:
The second item of national crisis is that the coffee is terrible. If anyone wants to slip a note to the chair, the chair would undertake to get sufficient coffee for members to get through the next two hours.
With that, we welcome our witnesses.
From Canadian Forces Morale and Welfare Services, we have Laurie Ogilvie, senior vice-president, military family services. Joining us from the Department of Veterans Affairs, by video conference, is Jane Hicks, acting director general, service delivery and program management. Steven Harris and Mark Roy are here in person.
With that, each of you have five minutes for an opening statement. We'll have one from Canadian Forces Morale and Welfare Services and one from Department of Veterans Affairs.
First, we'll go to Ms. Ogilvie.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Good morning.
My name is Laurie Ogilvie and I am senior vice-president of military family services.
Military family services and personnel support programs are operational divisions of Canadian Forces morale and welfare services.
[English]
Canadian Forces Morale and Welfare Services directly supports the Canadian Armed Forces' operational readiness by contributing to and strengthening the mental, social, familial, physical and financial well-being of Canadian Armed Forces members, veterans and their respective families.
Core public funding is received for the delivery of services and programs deemed necessary by the Canadian Armed Forces. As the Canadian Armed Forces’ service delivery partner, we are responsive to them as they remain the functional authority.
I am going to start today discussing the Soldier On program. It leverages the power of sport, recreation and creative activities to support an individual’s recovery, rehabilitation and reintegration. Established in 2007 and expanded in 2019 to align with the Canadian Armed Forces transition group, the Soldier On program supports military personnel and veterans who have sustained a physical and/or mental health illness or injury while serving, whether attributable to service or not.
[Translation]
The Soldier On program has two key lines of operations to achieve its mandate.
[English]
The first is communication and outreach, including increasing awareness and facilitating access to programs. The second is the local, regional, national and international camps and events. Activities range from hockey, skiing, golf and yoga to more creative programs such as cooking classes, guitar lessons and woodworking.
You might be familiar with the Invictus Games, which is the highest-profile sporting event for ill and injured personnel. Sports, recreation and creative activities help break down some of the barriers to recovery and, with the support of their peers, a common thread and a shared perseverance is established.
Switching now to family-centred programs and services, most are delivered by us, the Canadian Forces Morale and Welfare Services, or through not-for-profit, provincially incorporated charitable organizations, namely military family resource centres.
Today programming is available in the areas of relocation preparedness, financial resilience, personal and familial health and community involvement. A few examples include emergency family care assistance, mental health counselling in person and virtually, family and intimate partner violence support, including an annual healthy relationships promotional campaign, a 24-7 crisis and referral line, emergency grants and loans, children and youth mental health counselling, educational counselling and non-clinical psychosocial supports, including the family version of road to mental readiness.
We also engage with national stakeholders to extend our capacity to offer services through a spousal employment network and virtual career fairs, telemedicine for relocating families, a pilot program to dispatch personal support workers to a family's home, the military family doctor network, a dedicated crisis text service with Kids Help Phone, and external partners and support through the Seamless Canada initiative.
In 2017, we introduced the veteran family program, which delivers services to medically releasing Canadian Armed Forces members, medically released veterans and their families. A veteran family program coordinator is available in every Canadian community to support the transition into post-service life. In 2022, we extended our telemedicine initiative to the veteran and family cohort.
Also in 2022, military family services formalized its support to transitioning families. Previously, a family liaison officer supported families of the ill and injured before and during the transition, and the veteran family program coordinator supported post-release. A family transition adviser has now been added to the transition centres to support those families of non-medically releasing members.
Beyond the services we provide, we work to ensure that members, veterans and their families have additional support accessing community and provincial systems of care to maintain their resilience in order to manage the transitions inherent to serving in the Canadian Armed Forces.
[Translation]
Thank you for your time, Mr. Chair.
I am pleased to answer the committee’s questions.
:
Chair, it will be me. I'll do the remarks.
Good morning, and thank you, Mr. Chair and committee members, for inviting us to appear on transition.
I'm Steven Harris. I'm the assistant deputy minister for service delivery, and I'm joined today by my colleagues Jane Hicks and Mark Roy.
As you well know, transition is the process of change from military to post-service life. While every member will experience transition, the experience is not the same for every member. A successful transition to civilian life is dependent on many factors, including health, financial security, housing, community integration, identity and employment or other purposeful activity. A large number of members are able to navigate this transition themselves or with minimal targeted assistance from available services and supports.
However, others have unmet needs or risks that may require more intensive or ongoing supports. For veterans with more complex needs, our case managers work directly with veterans to identify their goals, needs, assessments and a plan to achieve independence, health and well-being.
Both Veterans Affairs Canada and the Canadian Armed Forces are committed to supporting a seamless transition and improving outcomes for transitioning members. As a result, we focused our efforts on reducing the complexity of the transition process and enhancing the well-being of Canadian Armed Forces members and RCMP members, veterans and their families.
