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Stress, depression high among Canadian peacekeepers
Thursday, December 13, 2007
Canada's peacekeepers suffer similar rates of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders (PTSD) as combat, war-zone soldiers, according to a London, Ont. research team.
Psychiatrist J. Donald Richardson and his
co-investigators also found that PTSD rates and severity were associated with
younger age, single marital status and deployment frequency.
Richardson is a consultant psychiatrist with the Operational Stress Injury Clinic
at Parkwood
Hospital,
part of St. Joseph's
Health Care, London
and a professor with the Schulich
School
of Medicine & Dentistry at The University of Western Ontario.
His team conducted a random, national
survey of more than 1,000 Canadian peacekeeping veterans with service-related
disabilities. The participants were below the age of 65 and had served with the
Canadian Forces from 1990 to 1999.
The research, published in the
Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, found a third of veterans deployed more than
once suffered probable clinical depression, and 30 per cent of those deployed
one time were affected.
The rates of probable PTSD were 11 per cent for those
deployed once and 15 per cent for those deployed more than once. The authors
also found peacekeepers were more likely to have PTSD and more severe symptoms
if they were young, single, or had multiple deployments.
“This study has important clinical
implications because understanding such risk factors can help predict potential
psychiatric problems in veterans who have been deployed," says Richardson.
“The high rates of depression
observed in deployed veterans can have a significant impact when they seek
treatment for PTSD because depression must be aggressively treated to help
patients respond more effectively to psychotherapy."
“Many veterans are also living and working in the community as civilians,
therefore it is important that primary care physicians and psychiatrists become
more knowledgeable about the emotional impact of military deployment and screen
for possible PTSD," says Richardson.
The Operational Stress Injury Clinic is funded by Veterans
Affairs Canada and provides specialized services to help veterans and members
of the Canadian Forces deal with PTSD, anxiety, depression or addiction
resulting from military service.
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