Monday, February 24, 2014

MILITARY - Mental Illness Programs Not Working

"Military using unproven programs to take on mental illness" PBS Newshour 2/23/2014

Excerpt

HARI SREENIVASAN (Newshour):  It’s estimated that nearly a thousand additional Iraq and Afghanistan veterans are being diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder every week.  A report out Thursday by the Institute of Medicine said that despite dozens of programs by the military to help treat the mental illnesses that veterans suffer, few of them are proving effective.  For more we’re joined by Gregg Zoroya of USA Today who has been covering this story.  So the Department of Defense asked for this review, what did it find?

GREGG ZOROYA, USA Today:  Well it really was a review that was, the request was really built on something that happened last year.  The Institute of Medicine had completed a four-year review of just how prevalent the problem was and they found that the numbers of folks that were ill were really kind of getting so large that both the Pentagon and the V.A. were having trouble staying ahead of it.  So the Pentagon asked for this report.  They wanted to know — we’ve got prevention programs out there, why aren’t they working?  And essentially what this panel, from the Institute of Medicine, found was that while some of these ideas in theory made sense when they were introduced earlier in the war, that there really hadn’t been a strong enough effort by the Pentagon and by some of the branches to try to understand whether through some real strong scientific research whether the programs worked.  And they found that in fact, they hadn’t.

No comments: