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Public-facing media, policy, education, advocacy, and professional activity involving Dr. Michael “Mike” Dadson, PhD, RCC, CCC, including parliamentary testimony, national mental health initiatives, trauma-informed program development, professional commentary, public education, and advocacy related to PTSD, operational stress injuries, veterans, first responders, families, men’s mental health, neurofeedback, and trauma-informed care.
Dr. Dadson’s public-facing mental health profile includes media interviews, parliamentary testimony, international public-awareness initiatives, national program development, institutional partnerships, academic training, and public education connected to trauma recovery, military transition, public safety personnel, family systems, group counselling, and psychological resilience.
This page highlights selected examples of Dr. Dadson’s media, public interest, and mental health advocacy.
Dr. Mike Dadson’s media and public-interest mental health profile includes:
Date: March 22, 2016
Institution: Parliament of Canada
Committee: House of Commons Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security
Topic: Operational Stress Injuries and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder in Public Safety Officers and First Responders
Role: Witness, appearing as Executive and Clinical Director of the Veterans Transition Network
Location: Videoconference from Langley, British Columbia
On March 22, 2016, Dr. Mike Dadson appeared before the House of Commons Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security during its study of operational stress injuries and post-traumatic stress disorder among public safety officers and first responders.
Dr. Dadson appeared as Executive and Clinical Director of the Veterans Transition Network and spoke from his experience as a clinician, trauma therapist, national program leader, and clinical director involved in group-based trauma recovery programming.
His testimony connected clinical trauma care with public policy questions about PTSD, operational stress injuries, public safety personnel, first responders, veteran transition, family impact, access to support, and trauma-informed systems of care.
Date: November 2016
Location: London, United Kingdom
Public Setting: Canada House, Trafalgar Square
Project: Contact! Unload
Fields: Research-Based Theatre, veterans’ mental health, operational stress injuries, military transition, public mental health advocacy, trauma-informed public education
Public Audiences and Settings: Canada House, HRH Prince Harry, Canadian High Commission, King’s College London, Brookwood Military Cemetery, international scholars, military leaders, public officials, and dignitaries
Dr. Michael “Mike” Dadson participated in the international public-awareness deployment of Contact! Unload, a Canadian initiative using Research-Based Theatre to bring the lived experiences of military veterans, operational stress injuries, trauma recovery, and military-to-civilian transition into public performance and dialogue.
Contact! Unload translated real-life trauma narratives into public performance, helping bridge the gap between clinical trauma knowledge and public understanding. The project connected veterans, scholars, clinicians, artists, and community members in a public mental health initiative focused on the emotional, physical, cognitive, relational, and social effects of service-related trauma.
During the London delegation, Dr. Dadson participated in high-profile public, diplomatic, academic, and ceremonial events connected to veterans’ mental health and Remembrance Week. These included presentations at Canada House in Trafalgar Square, a performance attended by HRH Prince Harry, meetings and dialogue at the Canadian High Commission, and professional engagement with academic and trauma specialists in London.
As part of the Canadian delegation, Dr. Dadson also met with the Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom and participated in Remembrance ceremonies at Brookwood Military Cemetery, one of the United Kingdom’s most significant military cemeteries and a major site of Commonwealth war remembrance. His participation included ceremonial remembrance activities honouring fallen soldiers and recognizing the continuing mental health impact of military service, operational trauma, and sacrifice.
This international advocacy activity connected Dr. Dadson’s clinical expertise in PTSD, operational stress injuries, group-based trauma recovery, and veteran transition with diplomatic engagement, public education, remembrance, and global mental health awareness.
Dr. Dadson has contributed to public mental health awareness through media interviews, public commentary, promotional appearances, professional articles, and public-facing education.
His public commentary has addressed PTSD, operational stress injuries, military-to-civilian transition, first responder trauma, isolation, identity disruption, moral injury, family strain, men’s mental health, couples counselling, neurofeedback, and trauma recovery.
As a clinical leader with the Veterans Transition Network, Dr. Dadson helped explain the Veterans Transition Program model to public audiences, media outlets, funders, veterans, families, and clinical communities.
Date: Winter 2018/2019
Publication: Rehab Magazine
Public Archive: Veterans Transition Network
Topic: Veterans’ mental health, PTSD, military-to-civilian transition, identity disruption, isolation, reintegration, and group-based trauma recovery
Featured Clinical Voices: Dr. Mike Dadson and Laura Bull, VTN clinical colleague and local counselling colleague
Dr. Mike Dadson was featured as a clinical voice in a national media article addressing how Canada supports veterans during the transition from military to civilian life.
The Rehab Magazine feature, archived by the Veterans Transition Network, included commentary from Laura Bull, a VTN clinician and local counselling colleague, and Dr. Mike Dadson, then Clinical Director of the Veterans Transition Network. Together, their public commentary helped explain the psychological and social challenges faced by veterans after service, including loss of meaning, isolation, PTSD symptoms, difficulty reconnecting with family and community, and limited access to specialized care in smaller or rural communities.
In the feature, Dr. Dadson explained the Veterans Transition Program as a structured pathway helping veterans return to civilian life, pursue their potential, and build meaningful lives after service.