Since 2015, Veterans Affairs and the Canadian Armed Forces have been offering enhanced transition services to medically releasing members. This means that we engage earlier with medically releasing members and their families to provide coordinated and integrated support. Early intervention is critical to a successful transition process. We've increased service to medically releasing members during their pre-release stage of transition.
Although we've been working together to provide transition services for a considerable time, historically, there was a potential gap for non-medically releasing members. In 2019, in co-operation with the Canadian Armed Forces, we designed a new joint military-to-civilian transition process for non-medically releasing members and their families. As part of this process, transitioning members are supported by both Canadian Armed Forces transition advisers and VAC staff, who jointly provide assistance and planning. Following earlier trials, this new approach is being implemented nationally and will be fully operational as of March 2024.
[Translation]
Furthermore, Veterans Affairs Canada has a full or part-time presence in each of the 32 transition centres located on CAF bases and wings across the country. At each of these centres, Veterans Affairs Canada offers transition planning services, including transition interviews and outreach and training seminars. During a transition interview, Veterans Affairs Canada staff provide releasing members with advice on applying for Veterans Affairs Canada programs and align members with supports based on their needs.
Transition centre staff conduct briefings on each base and have face-to face seminars with CAF members considering transition to provide important information on available Veterans Affairs Canada benefits and services as well as information on services offered by other organizations. Enhanced transition training courses are available online, anytime, anywhere, and are mandatory for all releasing members and which cover a diverse range of topics.
In addition to these joint initiatives, Veterans Affairs Canada has a variety of other benefits and services in place to support releasing members with their transition. For instance, the veteran family program offers medically releasing CAF members and their families continued access to the military family resource centres and a suite of transition programs, courses and group sessions.
Under this program, we have also introduced a pilot program called the veteran family telemedicine service, which connects medically released veterans and their families to a national network of canadian licensed doctors, nurse practitioners, and healthcare providers who are accessible via video, audio or secure text messaging.
Other existing benefits and services include disability benefits to recognize and compensate CAF members and veterans for their service-related injuries.
On April 1, 2022, Veterans Affairs Canada launched a new mental health program where veterans that applied for certain mental health conditions automatically receive treatment benefits while their application is being processed.
[English]
Other important components of our work include support for education and employment. The education and training benefit provides funding for veterans to pursue education and training that will support them in a successful transition and position them to be more competitive in the civilian workforce. Career transition services help with career counselling, resumé writing and job search assistance.
Our objective is to ensure a standardized, personalized and professional transition approach that supports and empowers Canadian Armed Forces veterans and RCMP members, other veterans and their families, before, during and after their transition to life after service.
We're happy to take your questions.
Once again, the Canadian Armed Forces would deliver health care services to members as they transition from one location geographically, provincially or otherwise. That would be its responsibility.
When a veteran leaves the service, how long would it take for them to access benefits and services? There are two streams. We have people who are still serving in the Canadian Armed Forces who apply for Veterans Affairs benefits, things like pain and suffering compensation and others. About 25% of applications we see for pain and suffering compensation come from still-serving members of the Canadian Armed Forces.
That means about 75% of them come after, so there are many who transition out of the military, realize they may have had impacts to their health as a result of their military service and may come back to us at Veterans Affairs a year later, five years later or even 25 years later, to say that they've had impacts from their service. At that time, we would go get their medical records from the military to be able to assess and make the determination of a service relationship to the injury they've suffered. That's easier in a digital age, but we still have a number of records that would still be in paper files, so we have to be able to go get them from wherever they're located within the Canadian Armed Forces or within the National Archives.
Thank you, everyone, for being here today.
I wanted to start with you, Ms. Ogilvie.
In terms of accessing health care, we have heard from previous witnesses during this study—I think it was quite eye-opening—about the challenges in the sense that CAF members don't access provincial health care systems and don't carry a health card. I can imagine significant challenges with that at any given time.
In the last round of questioning, you spoke to some of the changes or things you've done to work with provinces and territories to help with this. Are there other gaps or issues that we're still facing to allow for serving members and their families to be able to access health care, or to deal with some of the provincial and territorial access issues?
:
Thank you. That information is helpful because eventually, at the end of this study, we need to make recommendations. As much as I understand you're working hard on these issues, it's good for us to know where those gaps are or what still remains as a gap. Don't hesitate to send additional information as well.
This question is actually for both, so feel free to jump in, whoever.
I am curious about operational stress injuries because, when dealing with mental health, it's not like an injury when you break your arm on a given date and know exactly when that injury happened and move forward with the appropriate care. When it comes to things like operational stress injuries or other mental health needs, for some serving members or even veterans, they may not know the date on which the incident happened. If they've never suffered with mental health issues before, they may not even recognize within themselves what's happening. Therefore, they may not seek the care or wellness they need.
What, in your respective roles, are you outlining as some of the education-based things to look for, especially for those who have never experienced it before? How do they recognize some of the signs and symptoms and then seek help?
:
Maybe I'll just start briefly to say that we have a lot of contact with veterans or Canadian Armed Forces members going through the transition process. We use assessment tools to understand what they may be facing in terms of issues or concerns.
Some of those are occupational stress injury issues. There may be other issues as well, so part of the interaction we have, including the early interaction, both on the Canadian Armed Forces side and on the Veterans Affairs side, is to make sure that we can have proper assessments with those individuals and with members of their families. If they are seeing issues as well, we can often bring in members of the families to sit with us as part of a transition interview.
Second, from an occupational stress injury point of view, we have clinics that are set up via Veterans Affairs, working with our provincial health counterparts in every area of the country, and satellites in other areas as well, that help to support occupational stress injuries. There are dedicated clinics that veterans and RCMP member veterans can access as well to be able to seek treatment for occupational stress injuries.
We've also implemented a centre of excellence on PTSD. It's called the Atlas Institute. It's developing both metrics and norms to share with family physicians and others who may see veterans and military families, to be able to recognize some of these cues and signs and help to address them and treat them.
Welcome to our guests.
Before I ask my questions, I’d like to take a moment to discuss something that seems important to me and that seems important to francophones. The Standing Committee on Veterans Affairs, on which I sit, is currently conducting a lengthy study on women veterans. The study will span 23 meetings. Two weeks ago, this committee decided to stop referring to "femmes vétéranes" and start referring to "vétéranes"—something we’ve been talking about for a long time. This may seem trivial, but in French, the word "vétérane" does greater justice to these members of the armed forces.
From now on, the Standing Committee on Veterans Affairs and the Department of Veterans Affairs will use the term "vétérane". In my opinion, this is much more respectful of women. I mention this because I’d like the Standing Committee on National Defence to also use the designation "vétéranes", since Committee members will often use this term in French. The suggestion came from Ms. Sandra Perron. We’re pleased that the Department of Veterans Affairs will now be using this designation, and we hope other departments will too.
Mr. Harris, we all know transition is a crucial time for anyone, man or woman, who has spent several years in the armed forces. The members the Standing Committee on Veterans Affairs have often heard is that this transition is very problematic. One of the issues raised was the fact that the Department of National Defence and Veterans Affairs Canada both work in silos, with little or no contact between the two departments. This leads to difficulties and problems in terms of the credibility of these two very important departments.
I’d like you to tell us about what has been done to try to break down these silos, so these departments talk to each other more.
All our transition centres work directly with the Canadian Armed Forces during transition. At each of the military bases, there are employees working for the transition centres. During transition, the Canadian Armed Forces, Veterans Affairs Canada and military family services work together to help veterans and their families. During this time, we work hard to avert any risks that may arise for members of the armed forces.
If the armed forces are in a position to help people before they transition to civilian life, they do so. Members give their approval, and then we can help them. We try to offer them help during the transition period. In some cases, we’ll work with the Canadian Armed Forces to extend the transition period. That may be necessary, for example, if there’s a medical risk, if the member is too ill to undertake the transition, or if the member is at risk of becoming homeless.
As Mr. Harris briefly explained earlier, a series of questions are asked of the Forces member to conduct the risk assessment. In such cases, we work with the Canadian Armed Forces to try to reduce these risks.
:
This is for Mr. Harris or Mr. Roy.
I got to sit briefly at the veterans affairs committee. One key issue we were dealing with at the time was the contracting out of services for social workers and case workers for veterans dealing with a number of issues. That transition is part of it, but having that consistent case worker was so key to being able to help specific veterans go through potentially difficult transitions, difficult times and difficult points in their lives.
It's now been about six months since a $570-million contract was awarded to Loblaw for veterans rehabilitation services. In fact, some of the medical health clinicians from Renfrew County wrote an op-ed to the department based on the major problems of that contract.
They said that the Veterans Affairs' “approach fails to understand the complexity of treating military-related trauma and demonstrates a universal lack of understanding of veterans' complex mental-health challenges.” It goes on to say that, “The PCVRS program appears to prioritize administrative processes over client care, being overly focused on timelines and rushing treatments, rather than understanding veterans' unique needs and the importance of a culturally competent approach.” They ended the letter by saying that, “We are not saving taxpayers' money; we're offering less, and lining the pockets of a private company.”
Can you talk about what consultations occurred? Were those frontline service providers who are core to that service provision consulted? What did they have to say at the time?
If I could turn to Ms. Ogilvie, first of all, thank you to you and your team for all that do.
Last week, at Seamless Canada, for you, Mr. Chair, we were out at CFB Gagetown in Fredericton for our annual Seamless Canada meeting, and Ms. Ogilvie and her team made it seamless in terms of the organization. There was a great deal discussed on the day of the meeting. The day before, I was able to spend some time on the base speaking with CAF members of all ranks, and I heard some of the challenges. Health care kept coming up over and over again.
The theme for last week's meetings was child care and spousal employment and the challenges associated with that. It was important for me during that meeting to bring up the issues of health care. We were very excited and proud of the fact we were able to get the 90-day wait period for health cards wiped out across the country. That was a big step, but the message I got on the base was, “Great, we have a piece of plastic. We can't use it.”
Can you speak to some of the conversations we had at Seamless, some of the provinces that came forward in that incredible discussion around health care and some of the things they're hoping to be able to do at the provincial level?
Again, I'll go back to the fact that the biggest challenge with health care right now is a lack of doctors in the communities and, more importantly, in the communities where military families are located. In Fredericton specifically around Gagetown, there is a lack of doctors, which is what is complicating access to medical care. It was very encouraging at Seamless Canada, the discussions around what the provinces and territories can do to be able to increase interest in physicians being in particular communities and supporting Canadian Armed Forces families.
One of the pieces—and I'll talk a little bit about it—is around the different pieces we're trying to do on educating family physicians on the unique needs of military families. We have a family physician guide that has been created and is with the College of Family Physicians, so the physicians themselves are getting education so they understand the need to support military families.
Wait-lists are another concern around getting in to family doctors. Some of the discussions that have happened at Seamless Canada, and I hope continue, are around protecting certain portions of the physician spaces to go to military families.
:
Just quickly, Ms. Ogilvie, you had mentioned that your website was entirely up to date. However, there are actually postings that are currently at minimum wage in Ontario. I would hope that you would check that and make sure that it's addressed.
I will go back to VAC with my other question. In terms of that $570-million contract of Loblaw, one of the key points that they made in this article from the Renfrew County folks was that there's an overall lack of program transparency, increased distress for veterans, duplication of interviews and the fact that many veterans, because of the frustrations that they already feel, which is then increased, have actually walked from service. Because of the money that's being referred and put online, put to these telemedicine opportunities and contracts, private contracts, they are unable to help clinicians who meet the standards for licensing, specifically with veterans' service problems.
Could you address that, please?
I'd like to begin by thanking our witnesses for being here with us to answer some more questions.
I'll apologize in advance if you guys have touched a bit on this already, but I would like to get a bit of a deeper understanding to see if you have any recommendations on this specific issue. We've heard in past committee meetings that one of the biggest issues is that a lot of veterans often don't necessarily have issues upon discharge. The issues come up later. PTSD often shows up and creeps in a few years later on. It may not appear when they're discharged, when they have that caseworker specifically working with them on the issues that they're currently dealing with, so they often report having more difficulty receiving the support they need.
I know that there is support offered to all veterans who ask for it. That's what we've heard, but it does appear that they don't always know that they can ask for this, or they don't always know who to reach out to and where to go to receive the support. Do you think there is anything we can recommend in a study that would help either continue that relationship with the veteran or make it so that there's an easier process in place for them to receive the help they need?
:
Maybe I'll start, and then ask Ms. Hicks to join in to answer.
There is no wrong time for a veteran to come forward to Veterans Affairs to seek benefits. We have programs that support people immediately upon their transition. We have programs that continue to support them through their progressive age and their changing needs, from rehabilitation or transition and supports in terms of education and career transition services, to supports in disability benefits, to supports in terms of income replacement, and on and on. There is no wrong time. We have people come to us at all ages, as you have noted, as the members noted, who may only discover they have a disability, or they may have a barrier as a result of their service later on in their life or their career. We need to do that.
From the point of view of the question of what else we can do, we need to continue to promote the benefits and services that Veterans Affairs has available at the time of transition, at the time of serving in the Canadian Armed Forces, through the rest of their lifetimes as well, to make sure that they're aware of those things. We certainly do that work now to try to make sure that people are aware of all the benefits and support services that are available, and we don't have a limitation. If people who have needs come to us, there is not a cap at a hundred veterans we can support at a time, or a thousand or ten thousand veterans. As many who need help and come forward can get the assistance they need, and we want to continue to promote that.
Maybe I could ask Ms. Hicks if she has some additional elements here.
We have with us today virtually Dr. Ayla Azad, chief executive officer, Canadian Chiropractic Association. Dr. Andrew Bennett from Cardus is joining us in the room, and Dr. Matthew McDaniel, clinical director of the Veterans Transition Network, is also joining us on video conference.
We are already seven or eight minutes past where we should have been. I'm going to ask you to be very tight on your five-minute opening statements.
Colleagues, we're already going to have to chop some time.
Go ahead.
I would like to begin by thanking the members of the Standing Committee on National Defence for inviting me on behalf of the Canadian Chiropractic Association and the 9,000 doctors of chiropractic across Canada we represent.
I'm sorry I missed you in person on Tuesday, but I'm happy to join you virtually this morning.
I want to acknowledge that I'm joining you from the traditional lands of the Haudenosaunee, Huron-Wendat and Anishinabe nations, and it is my honour and privilege to be here.
It's takes eight years of education and 4,500 hours of clinical training to become a doctor of chiropractic. Chiropractors are trained to be primary care contact professionals with the ability to assess, diagnose and treat spinal, muscle, nerve and joint conditions, also known as musculoskeletal, or MSK, conditions. These conditions such as back pain, headaches and neck pain have a devastating impact on Canadians' health, quality of life, workforce participation and the economy. According to the World Health Organization, MSK conditions, specifically low back pain, are the leading causes of disability around the globe, and more than a 11 million Canadians suffer from musculoskeletal conditions every year.
