Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Clear Your Browser Cache

This website has recently undergone changes. Users finding unexpected concerns may care to clear their browser's cache to ensure a seamless experience.

Mental Health Stigma Campaign Will Be New Hub of Hope

Image of Mental Health Stigma Campaign Will Be New Hub of Hope. May is Mental Health Awareness Month. Protecting, optimizing, and defending our mental health is vital to our well-being and the readiness of our military force. The Defense Health Agency Psychological Health Center of Excellence has partnered with the Defense Suicide Prevention Office to expand and enhance the Real Warriors Campaign. (DHA Courtesy Photo)

The Defense Health Agency’s Psychological Health Center of Excellence and the Defense Suicide Prevention Office have partnered to enhance and expand a public health awareness campaign in efforts to continue reducing stigma associated with seeking care for mental health.

Soon, the award-winning Real Warriors Campaign, which originally rolled out in 2009, will include additional emphasis on suicide prevention in line with Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III’s goal to eliminate suicide in the military.

“PHCoE and DSPO are developing a new five-year strategic plan for the Real Warriors Campaign. The plan will be based on current research, have an evaluation plan in place that is monitored frequently, and work actively to link to other federal agencies with similar goals,” said Kate McGraw, PHCoE branch chief, and a doctor of clinical psychology.

PHCoE is developing a joint strategy with DPSO to ensure it identifies and optimizes every available means to publicize campaign messages, McGraw said.

PHCoE’s Multilayered Outreach

Established in 2017 as a DHA center of excellence but originally dating to 1995, PHCoE has led DOD’s use of evidence to inform mental health efforts across the services. Its new partnership with DSPO is poised to enhance the campaign to further awareness of getting help for mental health and suicide prevention.

“We serve as senior experts on task forces and work groups across the federal government, with international military mental health leaders and scientists, and with the White House to help shape policy and practice of mental health care research, services, and programs for our service members and their families, not only within the DOD, but also within civilian communities where our military families live,” McGraw explained.

“PHCoE conducts a portfolio of health systems and services’ research, provides surveillance and epidemiological expertise, and is responsible for the Department of Defense Suicide Event Report, which allows DOD to better understand the factors associated with suicide attempts and deaths, and to inform leadership at all levels to help develop evidence-based plans to reduce suicide in the DOD,” she added.

The center also oversees the joint DOD/Department of Veterans Affairs Practice-Based Implementation Network, established in 2012, to more effectively bridge the gap between psychological health research and clinical practice. It allows DOD to more rapidly translate mental health research findings into clinical practice across the enterprise, McGraw said. On Feb. 7, 2023, The White House Report on Mental Health Research Priorities named the network as a best practice.

DSPO’s Roles

“From the beginning, policy, oversight, and data have been foundational to DSPO. As DSPO looks to the future, our vision is to be a hub of hope,” said DSPO Director Liz Clark.

“DSPO is expanding its focus to create comprehensive prevention, response, and postvention training resources, to lead surveillance and data analysis efforts, to translate research into practice, to promote partnerships, and to effectively communicate that life is worth living,” Clark said.

The joint efforts of PHCoE and DSPO to reduce suicide come at a time when deaths by suicide in the military were down in 2021 but have still been trending upward over the last three decades.

DSPO reported that 523 soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines died by suicide in 2021, down from 581 in 2020.

On Feb 24, 2023, the Suicide Prevention and Response Independent Review Committee released a report with recommendations to the DOD on reducing suicide in the military. The four main areas of focus are:

  • Restructuring suicide prevention training
  • Providing additional resources to help service members access existing support services
  • Promoting lethal means safety
  • Emphasizing leader stewardship in addressing service member needs

“Once approved, DSPO will play a key role in implementing the recommendations to include oversight of the integrated primary prevention workforce,” Clark explained.

In addition to the Real Warriors campaign, DSPO and PHCoE are “collectively working on developing ideas for a robust practice-based implementation pilot focused on integrating suicide prevention and response into community care settings,” she said. “Within the last year, DSPO has collaborated with the unique skills and talents of the research experts at PHCoE on several research synthesis efforts aimed at helping DOD leaders to understand issues related to suicide prevention and response.”

Clark recognized that stigma can be a barrier to seeking help, adding: “Even when resources exist, fear can and does prevent people from reaching out. Normalizing getting help is key.”

Ultimately, the campaign aims to raise awareness of mental health and suicide prevention by putting the service member, family member, and veteran first.

