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Fort McMurray wildfire PTSD studies ready to begin with $1M grant

Researchers at four Canadian universities will use $1 million to study Fort McMurray residents suffering from post traumatic stress disorder after the wildfire last May.

We will be able to really extensively study the impact of the fires on a large range of mental health issues

Farid El-Hayouni walks in front of the site where his house once stood. Researchers are studying the impact of the traumatic experience on residents. (The Canadian Press/Brian J. Gavriloff)

Researchers at four Canadian universities will use $1 million to studyFort McMurray residents suffering from post traumatic stress disorder after the wildfire last May.

The funding from the Canadian Red Cross,theCanadian Institutes of Health Research and the provincial corporation Alberta Innovates isbeing awarded toresearchers at the University of Alberta, the University of Calgary,Mount Royal University and Laval University in Quebec.

Researchers at Laval helped assessthe mental health of evacuees as they returned to thecity, just one of the studies done shortly after the fire was under control.

"The work we did [that]summer was very much the spur-of-the-moment," said psychologistGeneviveBelleville. "[A] very small scale study that we did in order to see the immediate consequences on mental health of the wildfire."

The Laval researchers surveyed 379 people. They found 29 per cent of participants showed signs of PTSD, 26 per cent suffered from major depressionand 36 per cent had insomnia.

With the new grant money, Belleville plans tostudythe long-term impacts ofPTSDand other mental health disorders on about 1,500 wildfireevacuees.

"We will be able to really extensively study the impact of the fires on a large range of mental health issues," Belleville said.

The study will begin in May, one year after the wildfire, which is considered one of Alberta's worst, forced 80,000 people from their homes and destroyed over 2,400 homes and structures.

FortMcMurray a unique region

Researchers from the U of A, the U of Cand Mount Royal have teamed up for aPTSD study focusingon resiliency in children followingthewildfire.

One of the lead researchers, Dr. Vincent Agyapong, said the team willsurvey 5,000 students fromGrade7to Grade 12 in Fort McMurray schools thisfallandagain three years followingthe wildfire.

Agyapong, who practises psychiatry in Fort McMurray one week eachmonth, said he's seen an increase in patients with mental health conditions,including PTSD.

I cannot deal with it, Fort McMurray residents triggered months after the wildfire

8 years ago
Duration 4:25
Fort McMurray resident Sandra Legacy shares her battles with PTSD after the Fort McMurray wildfire. Legacy tells CBC Fort McMurray correspondent David Thurton she struggles with anxiety and says she is triggered whenever she smells smoke.

Despite the mountain of research that's been done on PTSD in the past,Fort McMurray needs its own studies into the mental health consequences of the wildfire, Agyapongsaid.

"If you just focus on treating people on the basis of research that has been done elsewhere, it doesn't take into account the local dynamics," Agyapong said. "Fort McMurray is a very unique region."

The studiesare two of seven sharing a total of $3.4 million through a partnership betweenthe Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Canadian Red Crossand Alberta Innovates.

Follow David Thurton, CBC'sFort McMurraycorrespondent, onFacebook,Twitteror contact him viaemail.