Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Clear Your Browser Cache

This website has recently undergone changes. As a result, the website is experiencing intermittent interruptions. We're aware of this issue and we're working to resolve these issues. Users finding unexpected concerns may care to clear their browser's cache to ensure a seamless experience.

Defense Health Agency Leaders Discuss Suicide Prevention, Future of Military Medicine

Image of Defense Health Agency Leaders Discuss Suicide Prevention, Future of Military Medicine. Defense Health Agency Director U.S. Army Lt. Gen Telita Crosland answers a question from Gretchen Berling, senior director at McKinsey & Company, during the AMSUS-sponsored “Thought Leadership Forum” in Washington, D.C. on Oct. 4, 2023. (credit: Robert Hammer, Military Health System)

The Department of Defense is committed to preventing suicide within our military by creating a supportive environment, improving delivery of mental health services, and reducing the stigma associated with asking for support.

Suicide prevention is about more than just finding a doctor, it’s about noticing warning signs and connecting with an individual before it’s too late.

“Anybody can reach out and put their arm around somebody today and save a life,” said Dr. Brian Lein, assistant director of health care administration with Defense Health Agency. “Think about that.”

Defense Health Agency Leaders Discuss Suicide Prevention, Future of Military MedicineDr. Brian Lein, assistant director of health care administration, Defense Health Agency, sits on a panel discussing suicide prevention during an AMSUS-sponsored “Thought Leadership Forum” in Washington, D.C. on Oct. 4, 2023.
(Credit: Robert Hammer, Military Health System)

Lein emphasized that anyone can help a person in crisis during a suicide prevention thought panel with other senior health leaders from the DHA, Veterans Health Administration, and private industry on Oct. 4, 2023, in Washington, D.C. The forum, titled “Advancing Healthier Communities: Behavioral Health and Other Trends Today,” was sponsored by AMSUS, the Society of Federal Health Professionals.

“The importance of suicide prevention for our military, is one that is key to military readiness and the overall well-being of the force. Not just to that individual, but to that unit, and to the family,” said Lein.

He pointed out that behavioral health isn’t just a health issue. Figuring out what put someone into a situation of a mental health crisis is critical to preventing these situations.

“It is not just on the medical community to have to figure out how to respond to this,” Lein said. “How do we identify what the triggers are that puts the individual in the circle? And in the cycle? Is it financial? Is it relationship? Is it spiritual? What's the issue?”

Lein also shared that he believes “not everybody needs to be seen by a behavioral health provider. How do we broaden the definition of who's a first responder to the behavioral health crisis?”

Many senior DOD leaders have already stood up and said: “’Hey, I have mental health issues, and I'm proud to say that because I reached out and got help.’ We must continue to remove the stigma associated with asking for help!”

Encouraging other leaders to speak out, he said, will help all to seek help before it is too late.

U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Telita Crosland, the director of DHA, also spoke during the panel and provided an update on the state of the DHA and spoke on mental health in the military.

When asked about how the DHA is intending to change health care, Crosland shared her direction for the agency; on creating a “person-centered” environment and using technology to facilitate a new way of delivering health care.

She talked about an upcoming pilot project in several treatment facilities where the DHA is launching these new technologies and strategies, as mentioned in the recently released DHA Strategic Plan.

Crosland mentioned that she wants the DHA to lead the evolution of health care from “value-based care” to “patient-centered care”.

“What we're unable to do is break the cycle of the fee for service to remedy, we're unable to break away from the dollars,” said Crosland. “I think in the DHA, we have the opportunity to have that horizontal and vertical, because we are the payer, we do run a system, and our patients stay with us. We have all the right incentives to break away from the primary driver being dollars.”

Defining what it means to have access, other than meaning having an appointment, is one area the project will look at.

“Access from a human perspective may be simply, ‘I need my results.’ It may be a question, it might be a five-minute conversation with a physician,” she said.

“So, that’s the journey we're on. We're starting with primary care and behavioral health.”

“We're going to leverage some of the digital health tools in 2023 that we know make a difference … then we'll model that very quickly,” said Crosland. “Then we'll scale it across the system.”

You also may be interested in...

Article Around MHS
Aug 9, 2024

Uniformed Services University Center for Deployment Psychology Awarded Top Prize for Virtual Suicide Prevention Learning Tool

Virtual learning tool start screen

The Center for Deployment Psychology at the Uniformed Services University was awarded the Gold Medal for Healthcare Games at the recent International Serious Play Awards in Toronto, Canada. The conference offered an opportunity for researchers, educators, and game developers to grow their skills in game-based learning.

Article Around MHS
Aug 7, 2024

Fort Drum Soldiers in Recovery Experience Posttraumatic Growth Through Innovative Program

U.S. Army soldiers in recovery currently assigned to Fort Drum’s Soldier Recovery Unit walk the labyrinth during the Boulder Crest Foundation’s five-day Struggle Well program at Fort Drum

For soldiers in recovery, the path to healing following trauma can be a long and challenging road. While many focus on the visible physical injuries soldiers endure, the emotional trauma hidden behind the surface can leave a lasting impact if not adequately addressed. Through the Struggle Well program at Fort Drum, New York, soldiers participate is ...

Article Around MHS
Jul 29, 2024

Celebrating One Year with Nalu: How Tripler Army Medical Center’s Facility Dog Makes a Difference to Patients and Staff Alike

Nalu the service dog poses with staff at Tripler Army Medical Center

Nalu, a 2-year-old Labrador retriever, is a full-time Tripler Army Medical Center hospital facility dog. He is present in the Child and Family Behavioral Health Service Clinic, where he works alongside Dr. Kathryn Egan, a child psychiatrist, and licensed clinical social workers.

Article Around MHS
May 27, 2024

Revolutionizing Mental Health Support: The Game Changing Role of the U.S. Navy Special Psychiatric Rapid Intervention Team

Navy Medicine graphic

Seven sailors died, and 48 others were injured when the guided a missile frigate and the aircraft carrier collided while performing nighttime exercises on Nov. 22, 1975. For years, the traumatic experience of that collision scarred many sailors who escaped physical injury but carried the invisible weight of the tragedy. The psychiatrists involved in ...

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: November 14, 2023
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery