First, thank you very much for appearing before us today and thank you for your presentation.
One of the concerns I always have is in comparing military or veteran suicide rates with those in the general population. Years ago I used to live in the Yukon, and we had a couple of suicides in our small town of Watson Lake. At the time there was a conference in Whitehorse that I went up to. I remember talking to some first nation chiefs about the issue, and they said, “We never want to be compared with the general population. We're first nations people. We're aboriginals. Our concerns, our issues, our thoughts, our views, our beliefs are different, and we don't want to be compared with the general population.”
I notice here that you mentioned several times the comparison with the general population.
In your brief you say “yet exposure to combat and peacekeeping did not increase the risk”. Obviously I can't question your study, but I find it rather hard to believe that people who serve in a combat role or a peacekeeping role are not subjected to this risk. I remember folks who served on the Swissair disaster picking up body parts off the rocks. Some of them had to leave the service because of what they were exposed to.
Now, they may commit suicide many years down the road. As Mr. Dallaire said, one of his soldiers committed suicide 14 years later.
Second, later in your brief you say that gatekeeper training reduced suicide rates by 33%. Does that mean they reduced 33% in that year? Suicide tendencies can last for the rest of your natural life. You can commit suicide in your fifties because of something that happened in your twenties, if I'm not mistaken. So I'd like to know how you quantify these types of statistics.
I say this with great respect. You said you started this in 2004. The Afghan mission really got kicked into high gear around that time. Are you planning to do enhanced studies down the road to follow these veterans and their families, many years down the road, or is this more or less it?
Thank you.