Good morning, Mr. Chair, and members of this committee.
We'd like to thank you for the invitation to appear before you today and for this opportunity to contribute to this crucially important focus on the effects of operational stress injuries and post-traumatic stress disorders upon public safety officers and first responders. It's my distinct pleasure to represent the Paramedic Chiefs of Canada today. It is an association that represents the paramedic chiefs in leadership across all of our provinces and territories.
We're pleased to participate in this national dialogue on this important issue that is crucial to the safety of our men and women on the frontline, regardless of the role they assume, and crucial to their families as well, who are often affected.
Our association recently participated in a round table on this important topic hosted by the Honourable Ralph Goodale, Minister of Public Safety. We prepared for that meeting by polling and interviewing a number of colleagues across Canada in trying to address three fairly simple questions. What is the problem? What are we doing about it? What do we need?
While the feedback and the answers are likely as complex as the overarching issue at hand, there certainly were themes that prevailed. I'm pleased to try to outline these to the best of my ability here today.
The message that we heard clearly though from our community is that this is a complex issue. To state that the impact is significant would definitely be an understatement. In terms of scope, we feel there is some difficulty in terms of the accepted definitions and terminology or measurements. Based solely on the limited research to date, we can easily surmise that the impact is alarming.
For perspective, Ontario has about 8,000 paramedics, and with some studies predicting that PTSD or OSI affects 22% of them, we can estimate over 1,700 of our medics are suffering from operational stress injuries.
Speaking from the paramedic community, initial steps have been and are being taken to get a better understanding of the magnitude of the problem, but that work is in isolation of a broader scope, and the research is difficult to verify. The magnitude of the problem appears to be growing in terms of its human effect, system performance, and financial burden.
The overarching message heard from our community is that there is a need to treat the problem as a whole, and not just the disorder or disease—or worse yet, an event or a symptom. With frontline work, the damage is likely to be cumulative from multiple exposures, and more research is required to determine just how the multiplicity of stressors experienced by first responders manifests into disorders or syndromes, and what we can do to intervene.
As system leaders and practitioners, we feel that it's imperative to have a coordinated and collaborative effort among and involving the first responder communities, who are here at a national level, in order to stop the hemorrhage of emotional and psychological damage that's occurring.
Peer support and critical incident stress management teams and training are needed to be supportive in the field. I think that's clear and broadly accepted, but further research is needed to employ effective methods of intervention in the field, with a greater understanding of the impacts and limitations. We feel there are gaps evident around treatment options, which are relatively new. We feel there doesn't appear to be a lot of peer reviewed literature around the efficacy of these treatment options among our paramedic community.
These identified concerns have led the paramedic community to express a need for greater understanding of the problem at hand, and for our leaders to have access immediately to tools to begin an effective and evidence-based approach to addressing the situation.
We also see the need to address gaps that have been missed, such as workplace reintegration. Presently workplace health and safety programs are challenged as to how to reintegrate some staff into the workforce safely. Small collaborative programs exist in some areas, but in many areas the only programs that exist focus on reintegrating persons with physical injuries back into the workplace, and a gap certainly exists.
Broadly, our community has concerns about the lack of coordinated research in all areas surrounding operational stress injury topics. We feel that efforts should be made to find opportunities to share research more broadly and effectively.
What is our association and our community doing to date? The Paramedic Chiefs of Canada, along with our partner here today, the Paramedic Association of Canada, have been trying to frame the discussion around mental health and wellness, both physical and mental, and not just the manifested PTSD. We believe that mental health incorporates a holistic approach that recognizes mental health promotion as part of preventing the disease's symptomatic progression to a state of disorder.
Our association has been collaborating on the following projects: the national EMS research agenda, the national research gap analysis, and the Canadian safety and security program's paramedic community of practice. Each of these has priorities that recognize that research is important for the health of the profession and, in particular, this area of focus. As an example, a current study is underway, supported by CSSP, examining mental health wellness through Queen's University, and with Frontenac as our municipal partner.
Our association has joined others to form a tri-services working group collaborating with Public Safety Canada and other key partners in an effort to continue toward meeting the federal mandate to form a national PTSD strategy.
The Paramedic Chiefs of Canada have also created an ad hoc committee and drafted a report dedicated to operational and psychological stress injuries. We've provided a copy of that today.
The scope of the report was to examine how organizations themselves can best respond to operational stress injury. As with other forms of injury, we believe that the paramedic services at the forefront of proactive action on this issue must address the following four core elements: first, comprehension and championing of the issue within the paramedic service; second, developing prevention strategies that target those who may be at risk, their environment, and the sources of injury; third, creating intervention services and strategies for those who are at risk; and fourth, ensuring that treatment and recovery programs are accessible to those affected by an operational stress injury.
Our community continues to focus on these areas, but we know that we would be much more successful with broader collaboration. We need wholesome programs that span the first responder's career and provide support at any position they may currently hold within the mental health continuum, whether they be healthy, reacting, injured, or ill.
Support needs to be holistic in its approach, spanning readiness for career, resilience training, exposure response, critical incident recovery, restoration and and return to work, and retirement/career changes or returning to the workforce as a non-first responder. These ideas and best practices need to be evidence-based, bolstered, and shared among our communities, covering pre-evaluation, prevention, resiliency, and recovery throughout the mental health continuum.
We think it's clear that broad collaboration will be the key to having a significant impact in addressing this problem and supporting the people in our communities who do great things to protect us each and every day.
A multi-pillar strategy or approach for the support of mental health for first responders is critical from the day they're hired until well after they retire. We need research, and we need the funding and support required to pool our resources.
Once again, the Paramedic Chiefs of Canada applaud the right hon. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for calling in his mandate letter to Minister Goodale for him to work with stakeholders to develop a national action plan on post-traumatic stress disorder, which disproportionately affects public safety officers, our people.
We welcome the opportunity to work with the federal government and partners to assist in coordination, research and communications, to ensure the safety of our first responders and the citizens of Canada in providing evidence-based national standards for the assessment, treatment, and long-term care of public safety personnel.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.