@article{9cd1f79ade9d41dcb47e5ac1a37befa3,
title = "Suicidal ideation, plans, and attempts among public safety personnel in Canada",
author = "Carleton, {Nicholas R.} and Afifi, {Tracie O.} and Sarah Turner and Tamara Taillieu and LeBouthillier, {Daniel M.} and Sophie Duranceau and Jitender Sareen and Rosemary Ricciardelli and MacPhee, {Ren{\'e}e S.} and Dianne Groll and Kadie Hozempa and Alain Brunet and Weekes, {John R.} and Griffiths, {Curt T.} and Abrams, {Kelly J.} and Jones, {Nicholas A.} and Shadi Beshai and Cramm, {Heidi A.} and Dobson, {Keith S.} and Simon Hatcher and Keane, {Terence M.} and Stewart, {Sherry H.} and Asmundson, {Gordon J.G.}",
note = "Funding Information: Special thanks for recruitment support provided by the (alphabetically): Badge of Life Canada, Behind the Red Serge, Canadian Association for Police Governance (CAPG), Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police (CACP), Canadian Association of Fire Chiefs (CAFC), Canadian Institute for Military and Veteran Health Research (CIMVHR), Canadian Ministry of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness, Canadian Police Association (CPA), Community Safety Knowledge Alliance, Correctional Service of Canada (CSC), Families of the RCMP for PTSD Awareness, First Responder Mental Health Network Collaboration, International Association of Firefighters (IAFF), Justice Institute of British Columbia, Mental Health Commission of Canada, Mood Disorders Society of Canada, Nova Scotia Operational Stress Injury Clinic - Capital Health, Paramedic Association of Canada (PAC), Paramedic Chiefs of Canada (PCC), Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), Tema Conter Trust, Union of Solicitor General Employees (USGE), and Wounded Warriors Canada. All authors made substantial contributions consistent with the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors. The details describing the contributions are presented below alphabetically by last name. Initial project design was a collaborative effort based on the following contributors, each of whom was responsible for overseeing their area-specific domains for assessment, all of whom reviewed, revised as necessary, and approved the final design in its entirety: Abrams, Afifi, Asmundson, Beshai, Brunet, Carleton, Cramm, Dobson, Duranceau, Griffiths, Groll, Hatcher, Jones, Keane, LeBouthillier, MacPhee, Ricciardelli, Sareen, Stewart, Weekes. Implementation was a collaborative effort primarily driven by: Abrams, Afifi, Asmundson, Carleton, Duranceau, Griffiths, Groll, Hozempa, Jones, LeBouthillier, MacPhee, Ricciardelli, Sareen, Stewart, Weekes. Analysis for the current article was a collaborate effort primarily driven by each of the following: Afifi, Asmundson, Carleton, Cramm, Hozempa, Sareen, Taillieu, Turner; however, area-specific analytic information was provided by different authors as required. Write up for the current article was a collaborate effort primarily driven by each of the following: Asmundson, Afifi, Carleton, Sareen, Taillieu, Turner; however, all authors reviewed the document and provided detailed feedback that was ultimately integrated into the submitted manuscript. All authors also approved the submitted version of the manuscript. The study was approved by the University of Regina Institutional Research Ethics Board (File 2016-107). We complied with Canadian Psychological Association ethical standards in the treatment of our sample. The survey was available for voluntary participation from 09/01/2016 to 01/31/2017. All interested persons were directed to a website with study details and were required to explicitly indicate consent before proceeding. There are no details, images, or videos relating to an individual person presented in the current manuscript. The data sets generated and/or analysed during the current study are not publicly available due guarantees made in the data collection consent form regarding protections to ensure participant confidentiality. R. Nicholas Carleton{\textquoteright}s research is supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) through a New Investigator Award (FRN: 285489). Tracie O. Afifi{\textquoteright}s research is supported by a CIHR New Investigator Award and Foundation Scheme Award. This research was also funded in part by the Ministry of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness through the Policy Development Contribution Program. Dr. Sareen is a consultant for UPTODATE and has written the Epidemiology Chapter for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. This work is in the field of epidemiology of work stress. Dr. Sareen does not have any conflict of interest with drug products or other industry. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2018 Canadian Psychological Association.",
year = "2018",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1037/cap0000136",
language = "English",
volume = "59",
pages = "220--231",
journal = "Canadian Psychology",
issn = "0708-5591",
publisher = "Canadian Psychological Association",
number = "3",
}