“Death by suicide is complicated. There is not easy answer to this tragedy. By taking a comprehensive and collaborative approach, DSPO ensures that all service members and their families know they matter,” Clark said.

Resources

Critical areas of public outreach are available across the services, including:

  • Educating and training programs such as the U.S. Air Force and Space Force’s “Ask, Care, Escort” program, the U.S. Army’s SP2 suicide prevention efforts, and the U.S. Navy’s “Ask, Care, Treat” training that give service members the skills to link someone thinking about suicide to support
  • Increasing service members’ knowledge of, and comfort in, reaching out to helping resources via DSPO’s Resources Exist Asking Can Help program, or REACH
  • Encouraging supportive language through DSPO’s informational resource based on the Your Words Matter national campaign, which calls for the end of stigmatizing or negative language when addressing mental health
  • Sharing resources to support service members and their families in nurturing, growing, and maintaining healthy relationships through the Healthy Relationships program, a free, educational consultation designed to strengthen relationships through a series of personalized coaching sessions tailored to help set goals and strengthen communication skills
  • Collaborating with the DOD Educational Agency to support school-age children in talking about their feelings via the Acknowledge, Care, Tell program
  • Contacting the Military Crisis Line and Veterans Crisis Line, which are free, confidential resources for all service members, including members of the National Guard and Reserve, and veterans. Call, chat, or text with a qualified responder, who will listen and can connect you with the resources you need. There's no charge and you decide how much information to share. The resource is accessible 24 hours a day. For the crisis lines, dial 988, then press 1.

You also may be interested in...

Article Around MHS
Apr 17, 2023

Defense Public Health Psychologist Offers Tips to Help Children Cope With Change

Defense Public Health experts say it’s important for parents to maintain a healthy and active attachment with their children by spending at least 20 minutes a day together. This can help military kids and families cope with life changes, like military moves. (Graphic illustration by Graham Snodgrass)

While military kids get to experience many unique and exciting things, they also face many challenges as a result of their parents' service. We've got some expert advice for military parents whose children are adjusting to new schools, separations during their deployments, and other coping skills for military kids to thrive.

Article Around MHS
Mar 8, 2023

Physician Says DOD Focused on Improving Mental Health of Force

Emergency trauma nurses, treat a simulated patient during the Tactical Trauma Reaction and Evacuation Crossover Course at Joint Base San Antonio – Lackland, Texas, Feb. 23, 2023. (Credit: Jason W. Edwards, DOD)

Defense Department health leaders provided testimony today at a Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense hearing. Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs Dr. Lester Martinez-Lopez said the department is committing resources with a focus on preventing suicides of military and family members.

Article Around MHS
Feb 15, 2023

Army Restoration and Reconditioning Centers Help Soldiers with Deployment Stress and Optimize Unit Readiness

Military personnel during mindfulness training

Yoga and mindfulness for the warfighter? We take a look inside an Army program's "whole person" approach to help soldiers cope with stressful or traumatic events in combat and other military operations.

Article Around MHS
Feb 10, 2023

U.S. Naval Forces Central Command Continues Expanding Mental Health Options in Pilot Program’s Second Year

Naval Branch Health Clinic Bahrain sign at Naval Support Activity Bahrain

A two-year pilot program expanding mental health treatment options for military and family members hit its halfway mark. Find out how it's been successful so far, and what's next in advancing services to warfighters and their families experiencing acute mental health problems.

Article Around MHS
Jan 17, 2023

There's No Excuse to Not Be Living Your Full Potential

Military personnel healing in hospital bed

Retired U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Armando Mejia was severely injured due to an explosion and firefight in Mosul, Iraq, in 2004. Staying in a medical hold while recovering, Mejia was eventually one of the first to experience the Army Recovery Care Program when it was stood up as Warrior Care and Transition.

Article Around MHS
Oct 13, 2022

Destigmatizing Mental Health Counseling and Treatment in Relation to National Security Clearances

Mental health infographic

A new specialty adjudicative branch of the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency Consolidated Adjudications Service focusing in behavioral science is expediting security clearance adjudications, as the agency continues its campaign to destigmatize mental health counseling and treatment in relation to the adjudication of national security ...

Article Around MHS
Oct 12, 2022

Dedicated Mental Health Facility Opens for Naval Surface Force in San Diego

Military medical personnel at ceremony

The Embedded Mental Health building is the new mental health facility for Commander, Naval Surface Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet (CNSP) operational Sailors, with an overarching goal to give active-duty personnel fast and quality access to mental health care, provide consultation to triads, and training for medical personnel and crews.

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: September 28, 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