Close X
Saturday, December 14, 2024
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

    New Brunswick Judge To Decide On Rare Request By Convicted Murderer For Bail

    New Brunswick Judge To Decide On Rare Request By Convicted Murderer For Bail
    It's rare for a defence lawyer to seek bail for a convicted murderer pending appeal - and even more rare for a judge to grant it - but lawyers for Dennis Oland are hoping their application will beat the odds on Wednesday.

    New Brunswick Judge To Decide On Rare Request By Convicted Murderer For Bail

    Pair Didn't Get Far With Stolen ATM They Dropped On Kelowna Highway: Police

    Pair Didn't Get Far With Stolen ATM They Dropped On Kelowna Highway: Police
      Police say the suspects dropped the stolen ATM on the side of a highway.

    Pair Didn't Get Far With Stolen ATM They Dropped On Kelowna Highway: Police

    Edmonton Man Says He Is Filing A Complaint With Police Over Homophobic Valentine

    Edmonton Man Says He Is Filing A Complaint With Police Over Homophobic Valentine
    Degas Sikorsk says he is filing a complaint with police after he received a Valentine at work that was defaced with a homophobic slur

    Edmonton Man Says He Is Filing A Complaint With Police Over Homophobic Valentine

    Anti-Refugee Graffiti In Calgary School, Prime Minister Trudeau Says It's Not What Canada All About

    Anti-Refugee Graffiti In Calgary School, Prime Minister Trudeau Says It's Not What Canada All About
    A photo that Global ran of graffiti spray-painted on the side of Wilma Hansen junior high school in Calgary shows the words: "Syrians go home and die, It also says "Kill the traitor Trudeau."

    Anti-Refugee Graffiti In Calgary School, Prime Minister Trudeau Says It's Not What Canada All About

    January Home Sales Give Rise To Correction Concerns In Toronto, Vancouver

    January Home Sales Give Rise To Correction Concerns In Toronto, Vancouver
    Surging sales in the piping hot real estate markets of Toronto and Vancouver last month prompted one of Canada's big banks to express concerns Tuesday that the cities may be at risk of a home price correction.

    January Home Sales Give Rise To Correction Concerns In Toronto, Vancouver

    Heavy Rain May Have Played A Part In Fatal Crash In Peachland, B.C.

    Heavy Rain May Have Played A Part In Fatal Crash In Peachland, B.C.
    One person has been killed and another has critical injuries following a head-on crash on Highway 97 in Peachland, B.C.

    Heavy Rain May Have Played A Part In Fatal Crash In Peachland, B.C.