This national media feature helped draw public attention to the need for specialized, group-based trauma recovery programs for veterans, women veterans, first responders, couples, families, and people affected by operational stress injuries.
Dr. Dadson’s public-interest mental health advocacy included activity connected to specialized trauma programming for women veterans and women affected by service-related trauma.
Through his leadership with the Veterans Transition Network, Dr. Dadson helped bring public attention to the need for gender-aware trauma care. This work recognized that women veterans and women first responders may face distinctive forms of trauma exposure, institutional injury, isolation, family disruption, identity strain, and barriers to care.
Specialized women’s trauma programming helped create safer group environments where participants could process complex experiences, reduce isolation, rebuild trust, reconnect with community, and pursue meaningful civilian lives after service.
From 2014 to 2018, Dr. Dadson served as National Executive Director and Clinical Director of the Veterans Transition Network.
In this role, his public-facing activity included national clinical leadership, program development, clinician training, public promotion, media representation, institutional communication, and the launch and expansion of specialized trauma-informed programming.
Dr. Dadson’s role connected clinical trauma knowledge with national service delivery, media education, funder communication, public advocacy, program launches, and public-interest mental health care.
A significant part of Dr. Dadson’s public-interest program activity involved improving access to trauma-informed care for underserved veteran populations.
This included activity connected to specialized programming for women veterans and French-language programming for Francophone veterans and families. These initiatives addressed barriers related to gender, geography, language, military culture, stigma, trauma history, and family impact.
Dr. Dadson’s public-facing activity intersected with a national network of veteran-support organizations, funders, clinicians, public advocates, academic partners, and institutional leaders.
During his Veterans Transition Network leadership, VTN’s program environment included support from major Canadian veteran and military-family organizations such as True Patriot Love Foundation, Wounded Warriors Canada, the Royal Canadian Legion, the Quebec Veterans Foundation, and other supporters.
Dr. Dadson’s public-interest mental health activity also intersected with COPE, Couples Overcoming PTSD Every Day, a group-based program focused on veterans, first responders, spouses, partners, PTSD, operational stress injuries, and the relational effects of trauma.
COPE recognizes that trauma does not affect only the individual. PTSD and operational stress injuries also affect spouses, families, attachment systems, emotional safety, communication patterns, and the process of rebuilding civilian life.
A 2015 Canadian Institute for Military and Veteran Health Research abstract identified Dr. Mike Dadson among the psychologists and counsellors involved in the development of COPE.
Institutional Context: University of British Columbia
Role: Advisory board / advisory committee involvement connected to group counselling and trauma
Associated Leaders: Dr. Marla Buchanan and Dr. Marvin Westwood
Fields: Group counselling, trauma treatment, operational stress injuries, clinician training, public education, and community mental health capacity
Dr. Dadson’s public-facing mental health activity has also included academic and training involvement connected to group counselling, trauma treatment, operational stress injuries, and community-based clinical education.
Through UBC-related trauma and group counselling initiatives, Dr. Dadson’s activity connected clinical practice with academic research, clinician training, public education, and applied trauma care. This involvement helped translate complex trauma research into practical frameworks for counsellors, clinicians, and community mental health providers.
Dr. Dadson’s academic and advisory involvement also connected with the broader public mission of trauma-informed group work: helping communities, clinicians, veterans, first responders, and families better understand and respond to operational stress injuries, PTSD, and the relational effects of trauma.
The Sequential Trauma Narrative emerged in part from Dr. Dadson’s long-term clinical, public policy, public advocacy, media, and program-development activity with trauma-affected individuals, families, veterans, first responders, couples, and communities.
The framework explores how traumatic experiences are encoded, stored, remembered, narrated, and transformed through therapeutic relationship, emotional safety, attachment repair, nervous-system regulation, family connection, group process, and meaning-making.
The Sequential Trauma Narrative also serves as a public education framework, helping clinicians, clients, families, and public audiences understand how trauma disrupts memory, identity, attachment, nervous-system regulation, and meaning — and how recovery often involves rebuilding a coherent story of self, relationship, loss, survival, and future possibility.
The Sequential Trauma Narrative reflects Dr. Dadson’s broader mental health activity across PTSD, operational stress injuries, veteran transition, first responder trauma, men’s mental health, father-son relational injuries, dissociation, couples counselling, group therapy, family recovery, and public education.
Dr. Dadson has contributed to public and professional education through articles, interviews, commentary, clinical publications, and media-distributed mental health resources.
His public education activity has addressed PTSD, trauma recovery, operational stress injuries, trauma neurobiology, dissociation, neurofeedback, men’s mental health, father-son relational trauma, couples counselling, media stress, crisis response, and psychological resilience.
Selected Topic Areas
Dr. Mike Dadson’s public-facing mental health profile includes parliamentary testimony, international advocacy, media interviews, public commentary, national program leadership, institutional partnerships, academic training, professional publications, public education, and the Sequential Trauma Narrative.
Across these activities, Dr. Dadson has helped bring trauma-informed clinical knowledge into public policy discussions, national mental health initiatives, media education, institutional partnerships, international public-awareness settings, and accessible resources for individuals, couples, families, veterans, first responders, and communities affected by trauma.