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Thursday, October 29, 2009

VA, DOD officials host national mental-health summit

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Cherie Cullen
Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates addresses the audience alongside Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki during the DoD⁄VA Mental Health Summit on Oct. 26 in Washington, D.C. The first-of-its-kind summit featured mental-health experts from both departments, other cabinet agencies and nongovernmental organizations to discuss a public health model for enhanced mental-health care for returning service members, veterans and their families.
Officials with the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Department of Defense hosted a first-of-its-kind national summit to address the mental health care needs of America’s military personnel, families and veterans, aiming to harness the programs, resources and expertise of both departments to deal with the aftermath of the battlefield.

‘‘This is about doing what is best for those who serve this country and using every federal, state and community asset to do it,” VA Secretary Eric Shinseki said. ‘‘We’re proud of the people and the organizations who have stepped up today to make sure everyone who fought for this country gets a fighting chance for a sound mind and an independent life.”

The summit, which opened Oct. 26 at the Capital Hilton, invited mental-health experts from both departments, Congress, the president’s cabinet and more than 57 nongovernment organizations to discuss a wide-ranging public health model for enhancing mental-health for returning service members, veterans and their families.

Striking down the stigma associated with the mental-health risks of service in a combat zone is among the priorities of the joint VA-DoD campaign on mental health for service members, veterans and their families.

Various studies show a large incidence of post-traumatic stress disorder occurs during the lifetime of many combat veterans.

A final report issued following the summit will summarize policies, programs and practices that show promise for enhancing the well-being and care for individual service members, veterans and their families.

VA and DoD officials view the mental health of returning service members and veterans as a matter of public health and an opportunity to engage in a broad response throughout America.

VA officials operate the largest mental-health program in the nation.

They have bolstered their mental-health capacity to serve combat veterans by adding thousands of professionals to the rolls in the past four years.

Department officials also have established a suicide-prevention hotline — 800-273-TALK — and a Web site available for online discussions at www.suicidepreventionlifeline.org⁄Veterans.

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