WASHINGTON,
Aug. 2010 – The Army is
striving to reduce soldier
suicides and mental-health
problems by giving troops
more dwell time between
deployments, identifying
tell-tale symptoms more
quickly and eliminating the
stigma of seeking help, the
Army vice chief of staff
said today.
Army
Gen. Peter W. Chiarelli
recapped findings of a task
force he commissioned to
reduce soldier suicides and
mental-health problems
during an interview with
Christiane Amanpour on
ABC’s “This Week.”
The
task force offered 250
recommendations, including
establishing health
promotion councils at each
installation, expanding
behavioral health screenings
and recruiting additional
behavioral health
counselors.
“We
have a force that has been
stressed after almost a
decade of war,” Chiarelli
said today, with many that
have been home for just 12
to 16 months between 12- to
15-month deployments.
In
some cases, this stress has
led to problems with alcohol
and drug abuse, legal
troubles, mental-health
issues and, in the most
extreme cases, suicide.
The
first step in reducing that
stress level, Chiarelli
said, is to provide soldiers
24 months before year-long
deployments, and ultimately,
three months at home for
every month deployed.
“We
know when that happens many
of the problems that we've
seen will in fact meliorate
themselves,” Chiarelli
said.
Meanwhile,
the Army is bolstering its
behavioral health staff and
encouraging more soldiers to
take advantage of their
services, he said.
It’s
an effort Chiarelli said
starts at the top. “If you
want to get at stigma, you
start with the brigade
commander [and] brigade
command sergeant major and
work right down the chain of
command so every soldier
sees his leader going
through the same checks that
the soldier's going to go
through,” he said.
“Leaders
need to lead, to know their
soldiers, to look for those
signs that they see that
Pfc. Chiarelli has changed.
Pfc. Chiarelli is going out
and maybe drinking a little
bit too much, showing up for
work late, whatever it might
be,” he said.
Part
of the problem, he conceded,
is that too many soldiers
recognize that they need
help, but put off getting it
because they feel such a
personal responsibility to
their units and battle
buddies.
“That's
one of the issues that we
have to get through is we
try to break down stigma --
to get soldiers to
understand that these hidden
wounds of war are things
that they've got to seek
help for when they have
problems,” Chiarelli said.
The
Army also is exploring
innovative approaches to
identify troops grappling
with the emotional stresses
of combat and get them the
care they need.
“We're
looking for new ways to be
able to deliver behavior
health, such as virtual
behavior health where we
literally bring up a network
using the Internet, using
the network of doctors, say
200, from all over the
United States who can, in
fact, provide a good, good
look at our soldiers when
they return,” Chiarelli
said.