Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ontario Bill Would Allow First Responders With PTSD Quicker Treatment

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Feb, 2016 11:43 AM
    TORONTO — First responders with post-traumatic stress disorder will be able to get quicker and easier access to benefits and treatment under legislation introduced today.
     
    The law would create a presumption that PTSD in first responders is work related, removing the need for them to prove a causal link to the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board.
     
    It would cover police officers, firefighters, paramedics, workers in correctional institutions, dispatchers of police, firefighter and ambulance services, and First Nations emergency response teams.
     
    Labour Minister Kevin Flynn says it's important to keep safe the people who keep everyone else safe.
     
    He says first responders are at least twice as likely — compared to the general population — to suffer PTSD.
     
    The presumption would apply to new claims, as well as pending claims and claims in the process of being appealed.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    East Coast Storm Causes Closures, Outages As Snow, Winds Sweep Through Region

    East Coast Storm Causes Closures, Outages As Snow, Winds Sweep Through Region
    Environment Canada issued a winter storm warning in most regions of New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia by early morning, while Newfoundland and Labrador was expecting snow later in the day.

    East Coast Storm Causes Closures, Outages As Snow, Winds Sweep Through Region

    Shaw To Sell Global TV Network, Specialty Channels To Corus For $2.65 Billion

    Shaw Communications is selling its media division to Corus Entertainment for $2.65 billion — a deal that will help fund the telecom company's purchase of Wind Mobile.

    Shaw To Sell Global TV Network, Specialty Channels To Corus For $2.65 Billion

    Winnipeg Man Joshua Stevens Recalls Fatal Confrontation At Peruvian Spiritual Retreat

    Winnipeg Man Joshua Stevens Recalls Fatal Confrontation At Peruvian Spiritual Retreat
    Joshua Stevens tells CTV Winnipeg he had gone to the Phoenix Ayahuasca retreat near the town of Iquitos in December looking for relief from a skin condition that caused his hair to fall out in circular patches and left his arm covered in a rash.

    Winnipeg Man Joshua Stevens Recalls Fatal Confrontation At Peruvian Spiritual Retreat

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Attacks Money Guru Kevin O'leary's Offer To Pay For Her To Quit

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Attacks Money Guru Kevin O'leary's Offer To Pay For Her To Quit
    Rachel Notley has a simple message for Kevin O'Leary: "Bring it on"

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Attacks Money Guru Kevin O'leary's Offer To Pay For Her To Quit

    Toronto Bakery Gave 500 Powerball Tickets To Customers In Promotion; Plans Repeat

    Toronto Bakery Gave 500 Powerball Tickets To Customers In Promotion; Plans Repeat
    World Class Bakers said they are giving away 500 tickets for the Wednesday night draw and apparently all tickets had been claimed by mid-afternoon

    Toronto Bakery Gave 500 Powerball Tickets To Customers In Promotion; Plans Repeat

    Northwest Territories Bears Daily Witness To Impact Of Climate Change: Bob McLeod

    Northwest Territories Bears Daily Witness To Impact Of Climate Change: Bob McLeod
    Canada's North is at the forefront of climate change and its effects can be seen with the naked eye on a daily basis, Bob McLeod said in an interview

    Northwest Territories Bears Daily Witness To Impact Of Climate Change: Bob McLeod