Tuesday, April 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Military reports 16 suicides in 2020

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2021 10:02 AM
  • Military reports 16 suicides in 2020

The Canadian Armed Forces says 16 service members took their own lives last year.

That represents a slight decline from the 20 military suicides reported in 2019, which was the largest number in five years.

The new figures nonetheless bring the total number of Canadian military personnel who have died by suicide over the last decade to 191. That is more than the 158 service members who were killed while serving in Afghanistan from 2001 to 2014.

Military commanders have expressed concern about the mental well-being of those in uniform, particularly given the COVID-19 pandemic and a drop in the number of members accessing support services.

Acting defence chief Lt.-Gen. Wayne Eyre told The Canadian Press last week that he was seeing "cracks" in the military, including among individual troops who have been working overtime during the pandemic.

A survey of nearly 20,000 Armed Forces members last spring also saw about one-third of troops report that their mental health had deteriorated during the pandemic, but only one in 10 had received some form of care.

The new figures show 14 full-time regular-force members and two reservists died by suicide in 2020. The figures did not break the numbers down by gender.

The federal government introduced a suicide-prevention strategy for military personnel and veterans in 2017 after a rash of suicides during the last few years of the war in Afghanistan cast a spotlight on the issue.

The strategy promised to improve the services and support available to military members and veterans in the hope of increasing awareness and reducing the number of suicides in both populations.

That included adding more medical staff, training personnel on how to respond if someone shows warning signs for suicide and introducing new measures to ease the transition to civilian life for those leaving the Forces.

Yet while dozens of initiatives associated with the strategy have been implemented, a number remain works in progress.

Lt.-Gen. Steve Whelan, who recently took over as the military's top human resources officer, was hopeful the work undertaken through the strategy has had an impact, even if it can't be properly measured.

"Maybe without the suicide prevention strategy, there might have been more, but we'll never know that," Whelan said in an interview. "The one thing about suicide prevention is you never know how many suicides would have been prevented as a result of the strategy."

The Canadian Armed Forces for years resisted suggestions service members were more at risk of suicide than the general public, but reversed course after a landmark study from Veterans Affairs Canada in 2017 suggested it was true.

MORE National ARTICLES

799 COVID cases on Tuesday

799 COVID cases on Tuesday
1,671,128 doses of Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines have been administered in B.C., 89,457 of which are second doses

799 COVID cases on Tuesday

51 year old man charged in the murder of Abbotsford resident Harpreet Singh Dhaliwal

51 year old man charged in the murder of Abbotsford resident Harpreet Singh Dhaliwal
Harpreet Singh Dhaliwal, 31, was pronounced dead on scene after first responders were unsuccessful in reviving him.

51 year old man charged in the murder of Abbotsford resident Harpreet Singh Dhaliwal

Vancouver police urge calm after fatal stabbing

Vancouver police urge calm after fatal stabbing
Sgt. Steve Addison says Vancouver police are "asking everybody to stay calm after we've seen an uptick in potentially harmful online rhetoric."

Vancouver police urge calm after fatal stabbing

Auditor says B.C. avalanche management working

Auditor says B.C. avalanche management working
Michael Pickup says in a statement the audit found avalanche deaths on B.C. highways are rare events and road closures due to avalanches are declining.

Auditor says B.C. avalanche management working

Fraser Health Announces Drop in Clinics for Today

Fraser Health Announces Drop in Clinics for Today
In addition, people 30 years of age and older can now get AstraZeneca, and Fraser Health has drop in clinics today to support this for people who live in the ten high transmission neighborhoods in the Fraser Health region.

Fraser Health Announces Drop in Clinics for Today

Shooting incident at Coquitlam Town Centre Mall sends one man to hospital

Shooting incident at Coquitlam Town Centre Mall sends one man to hospital
One male victim is being treated for stab wounds in hospital and Mounties say that incident is connected to the shooting.

Shooting incident at Coquitlam Town Centre Mall sends one man to hospital