, as I mentioned, rarely occurs with just one condition but also with others, the treatment tends to be more intensive, and with that it might take longer also.

4:40 p.m.

NDP

Jack Harris NDP St. John's East, NL

We've also heard complaints from the civilian mental health group in Petawawa about the complexity of the cases characterized by those series of things, and in fact, high suicide rates, rampant addiction, and the lack of and need for medical addiction specialists.

Do you see any special considerations in dealing with addictions among serving members?

4:40 p.m.

Consultant Psychiatrist, Canadian Psychiatric Association

Dr. Don Richardson

I think addictions, both alcohol and drugs, are an issue with PTSD. When they have looked at whether or not the rates are higher than on the civilian side, I think we're probably seeing higher rates of depression. But I do think that when we're looking at treatment focus specifically, the first part is stabilization. That involves looking at all, not just PTSD, but all of what the person is presenting with. So if it is addiction, that needs to be addressed, whether it's assessing for depression and suicide or making sure the person is stable before they start doing specific, trauma-focused therapy.

4:40 p.m.

NDP

Jack Harris NDP St. John's East, NL

For that, of course, you need resources.

Ms. Bradley, your organization is a very welcome one in Canada. It has been active since 2007. Given our government's attitudes toward some kinds of bodies, they might try to call you a talk shop because you've been talking about these issues for such a long time.

You mentioned your work with the military. Has there been a direct relationship in the sense that the military has asked you for advice on how to solve some of these problems because of what we've seen? This has been going on for some time: we're still talking about stigma, we're still talking about basic treatment like Dr. Richardson has just been talking about.

Is there a fix here that you can help with? Have you been helping with that? Or does the military try to find its own solutions?

4:40 p.m.

President and Chief Executive Officer, Mental Health Commission of Canada

Louise Bradley

We work collaboratively. Have they come to us specifically and asked for help to fix something? No, and I'm quite grateful they haven't, to be honest with you, because I'm not sure there's any quick fix to any of this.

And by the way, we do far more than talk. We have many active programs. We have evidence-based programs that actually show where stigma can be resolved or can be reduced considerably. We've focused on health care professionals, as one group. This is something that would apply right across the board.

It saddens me, as a registered nurse, that we have to focus on health care professionals when we hear they are one of the biggest barriers to people getting care. I know these issues are very similar in the military. I don't know whether they are worse or not, but all roads lead to stigma. Other than this one program, we haven't been able to evaluate other programs in there, but I think the work the commission is doing can very much be generalized to the military.

4:40 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative James Bezan

Thank you.

The bells are ringing. According to Standing Order 115(5):

Notwithstanding Standing Orders 108(1)(a) and 113(5), the Chair of a standing, special, legislative or joint committee shall suspend the meeting when the bells are sounded to call in the Members to a recorded division, unless there is unanimous consent of the members of the committee to continue to sit.

Since it is a 30-minute bell, I would ask for consent.

4:40 p.m.

NDP

Jack Harris NDP St. John's East, NL

Do we have the timer on?

4:40 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative James Bezan

Yes, we can turn on the timer. It's been ringing for about five minutes, so we should have about 25 minutes.

Can you make sure it's muted, please?

4:40 p.m.

NDP

Christine Moore NDP Abitibi—Témiscamingue, QC

Mr. Bezan, it's just for an intervention from the Conservatives, the Liberals, and then me?

4:40 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative James Bezan

Yes. Then we'll go. I think we'll do two more quick questions of five minutes each, and then we'll go. Okay? We have 26 minutes.

So do I have consent?

4:40 p.m.

Some hon. members

Agreed.

4:40 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative James Bezan

Mr. Strahl, you have the floor.

4:40 p.m.

Conservative

Mark Strahl Conservative Chilliwack—Fraser Canyon, BC

Thank you very much.

Thanks to all of you for your testimony under pressure. We appreciate that and your being here today.

I've been on the health committee before and certainly mental health is something that we found touched all of the other studies we were doing, whether it was chronic disease, or innovation, or anything. It all comes back; there's always a connection there.

I am going to ask you, Mr. Upshall, for your perception of this, which may be following on Mr. Harris' question. How receptive have the Canadian Forces been to working with outside groups, with civilian researchers? Do they welcome that collaboration or are they...? Just generally, from your perspective, have you seen a willingness from the Canadian Forces to work with outsiders to address an issue that affects their members?

4:45 p.m.

National Executive Director, Mood Disorders Society of Canada

Phil Upshall

What did I do to you to deserve that question?

4:45 p.m.

Some hon. members

Oh, oh!