Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
Networking

Forum for first responders suffering from PTSD at KPU

KPU Surrey23 Feb '17 to 24 Feb '17 @ 12:00 AM - 12:00 AM
    “911. Do you require police, ambulance or fire?”
     
    Former 911 operator Rae-Lynne Dicks said these words literally thousands of times during her 10-year career. She listened to the screams of domestic abuse victims as they cried for her help, and the quietly desperate words of sexual assault victims who had been brutally beaten.  
     
    She listened to the last words of fire victims waiting to be rescued, and she convinced homicide suspects to stay on the phone with her until police arrived to arrest them. She talked a suicidal man, barricaded in his home, out to safety.
     
    Now living with chronic post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), Dicks will share her experiences in healing and post traumatic growth at an upcoming symposium on mental health and first responders at Kwantlen Polytechnic University (KPU) later this month.
     
    “Too often, first responders, and particularly 911 operators, suffer in silence,” says Dicks, who is also a KPU alumna. “The point of this conference is to provide a venue at which students, first responders, professionals, faculty, and members of the community can come together to share our knowledge, resources and support one another.”
     
    “Connections in First Responder Mental Health” is jointly organized by the criminology department at KPU and Badge of Life Canada, a non-profit volunteer organization committed to supporting police and corrections personnel dealing with the psychological injuries suffered in the line of duty. Badge of Life also has a mandate to advance the public’s understanding of operational stress injuries, including post-traumatic stress and suicide prevention.
     
    “We’re trying to spread awareness of the realities of PTSD: that support and treatment are available, and PTSD does not have to end in suicide,” said Alana Abramson, a criminology instructor at KPU helping to organize the conference.
     
    PTSD increases risks of aggression, self-harm, suicide, depression, anxiety, relationship breakdowns, substance misuse, and other troubling health concerns. Often first responders—911 communications operators, law enforcement, fire fighters, paramedics, social workers, emergency room personnel, correctional officers, victims services workers—suffer in silence with PTSD.
     
    Dicks graduated from the public safety communications program at KPU in 1993 and worked as a 911 operator for 10 years before developing PTSD. Her work took her into the depths of other peoples’ despair, until she could no longer hear their stories, or function as a human being.  Unable to do the job she loved, Dicks sank into a major depression and was suicidal for two years. Dicks credits her cat, Tomi, for her survival: Tomi refused to leave her alone and set her on the path to healing. 
     
    “I am absolutely passionate about breaking the silence surrounding mental health and stress-related injuries for first responders, and I firmly believe that those of us with lived experience have much to contribute to the conversations and the change of the status quo,” affirms Dicks.
     
    “Connections in First Responder Mental Health” is set for Feb. 23 and 24 at KPU Surrey, 12666 72nd Ave. Tickets are available for one or both days of the conference, ranging from $5 for students for one day, to $150 for professionals for both days. For more information, including a full schedule of events and to buy tickets and register, visit https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/connections-in-first-responder-mental-health-tickets-31327856462
    Event Location KPU Surrey
    Address: 12666 72nd Ave
    Post Code: V3W 2M8

    MORE Networking ARTICLES

    Open Mic with Surrey’s first Poet Laureate, Renée Sarojini Saklikar

    10350 University Dr | 09/12/2016 - 09/11/2016

    Participants are welcome to bring one page of their writing to read and share at an Open Mic hosted by the Surrey Poet Laureate who will read from her own work.

    Open Mic with Surrey’s first Poet Laureate, Renée Sarojini Saklikar

    09/12/2016 - 09/11/2016

    B.C.’s biggest tech event returns with thought leaders, game-changing tech

    Pan Pacific Vancouver, Vancouver Convention Centre West Building, 3C1,, 1055 Canada Pl | 14/03/2017 - 15/03/2017

    From natural resources and agriculture to health and digital media, the second #BCTECH Summit will explore how tech is impacting every part of B.C.'s economy and changing lives.

    B.C.’s biggest tech event returns with thought leaders, game-changing tech

    14/03/2017 - 15/03/2017

    TWU stages world premiere about refugees to Canada

    Robert N. Thompson Building, 7600 Glover Rd | 22/11/2016 - 03/12/2016

    The show, called disPLACE: Refugee Stories in Their Own Words, tells the true stories of people who courageously shared their experiences with the artists – from Mennonite immigrants who fled Europe after World War II, to recently arrived Syrian refugees.

    TWU stages world premiere about refugees to Canada

    22/11/2016 - 03/12/2016

    SBOT & BDC Youth Film & Dialogue

    7929 152 St | 23/11/2016 - 23/11/2016

    If the Millennial Dream is about doing well by doing good, how do business owners need to adapt?  

    SBOT & BDC Youth Film & Dialogue

    23/11/2016 - 23/11/2016

    eWomenNetwork Vancouver Holiday Extravaganza

    2001 Nanton Avenue | 08/12/2016 - 08/12/2016

    Get a head start on your holiday shopping with eWomenNetwork members and other local businesses.

    eWomenNetwork Vancouver Holiday Extravaganza

    08/12/2016 - 08/12/2016

    Renowned Indian journalist to discuss India in transition at SFU

    515 W. Hastings Street | 24/10/2016 - 24/10/2016

    At SFU, the discussion will be moderated by Prof. S. Parasuraman, director of the Tata Institute of Social Sciences and currently a visiting scholar in the school.

    Renowned Indian journalist to discuss India in transition at SFU

    24/10/2016 - 24/10/2016