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'Monumental task': National effort launched to tackle mental health of public safety workers

Public safety workers across Canada have tough jobs - from police, to firefighters, paramedics and corrections officers - so a new group is working on a national strategy to help them all take care of their mental health.

Research group officially launched Tuesday with 3-day summit in St. John's

The mental health of public safety workers across Canada is the focus of a new research group that launched in St. John's on Tuesday. (Avalon North Wolverines)

Working in the public safety sector across Canada is not easyand is often traumatic.

Anew research group launched in St. John's Tuesday to work on a national strategy to support the mental health of the country's police, paramedics, firefighters, corrections officers and other frontline workers.

"The goal is to increase the education, reduce stigma, build a resilience in responders so we can reduce the number that are impacted by this and certainly bring them earlier stage treatment," saidSteve Palmer,executive director of theCanadian Institute for Public Safety Research and Treatment (CIPSRT).

The organization officially launched Tuesday at Memorial University in St. John'sduringthe first of a three-day summit presented by Wounded Warriors Canada.

The goalwas to come up with concrete ideas for improving the mental and physical health of public safety workers.

"The idea is to get the research going, get the momentum going, get people working together, and find a way to do best by our public safety population," said Rose Ricciardelli, CIPSRT's associate director of corrections.

Nicholas Carleton, scientific director of the Canadian Institute for Public Safety Research and Treatment, speaks about their work at Memorial University in St. John's. (Cal Tobin/CBC)

Scientific Director Nicholas Carleton said CIPSRTbrings together academic and public safety leaders to create a new national strategy on mental health.

He said it's a monumenatl task with a massive team.

"These different public safety organizationsand the personnel that they serve are facing, in many cases, very similar challenges with respect to their mental health and their mental health concerns," he said.

"Because they are facing similar challenges, it makes sense that they should work together."

During the summit, Carleton presented one of the group's efforts to immediately help workers:an online tool set to launch next month to screen for post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and other issues.

Public safety workers can then compare their results to those of other workersand, if needed, take the information to a professional for help.

A screenshot of CIPSRT's online mental health survey for public safety workers, set to launch next month. (Cal Tobin/CBC)

'You take that home to your family'

Royal Newfoundland Constabulary Insp. Terry Corbinsaid thetool will be very useful, sinceofficers are concerned about mental health and stress injuries from the job.

"As police officers,we start our career and we go about our work every day," he said.

"We're out helping people and we don't sometimes focus on the fact [and think]'Are there any impacts in this process for us?' And you don't see that, and you take that home to your family and you're dealing with those things."

RNC Insp. Terry Corbin says Operation Reprieve was launched when police noticed a distinctive method in a cluster of residential break-ins starting in the spring. (Cal Tobin/CBC)

He said realizing the impacts of the traumas and stress experienced on the job often comes later, after you've been living it for years.

Ricciardelli noted those impacts can go well beyond the frontline workers.

"In Newfoundland, everyone is related to, knows someonewho is part of one of these [public safety] systems," she said.

"Everyone is very close. So, in essence, we're in a province where this just about affects every person, because it's so small."