Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Former Paramedic Finds Hope, Healing, Raising Awareness Of Post-Traumatic Stress

The Canadian Press, 21 Mar, 2016 01:04 PM
    WHISTLER, B.C. — Six years after the death of a Georgian luge athlete on the opening day of the 2010 Olympics, the paramedic who tried to save him is still trying to shed the chains of post-traumatic stress disorder.
     
    Forty-five-year-old Terrance Kosikar has just finished a gruelling physical test flipping a nearly 200 kilogram tractor tire through the back roads towards Whistler, B.C., while wearing nearly 25 kilograms of steel chain.
     
    The tire and chain became the symbols of Kosikar's burden, and his long and lonely battle with suicide attempts and addiction after the death of Nodar Kumaritashvili.
     
    The former paramedic wants the problem of PTSD pushed out of the shadows, saying first responders are trained to save lives, but are never taught about the dangers to their own mental health. 
     
    He also says more should be done to remember Kumaritashvili, the young luger who was travelling at nearly 144 kilometres per hour when he slammed into a pole during a practice run in Whistler on the open day of the Olympics.
     
    Kosikar says he wishes more of his former colleagues had turned out Sunday to watch him flip the giant tire through Whistler, but he and his supporters are confident the journey has given traction to the discussion surrounding PTSD.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dalhousie Students Design Game To Help Peacekeepers Deal With Child Soldiers

    Dalhousie Students Design Game To Help Peacekeepers Deal With Child Soldiers
    The game presents interactive scenarios for peacekeepers who encounter child soldiers.

    Dalhousie Students Design Game To Help Peacekeepers Deal With Child Soldiers

    Abbotsford Shooting That Injured Two Men Was Not Random: Police

    Abbotsford Shooting That Injured Two Men Was Not Random: Police
    Police in that Fraser Valley city say they were called to a home just south of Highway 1, not far from the Abbotsford Centre, just after 9 p.m. Thursday night.

    Abbotsford Shooting That Injured Two Men Was Not Random: Police

    Woman Steals Vancouver Police Car Crashes Into Burnaby Building

    Woman Steals Vancouver Police Car Crashes Into Burnaby Building
    Vancouver Police are investigating a stolen cruiser incident, after a woman took off in a marked police car last night in the Downtown Eastside.

    Woman Steals Vancouver Police Car Crashes Into Burnaby Building

    Police Release Terrifying Photo Of Axe-Wielding Robber In Tinted Helmet

    Police Release Terrifying Photo Of Axe-Wielding Robber In Tinted Helmet
    RCMP Cpl. Rick Mills says in nine years he has never seen a convenience store robbery similar to the one Saturday night in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, Labrador

    Police Release Terrifying Photo Of Axe-Wielding Robber In Tinted Helmet

    Jewish Groups Demand Ottawa Strip Helmut Oberlander Of Citizenship, Deport Him From Canada

    Jewish Groups Demand Ottawa Strip Helmut Oberlander Of Citizenship, Deport Him From Canada
    In a letter to Citizenship Minister John McCallum, the groups say it's time to put an end to what has been a 20-year battle to deport Helmut Oberlander.

    Jewish Groups Demand Ottawa Strip Helmut Oberlander Of Citizenship, Deport Him From Canada

    Homeless Saskatchewan Man Given One-way Bus Ticket Hopes For New Life In B.C.

    Homeless Saskatchewan Man Given One-way Bus Ticket Hopes For New Life In B.C.
    Charles Neil-Curly, 23, has been homeless for about five months and living in a North Battleford, Sask. shelter, but he says the province cut his funding, forcing him to find somewhere else to go.

    Homeless Saskatchewan Man Given One-way Bus Ticket Hopes For New Life In B.C.