'We're just human beings': Former Calgary first responder hopes to help others with PTSD


When Chad Kennedy arrived at a horrific bus crash nearly two years in the past, he says it despatched him into the darkest place he'd ever been in his life.


Kennedy, who was working with the Alberta Freeway Patrol on the time, was one of many first responders on the scene of a tour bus crash on the Columbia Icefield on July 19, 2020.


A number of RCMP detachments from the realm, together with Jasper, Banff and Lake Louise, all responded to the scene, together with three STARS helicopters.


Three folks died within the crash and the 24 different folks on board have been injured, a few of them critically.


Following the incident, Kennedy was identified with post-traumatic stress dysfunction (PTSD).


Unable to work as a primary responder anymore, he is now made it his mission to share his story of survival with anybody else who's battling PTSD.


Kennedy's additionally going to nice lengths to verify his message is heard – strolling from Cranbrook, B.C. to St. John's, Nfld.


He hopes that anybody who listens to his Sea to Sea for PTSD lecture will perceive the stress that first responders should face every day whereas on the job.


"We have all these people on the market which are protecting the general public secure and, on the finish of the day, beneath these uniforms, we're simply human beings," Kennedy instructed CTV Information in an interview in Lethbridge on Thursday.


"We have to do not forget that – we will not let our jobs determine ourselves. At the start we're human and it is okay to not be okay."


Kennedy started his journey on April 4 and expects to achieve the Atlantic by mid-October.


For extra particulars on Sea to Sea for PTSD in addition to a strategy to donate to his mission, you may go to the official web site.

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