The Darker Side of Military Mental Healthcare Part One: Understanding the Military ’s Mental Health Dilemma

AbstractThe military ’s primary mission is to prevent, fight, and win wars. A critical key to its success is the military’s dual mission of force health protection that translates to preventing and treating the physical and psychological wounds of war in order topreserve the fighting force. To accomplish both missions, the military relies extensively on documenting its lessons learned to build upon its successes and prevent avoidable disasters caused by repeating its failures. The military ’s commitment to learning battlefield lessons are directly responsible for unparalleled technological and medical, life-saving advances that greatly benefit both military and private sectors. However, the evolution of modern industrialized warfare’s capacity to kill, maim, and terrorize has exce eded the limits of human endurance whereby psychiatric casualties have outnumbered the total of combatants, both wounded- and killed-in-action, since the Second World War. Psychiatric attrition and skyrocketing costs associated with psychiatric treatment and disability compensation threaten the mili tary’s capacity to accomplish its primary mission as well as risk straining the finances of society, thereby presenting a significant mental health dilemma. Central to the military’s mental health dilemma are two competing alternatives: (1) to fulfill its moral, ethical, and legal obligation of preventing and treating war stress injuries by learning from its documented lessons learned, or (2)...
Source: Psychological Injury and Law - Category: Medical Law Source Type: research