Due to the physical demands put on active military personnel, MSK conditions like back and neck pain are double that of the general population. MSK injuries are also a major occupational risk for a military career and are responsible for 42% of medical releases. These conditions are a key issue for transition services, as 59% of Canadian Armed Forces veterans who report difficult adjustment to civilian life had chronic pain.
We are all here today because we want to help our women and men in uniform stay healthy and pain free. We feel chiropractors are part of the solution, but there are two barriers we want to bring to your attention, barriers to access to care and inadequate benefits coverage.
Yes, armed forces members do have access to some chiropractic care, but in order to receive treatment, they first need to get a referral from the on-base clinician. Most Canadians can simply walk into a chiropractor's office to get care. The requirement of a referral before accessing chiropractic care is not required in any provincial or national health regulation and is not best practice in the health insurance industry. Veterans in the RCMP can seek care when they are in pain without this requirement.
There's well-documented research that patient-centred care includes choice of provider. This results in improved outcomes. Some people respond well to physiotherapy. Some people respond well to chiropractic. Some may need both. It seems disrespectful that our brave Canadian Armed Forces members don't have the same choice and require a referral.
This requirement also takes time. It takes time to see a physician. They take a history. They have to perform their own assessment, and then usually the patient is required to first try a course of treatment with on-base staff. Then, when that doesn't work, they might get a referral to book an appointment with a chiropractor, who then has to go through their own processes. This causes significant delay in accessing care.
As a clinician and a chiropractor, I know the sooner I can see the patient, the shorter the recovery period and the better the outcomes. When care is delayed, acute cases become more complex and potentially chronic. We hear stories of Canadian Armed Forces members waiting weeks to get their required referral. Many are paying out of pocket so they don't need to jump through these hoops. At a time when health care human resources are spread thin in the armed forces and across Canada, we need to streamline and reduce duplication.
Secondly, the benefits offered through Medavie Blue Cross only cover 10 visits. This might be enough to cover an acute case of injury, but we know that MSK conditions like low back pain can reoccur, and there is a chronicity to them. Veterans, for example, get access to 20 visits.
Our chiropractors are ready and willing to follow the protocols and reporting requirements that are necessary to interface with the armed forces. We already have the training to do so. Culture change is hard and takes time, but we are asking this committee to encourage the removal of the barriers that are preventing Canadian Armed Forces members from getting the care they need. The prevalence of MSK conditions among active service members means chiropractic can play a role in improving health outcomes and quality of life.
We feel that the brave women and men of our armed forces deserve choice and the very best in health care.
Thank you again for inviting me to appear before the committee.
I'd like to thank you and the committee members for the opportunity to appear before the standing committee this morning to speak about what I would see as an under-examined aspect of health and transition services provided to Canadian Armed Forces personnel and veterans, and that is their spiritual or pastoral care.
While I am not a chaplain and have not provided pastoral care to veterans or armed forces personnel, as an ordained deacon in the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, I regularly provide pastoral care and spiritual direction to men and women from a variety of backgrounds and situations.
I'm also able to speak on these questions given my previous role as Canada's ambassador for religious freedom and my ongoing work in this area.
In the Christian tradition, as well as in the Jewish, Muslim and certain other traditions, we understand that the human being has a tripartite nature composed of a body, mind and soul. Each part works in concert with the other two to ensure a healthy and thriving person.
When the body is weakened by injury or disease, it can impact the psychological well-being of the person. Various forms of psychological distress and mental illness can have impacts on the physical body. Likewise, when a person is experiencing existential crises related to their search for meaning and truth, it can impact the physical and mental aspects of the person as well.
We all confront in our lives certain existential questions such as, who am I? Who am I in relationship to others? Who am I in relationship to the world? Who am I in relationship to God or to an ultimate truth according to a given philosophical tradition? The ongoing wrestling with these questions is part of our humanity.
These questions often come particularly to the fore in times of personal crisis or in times when we place ourselves in harm's way, in conflict, as do the members of the Canadian Armed Forces on a daily basis. All of us are hard-wired to seek meaning, to discover what is true and then to govern our lives according to that truth. In short, we cannot separate out our rational and physical selves from our spiritual self.
Given this reality, it is critical that, in addition to services and treatments that support the physical and mental health of Canadian Armed Forces' personnel and veterans, they also be given access to high-quality care for their spiritual health. The skilled personnel of the Royal Canadian Chaplain Service are at the forefront of providing this care, as well as reflecting the growing religious diversity of the armed forces.
These men and women, both clerical and lay, collectively play an indispensable role in the ongoing spiritual health of our men and women in uniform and after they have left service. Pastoral care is also indispensable to aid in spiritual healing, healing that has beneficial outcomes for the whole person.
In providing essential spiritual care to CAF personnel and veterans, chaplains must be able to provide that care and counsel fully informed by the teachings and beliefs of their particular faith. They must be fully able to exercise their freedom of religion in doing so and thus minister to others in a way that is integrated and authentic, bearing faithful witness to what they confess to be true. This freedom must not be unduly hindered such as through a mandated requirement to adhere to a prevailing secular creed or to conform to a political ideology of any stripe. These religious truths are timeless.
The essential work of armed forces' chaplains of all religious and philosophical traditions must be protected and encouraged, all while upholding freedom of religion and conscience for chaplains and those whom they serve.
As such, I'd like to recommend that this committee and its report on this study call upon the to firmly and publicly reject the discriminatory sections of recommendation 6, “Re-Defining Chaplaincy”, contained in the April 25, 2022, final report of the Minister of National Defence’s advisory panel on systemic racism and discrimination.
Further, this standing committee could recommend that all Canadians, regardless of their religious or philosophical tradition, whether that be theistic, secular humanist or atheistic, be supported through the pastoral services of CAF chaplains as they serve our country.
I would also recommend the establishment of a permanent committee of religious leaders who report jointly to the and to the chaplain general on an annual basis regarding the integrity of the Royal Canadian Chaplain Service. Among its principal roles, the permanent committee would serve as a consultative body to ensure and promote ways of advancing and maintaining the religious diversity with the service, serve as an arm's-length representative body of religious leaders and investigate and report on violations of the freedom of religion or conscience within the service.
Thank you.
:
Hello and thank you for the opportunity to speak today.
I'd like to acknowledge that I'm on the unceded traditional territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh nations.
My name is Dr. Matthew McDaniel. I'm the clinical director at the Veterans Transition Network, or VTN. We are a registered charity that provides counselling and transition programs for veterans and service members of the Canadian Armed Forces across Canada.
I have 20 years of experience working with people facing under-supported mental health disorders, with a focus on frontline workers, first responders and veterans. I see first-hand the cost of these groups falling through the cracks. When that happens, the first responder or the veteran pays a heavy cost and so do their families and their communities. This impact spreads across our society.
My doctoral research centred on supporting these at-risk populations. I joined VTN to try to address and mitigate systemic risk. I oversee our highly effective transition programming as we continue to expand services. We're attempting to reduce the rippling personal and societal impacts of impeded transition.
The Veterans Transition Network was initially developed at the University of British Columbia in 1998 and was refined over 15 years. We were established as a charity in 2012 in order to expand our services free of charge. We offer specialized transition services for both men and women in English and French. Last year, 20% of our programs were in French and 40% were for women.
My testimony will focus on recommendations for the in-house transition programming developed by the Canadian Armed Forces transition group. These recommendations are based on our years of experience helping veterans and service members resolve trauma, improve family relationships and transition into civilian life.
I have three major recommendations to make.
The first is that transition services must be specialized. Research indicates that most veterans transition relatively successfully into civilian life. However, between 25% and 38% of veterans report difficulty transitioning. This struggle is correlated with some specific service factors. These are medical release from the military, including release for mental health conditions, longer service history and service in the junior ranks, the regular forces, the army and combat arms.
In addition, women veterans often struggle more significantly in their transition because of the high rate of military sexual trauma that they experience. Women are a minority in the military and this affects their service experience and transition. Women often experience something called “sanctuary trauma”, which is a traumatic injury from a person or institution that's believed to be safe. This requires specialized programming to address.
If transition services are going to be successful, they must be built with the needs of these groups specifically in mind.
The second recommendation is that transition services must be involved and proactive. One of our program founders, Dr. Marv Westwood, says that you don't talk your way into PTSD, and you can't talk your way out of it. The same is true of military service and transition. Veterans did not talk their way into military service skills. They engaged with practical behavioural training. They need the same as they transition into civilian life.
Transition is not simply a change in employment. It's a deeply significant psychological and social process. Helping someone who is struggling with that process requires an involved approach.PowerPoint alone is not enough. Active skills rehearsal in a connected social environment is necessary. For transition services to be valuable for those groups who need it most, it must involve a hands-on approach that includes active, socially situated skills rehearsal.
Third, transition needs social support. The common factor for all psychological treatments is social support. The relationship with the veteran's therapist is pivotal and veteran relationships with the supportive people in their lives are also pivotal. When service members leave the military, they often leave behind their dominant social support network. This hinders their ability to cope with transition challenges. Building social support outside the military community becomes crucial for successful transition. Group-based programs address this need by jump-starting social support skills and connection outside of a military context.
A successful transition service must also incorporate components designed to enhance veteran social support.
Thank you for your time. I welcome your questions here.
Thank you to the witnesses for their testimony.
Dr. Azad, you and I had a chance to speak last week. I appreciated your comments and your delivery today.
My questions are to Mr. McDaniel. I was really taken by your recommendations. I thought they were excellent. I really appreciated your notion of integrated care and proactive care. It's almost as though you're advising us to take preventative measures in the support of the transition.
Are the trends of mental health over the past year consistent, or are they expanded in CAF and in the transition relative to the general population? Do you see that changing? Explain to us where we're at here.
