Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Troops More Likely To Have Experienced Childhood Abuse, Violence: Study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jan, 2016 12:00 AM
    OTTAWA — A new study says approximately half of military personnel in Canada begin their service with a history of abuse in their childhood, including corporal punishment, or witnessed domestic violence as children.
     
    The research, conducted by the Department of National Defence and the University of Manitoba, also found that exposure to child abuse and trauma among soldiers is proportionally higher than in the civilian population.
     
    Health specialists were looking to understand the factors driving the series of suicides that has gripped the military.
     
    The Canadian Press reported on the initial findings of the study a year ago after it was presented at a military medical conference, but the research was finalized and published Wednesday in The Journal of the American Medical Association - Psychiatry.
     
    The study reports that child abuse exposure was higher in the regular forces — at 47.7 per cent — and higher still in reserve forces with 49.4 per cent, compared with 33.1 per cent in the Canadian general population.
     
    "Regular Forces personnel were more likely than the (general population) to have experienced all types of child abuse exposure with the exception of sexual abuse among males," said the report.
     
    "Reserve Forces personnel were more likely than the (general population) to have experienced any physical abuse and exposure to intimate partner violence (with the exception of females for the exposure to intimate partner violence only); sexual abuse was more likely in the reserve Forces compared with the (general population) among females in the higher income category only." 
     
    Why almost half of all military personnel in Canada have a history of child abuse exposure is not something the study was able to determine, the authors said.
     
    Significantly, the analysis concludes the link between child abuse exposure and suicide was often "significantly weaker" in military personnel compared to civilians. But trauma early in life combined with witnessing horrors overseas does have an "effect on past-year suicidal ideation and suicide plans."
     
    The report says the findings are significant for both soldiers and civilians, but recommends suicide prevention efforts be aimed at those who've suffered childhood trauma.
     
     
    Abuse is defined in the report as being kicked, bitten, punched, choked, burned or attacked as youngsters, including sexual violence. It also includes the trauma of having witnessed "intimate partner violence" while growing up.
     
    The new study relies on data in the mental-health portion of the 2012 Canadian Community Health Survey, which questioned more than 25,000 people, and the 2013 Canadian Forces Mental Health Survey, which is based on responses from more than 8,100 members of the military.
     
    It follows a major study in the U.S. three years ago by the mental-health research branch of the Veterans Administration, Duke University and the University of Alabama. That research concluded that abuse, neglect and other childhood ordeals were major contributors to mental-health problems suffered by soldiers later in life.
     
    In 2014, the Canadian Forces surgeon general Brig.-Gen. Jean-Robert Bernier told a Commons committee that the mental health of soldiers was an issue the military was struggling to understand. He pointed to the extraordinarily high rate of depression among serving members. 
     
    The new research may shed more light on that.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Man Starts Petition Calling On Amazon To Stop Selling Suicide Shirts

    Toronto Man Starts Petition Calling On Amazon To Stop Selling Suicide Shirts
    Mark Henick, 28, has launched an online petition on Change.org that has garnered support from hundreds of people.

    Toronto Man Starts Petition Calling On Amazon To Stop Selling Suicide Shirts

    Justin Trudeau Told To Deepen Ties To Saudi Arabian, Brace For Change In Iran

    OTTAWA — Federal officials have told Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that Canada's strategic interest would be well served by strengthening economic ties with oil-rich Saudi Arabia because of its powerful position in the Persian Gulf.

    Justin Trudeau Told To Deepen Ties To Saudi Arabian, Brace For Change In Iran

    Man Dead After Being Hit By Falling Arcade Game In Quebec City

    Man Dead After Being Hit By Falling Arcade Game In Quebec City
    He was found suffering from a head wound in the wee hours and was declared dead in hospital.

    Man Dead After Being Hit By Falling Arcade Game In Quebec City

    Tips For Helping Youngsters Link Written Words To Language

    Tips For Helping Youngsters Link Written Words To Language
    Reading to very young children is crucial to help them eventually learn to read. But researchers studying how kids begin to understand that text conveys meaning differently than pictures

    Tips For Helping Youngsters Link Written Words To Language

    OPP Issue Warning About Email 'Phishing' Scam That Targets iTunes Users

    OPP Issue Warning About Email 'Phishing' Scam That Targets iTunes Users
    Police say they received a call earlier this week from a concerned person who had received an email claiming to be from iTunes.

    OPP Issue Warning About Email 'Phishing' Scam That Targets iTunes Users

    Hudson's Bay Pairs Online Shopping Business Gilt With Its Saks Off 5th Stores

    Hudson's Bay Pairs Online Shopping Business Gilt With Its Saks Off 5th Stores
    Hudson's Bay Co. is scooping up Gilt Groupe Holdings Inc., one of the last independent e-commerce retailers built on the niche market of "flash sales."

    Hudson's Bay Pairs Online Shopping Business Gilt With Its Saks Off 5th Stores