Even after 23 years, Kelly Edwards stills loves being a paramedic.
“It’s very unpredictable. It’s exciting,” she said. “You meet a lot of nice people.”
But she admits┬аthere’s a much darker side to the job, too.
Edwards recalls a time she and her partner were treating an agitated patient. That patient threw a piece of furniture at her partner, breaking his arm.┬а
“That was super uncomfortable, unacceptable,” the Ottawa paramedic said.
Edwards said she’s also been hit, kicked and spat on numerous times throughout her career. That’s on top of the verbal abuse and sexual harassment┬аshe faces daily.
“I’ve heard lots of threats of being sexually assaulted and descriptions on how they do that,” said Edwards. “It’s pretty uncomfortable when you’re in the back [of the ambulance] or┬аyou’re alone with that patient.”┬а
It’s a reality that not only affects┬аwomen in the job.┬аMathieu Roy, who’s been with the Ottawa Paramedic Service for more than┬а22┬аyears, said his safety “is put on the line pretty much on every call.”
“Being told, ‘I will kill your family’┬аwhen I meet [patients]┬аis something that occurred more than once in my career,” he said.
Marc-Andr├й P├йriard, vice-president for the Paramedic Chiefs of Canada, said stories like these have become a regular occurrence for paramedics across the country.
“A┬аlot of the … public aren’t aware that this occurs frequently. They think it’s an anomaly,” he said.
Gaps in the data
P├йriard said the problem only seems to have gotten worse over the years, but any details are mostly anecdotal.
Experiences of violence are significantly under-reported, according to P├йriard,┬аbecause there is no standardized complaint system for working paramedics. Every service has their own culture and system, he said.
That also means there’s no data available that accurately quantifies┬аwhat the approximately 40,000┬аparamedics in Canada┬аare up against while they’re at work, according to Ren├йe MacPhee, an associate professor at Wilfrid Laurier University who has focused on paramedic research over the last 30 years.
“We don’t have a fulsome picture. We don’t know how big the problem is,” said MacPhee.
Most research on the topic has been conducted in the U.S. and other countries, she said, with just a handful of jurisdictions in Canada including Saskatchewan, Manitoba and a few paramedic services in Ontario collecting their own data.
Researchers like MacPhee┬аhave been able to glean some consistent details from the available research, and it confirms that┬аparamedics are consistently experiencing physical abuse, verbal abuse and sexual assault while on the job.┬а
Some research shows the impact this has on┬аthe mental health of those in the job.
According to a 2018 study done by the Canadian Institute for Public Safety Research and Treatment, paramedics had the highest likelihood of developing suicidal behaviours among nearly 6,000┬аpublic safety personnel surveyed.┬а
National survey the first of its kind
It’s something┬аthat the Paramedic Chiefs of Canada (PCC) hopes to better understand тАФ and┬аchange тАФ with┬аan upcoming national survey┬аin partnership with MacPhee’s research team, described as the first of its kind in the country.
The survey, funded by┬аDefence Research and Development Canada, is set to roll out in the new year. It┬аwill be issued to paramedics across the country┬аin the hopes of painting a fuller picture of what paramedics are up against, and give insight into how to better protect them.
“I think we’re going to be quite┬аunpleasantly surprised┬аwith the amount of violence that has actually happening, and I don’t think the public┬аis even remotely aware that this is happening,” said MacPhee.
Researchers will interview as many paramedics┬аacross Canada as possible over the course of six weeks.┬аQuestions will focus on personal experiences of violence on the job, how paramedics are being trained to defend themselves, and the impacts violent encounters have┬аon personnel and their families.
“It’s definitely changed me,” said Edwards of her time on the front lines.┬а“It makes me less trusting of people. I know there’s good people out there, but I definitely find myself apprehensive.”
Evidence of violence could bring change
P├йriard and MacPhee said the hope is to use the results of the survey as a tool to better advocate for change┬аand ultimately make it safer for those in the profession.┬а┬а
“These are people who have dedicated their lives to caring for every single Canadian in this country, and to see them victimized as part of that job is heartbreaking,” she said.
The PCC has advocated┬аfor royal assent of┬аBill C-321,┬аwhich┬аlooks to amend Canada’s Criminal Code to┬аintroduce harsher penalties for assaulting a health-care worker or first responder. It passed third reading in the House of Commons in February, but has been stalled since.┬а┬а
The bill was recently┬аdiscussed at a Standing Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs.
A report from committee chair Brent Cotter acknowledged “that there is a serious and growing increase in acts of violence against first responders,” but added that “this bill aims to increase penalties without addressing the underlying systemic and societal issues that contribute to increases in these forms of assaults.
“Without such measures, criminal law changes risk resulting in further overrepresentation in the criminal legal system of those most marginalized,” wrote Cotter.