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It's really hard to address mental health concerns if society writ large does not acknowledge that those mental health concerns exist. We've seen over the years more and more acknowledgement of some of the mental health challenges that not only people in the civilian populations but in the military populations struggle with. The biggest example is PTSD, which used to be shell shock and which was nothing before that. We are similarly seeing certain things now starting to be acknowledged so that we can help with them. I named something called “sanctuary trauma”. That's not something that I would bet most of the people here have heard as a term before, but it's quite apt for what some people experience with the military.
The other thing that we're looking at much more now is moral injury, which has to do with when people participate in an action or behaviour that goes against their ideals, their values or their deeply held beliefs about how life should be. When something happens that contradicts those, a person can go through an identity crisis and, in fact, a crisis about whether they can live life in the same way anymore.
You mentioned preventative care. If we can get in and address some of those mental health concerns I just named, including PTSD, moral injury and sanctuary trauma, before they fester, we can prevent a whole tail of other challenges that happen, including relationship and family breakups and unemployment. Homelessness can be connected to a lack of preventative care in some situations.
I think I'm kind of running with this answer, so I'm going to stop myself right now.
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Thank you to the witnesses for appearing today.
Mr. McDaniel, I referenced in the previous panel an opinion piece that was presented by health clinicians from Renfrew County who are trying to provide services to Veterans Affairs Canada. One of the quotes from their article said, “The ability to care for psychologically injured veterans is a skill set that requires particular training and education, and years of experience.” They were talking about it in reference to that farming out and privatization of a lot of these services. Of course, we've heard that from a lot of the caseworkers who work within Veterans Affairs.
You spoke about that sanctuary trauma and the consistency that's required for those with that special skill set to be able to address that and handle it over time. Can you talk about the fact that, if we're going to work within that consistency, then we're going to have someone who's able to delve into those cases to have consistency for a veteran who's dealing with a lot of psychological trauma? How does that all work together, and what's the importance of trusting someone consistently and not have it farmed out in these ways to a company like Loblaw?
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You've brought up two different things here. The first has to do with intergenerational trauma, and the second has to do with minority populations.
To speak to intergenerational trauma, one of the largest correlates with mental health challenges and the development of PTSD is that, rather than a person experiencing something stressful or traumatic and having it convert into PTSD, it has to do with a history of traumatic incidents in their lives. The more traumatic incidents you experience through your childhood and into adulthood, the more likely it is that you will develop PTSD. That rolls forward too. If we don't manage to address those concerns, they can then be passed forward as that person who is facing some mental health challenges passes a bit of that onto their kids.
My second point to that is that most of the people in the professions that I work with—first responders, frontline workers, veterans—do this because it's deeply meaningful to them. They see this as service. They have found a way to give back to society and make their lives make sense from a service perspective. Because of that, they feel like they have found a family, and a group that accepts them and is on the same mission they are on regarding this existential need to serve. When that falls apart, when the institution falls apart, they also lose their sense of purpose in life. That's damaged as well.
Both of these concerns of intergenerational trauma and a loss of direction and meaning in life can be addressed with preventative care if we get to these folks right away and keep this from going forward. I'm suggesting that our transition services aren't just affecting that 25% to 30% of people who have trouble with transitioning. This is preventing, perhaps, future generations from having these same challenges. We need to take that very seriously.
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Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank the witnesses for being here today and for sharing your testimony.
Dr. McDaniel, transition is an incredibly complex process. It probably shouldn't be, but it seems to be. It seems that the majority of the onus is put on the individual, the transitioning member, for that very complex process. I was going to ask you what your recommendations are, but I want to thank you for presenting those recommendations with clarity. If you have more that come out of this testimony, I would suggest that it would be wonderful if you would submit those to us as well.
The Veterans Transition Network website talks about the job market and about how, when veterans are transitioning, they come out with a set of military skills, and then employers don't necessarily know how to recognize.... How do we put those groups together? How do we get employers to recognize that special set of skills and how they can utilize those in today's...?
We have a major labour issue in Canada, and if there were a way of helping the veterans but also helping employers see the value of some of those military skill sets....
My expertise has to do with psychological interventions, so my mind goes to what psychological interventions we might be able to do. I would love it if, included in the roster of services for transition, was employment counselling, quite directly helping veterans.
I am not saying that it's not available at all, but it's not available enough. Veterans need help translating on their CVs, between a military culture and a civilian culture, what they are capable of. They have soft skills that perhaps people don't understand around teamwork and focus, which you learn in the military. That's where my mind goes first: actually empowering the veterans with skills.
Is it not possible for us to be doing public campaigns that let the public know about this, that show examples of successful employment transitions between a military and a civilian context? I am sure there are some amazing success stories out there where people use the skills that the government gives folks now in the civilian sector.
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There are services available. There are case managers. There are psychological support services available, of course, with VAC.
What I am advocating for here is that these services be made more specific, that they're made more practical and skills based, and that they're made more social based.
