Good afternoon, Mrs. Gibson. I very much enjoyed your presentation, despite the lack of time that was allotted to you, and I want to congratulate you on it. Perhaps we could have given you a few more minutes, in view of the interest your presentation raised among committee members.
We know today that a boy or a girl who decides to join the Armed Forces is under the responsibility of the Department of National Defence. When he or she leaves National Defence, that responsibility is transferred to the Department of Veterans Affairs.
As Mr. Perron said earlier, there is little training or information on the consequences or the mental health problems that may arise.
In one article, for example, we learned that, in the United States, at least 6,256 persons who had served in the Armed Forces committed suicide in 2005, an average of 17 persons a day. The average in the general population is 8.9 per 100,000 inhabitants, and the average for veterans in the United States is 18.7 to 20.8, twice that figure.
Veterans in my riding are lacking information. First, they spent time in the Canadian Armed Forces. They went into combat. They have a file number as veterans, but today those individuals are elderly, often disabled and have lost quality of life. They are therefore left to their own devices because they don't know that there is a health program for veterans. They don't know that they could be receiving some kind of financial compensation or that various programs are there. Unfortunately, veterans are left to their own devices from the moment they leave National Defence.
This happens at the expense of their health and families. A number of them become discouraged and commit suicide. I think veterans should at least be informed about federal government financial assistance from the moment they join the Armed Forces. Veterans should also be constantly monitored to eliminate health problems or at least to provide them with the services to which they're entitled as veterans.
If a veteran from my riding came to see me in my office and asked me whether I could tell him where in Quebec he could get the relevant information for veterans, I would be at a bit of a loss and I would have to turn to Mr. Perron—somewhat as I did this morning—in order to be able to communicate with the Department of Veterans Affairs.
I think there is a considerable lack of information on health, follow-up, programs and financial assistance to which people are entitled. People often can't stand it and decide to commit suicide. There are cases of suicide, but there are also cases of murder.
I would like you to tell me how the government could improve the federal system in order to help veterans and to reassure them about health programs.