News

For Canadian veterans wounded by bullets, shells or gas attacks, the end of the First World War heralded a new battle: the fight with Ottawa for support and benefits.
They are invisible veterans of an unpopular war, so reticent about their experience that next-door neighbors may never know that they served in Vietnam. Yet 56 of their comrades died in that war. T… ...
Paul Franklin wishes these papers would go AWOL. The retired Canadian Master Cpl. lost both of his legs from near the knees up in 2006, and has to relive the grim fact every year when he fills out … ...
The Canada Senate Subcommittee on Veterans Affairs held a press conference on Nov. 8 to talk about its newest report on psychedelic-assisted therapy. Entitled “The Time is Now: Granting ...
Scheer vows to clear backlog of Canadian veterans waiting to receive benefits. By Staff The Canadian Press Posted September 22, 2019 10:35 am. Updated September 22, 2019 7:11 pm.
A Canadian armed forces veteran suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and a traumatic brain injury was offered medical assistance in dying by an employee of Veterans Affairs Canada.
Footnotes. Competing interests: Kayla May is a knowledge mobilization specialist with the Chronic Pain Centre of Excellence for Canadian Veterans, where Abhimanyu Sud serves as chief scientific ...
More than 25,000 people across 61 communities were experiencing homelessness in Canada last year, with 4.4% identifying as veterans of the Canadian Armed Forces and 0.3% as veterans of the Royal ...