A word that has come up a couple of times, which I wish I had included in my recommendations because it's good, is the word “preventative”. As I've mentioned before, rather than waiting for folks to express distress or fall through the cracks, I think that involves being on top of it beforehand and checking in with folks before that and ensuring that these services are made regular and made available. It also involves, as you say, treating that transition as a complex and supportive process that can prevent problems in the future.
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Let me make sure that I understand the question.
I think you're saying that the armed forces and veterans are, in a way, siloed away or maybe less connected with other aspects of society or other groups than would be positive. I absolutely think that is a challenge. In some ways it's necessary, considering the intensity of skills and training and what we ask of them for them to end up being quite cohesive within themselves.
I also think that what we're talking about is this challenge of how you move on from that cohesiveness, come apart and rejoin with new groups within society. How can we help them learn how to do that? That, indeed, could be benefited by finding ways to make sure that the armed forces are more connected with other aspects of our society before transition.
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Thank you so much. I've been fascinated by this conversation and Dr. McDaniel's comments. You cannot have mental health without physical health, and he put it correctly—we all need to be working together.
Chronic pain and mental health are directly connected. Sixty-five per cent of people who have chronic pain will also have a mental health issue, and I believe the stats go both ways.
As far as your comments about other models, I know we do things differently here, but around the world, if you look just south of the border in the United States, they actually have integrated teams on bases. They have chiropractors on staff working together with professionals. We now know that interdisciplinary integrated models of care are the best way to treat patients, because we are not siloed, as someone put it. You can't have mental health and not think about all the other conditions that the patient may be going through. It must be a team-based collaborative approach.
I would like to begin by thanking all three of our witnesses on this panel. I think you've each brought forward a different perspective that we haven't heard until now.
Dr. McDaniel, I just want to start by saying that everything you said makes so much sense. I'll definitely be looking towards your testimony when I'm putting forward my recommendations because it seems obvious, yet it's really not.
I'm wondering if you could just clarify. I know you mentioned instances where group therapy would help because, of course, loneliness is one of the big issues and feeling that support is definitely helpful. You also mentioned practising social situations and scenarios. Would this be considered behavioural therapy? What is the specific type of therapy that you think would benefit veterans?
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Thank you. I appreciate that clarification.
Deacon Bennett, I have a question for you. I agree that, when someone is in a situation of crisis, they turn towards their faith and begin a spiritual journey, perhaps. I imagine that members in the armed forces are at a particular place and point in their lives where they may need this service and where they may need this guidance.
We also know, though, that we're opening up and we're trying to be as inclusive as possible in the armed forces. There are members of different backgrounds. There are members of the LGBTQIA+ community, and obviously everybody needs to be respectful. We're moving towards a better culture in the armed forces.
Given this context, can you elaborate a little on how we could go forward, allowing people, pastors, imams, rabbis and spiritual leaders of all faiths to be involved while still maintaining that level of respect for all members of the CAF?
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We have to recognize that at the core of all these different religious traditions, particularly the Abrahamic faiths, there's an understanding of the inherency of human dignity. While a particular religious tradition might have a different view of anthropology or of sexuality, at the core—certainly of the Christian tradition, the Jewish tradition and the Islamic tradition—is an understanding of the dignity of the human person.
While there might be differences of views on sexuality, anthropology and what have you, we're still called to recognize, in the person with whom we might disagree, their inherent dignity. Certainly, chaplains have to be able to minister to them, recognizing that dignity.
To say that if you hold a particular view that's not in sync with a particular secular view you're not qualified to be a chaplain is very narrow-minded and doesn't demonstrate the sort of robust pluralism and diversity that we should be really advancing within our society and certainly within the CAF. Given the realities of Canadian Armed Forces personnel and what they deal with, they need to be able to have access to authentic, integrated pastoral care.
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Thank you, Ms. Lambropoulos.
That brings our session to an end.
I want to, on behalf of the committee, thank our three witnesses. I apologize again for having to bump you from Tuesday to Friday. That's just the life of parliamentarians.
Colleagues, if you could stay for a second, I have three things I need to deal with quickly.
One is the budget, which has already been distributed, for the health services. I need someone to move it.
I saw Ms. O'Connell twitch, so she's moved it. Mr. May has seconded it.
Is there any conversation?
An hon. member: What is the budget?
The Chair: It's $5,100.
(Motion agreed to)
The Chair: Thank you.
Second of all, Ms. Mathyssen has put forward a motion. I intend to deal with that on Tuesday.
Third, the draft report on cyber is available. It's already been distributed. I want to deal with that on Tuesday.
Do you want to speak to that particular issue?
Then a week from today, I intend to start the procurement study—the Lord willing and the whips.
By the way, speaking of whips and House leadership, if there is anyone you can lean on, our travel budget may have been passed but that doesn't mean we're going anywhere. It just means that it passed. We need to free up the attitudes toward travel.
Finally, I'd like us all to recommend my staff member for barista training.
Some hon. members: Hear, hear!
The Chair: There we go. Thank you.
The meeting is adjourned.