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Friday, August 31, 2018
3 Ontario Provincial Police die by Suicide
OPP launch internal review after 3 officers die by suicide
By Alanna RizzaThe Canadian Press
Thu., Aug. 30, 2018
The
recent suicides of three officers in as many weeks has prompted
Ontario’s provincial police force to launch an internal review on what
might be preventing those within its ranks from seeking help with mental
health issues.
In announcing the analysis that will examine
suicides and attempted suicides involving force members over the last
five years, Ontario Provincial Police also said they would work on
developing ways to boost supports offered to officers.
“The
OPP recognizes that there is stigma associated with suicide and mental
illness,” Ontario Provincial Police Commissioner Vince Hawkes said
Thursday. “Although we don’t have all the answers, and I certainly don’t
have all the answers, we will continue to work together to break down
the barriers and provide support.” Read more: OPP union president urges members to seek help in wake of three officer suicides
Opinion | Readers’ Letters: End stigma of mental illness in OPP
The
force’s internal review will try to identify similarities between
suicides and attempted suicides in the force and look at what might have
hindered those individuals from getting help, Hawkes said.
A
series of round tables — made up of officers, mental health experts and
family of first responders — will also be launched to craft
recommendations on how the force can improve the mental health
assistance it offers, he said.
The initiatives will build on the
force’s mental health strategy created in response to a 2012 ombudsman
report that looked at OPP officers suffering from depression, anxiety
and post-traumatic stress disorder due to trauma on the job. The report
said the force was failing to help those officers and a list of
recommendations was provided.
“The OPP continues to make mental
health a priority for our people and our community but clearly we need
to do more,” Hawkes said. “There are serious gaps and barriers that
require further examination, review and evaluation.”
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Earlier
this month, Sgt. Sylvian Routhier, Det. Inspector Paul Horne and Const.
Joshua De Bock died by suicide within a three-week period, the OPP
said. Their jobs ranged from front-line work to special investigations
and they were posted in different parts of the province, the force said.
The
deaths prompted the head of the union representing provincial police
officers to write a deeply personal letter urging members to reach out
if they found themselves in emotional distress.
Hawkes
said the entire force had spent the last few weeks grieving the loss of
the three officers, adding that their deaths left a “tremendous void.”
In the last 30 years, the OPP has documented 24 force members and nine retired members that died by suicide, Hawkes said.
The
commissioner added that the force is also meeting with the province to
determine how the government can help provide better mental health
support to first responders.
Vince Savoia, executive director of
the Tema Conter Memorial Trust, which focuses on the mental health of
first responders, said he’s “thankful” that the OPP is conducting an
internal review and having more discussions about mental illness.
Savoia
said he looks forward to the review’s completion and that he hopes the
OPP makes the findings of the exercise public. He added that it will be
important to compare the findings of the review to information available
from other police forces.
“The internal review is integral to be
able to analyze those findings,” Savoia said. “This will bring attention
to the reality that first responders are at risk of suicide.”
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