Curley Justin M, Warner Christopher H
Research Psychiatrist, Department of Military Psychiatry, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, 503 Robert Grant Avenue, Silver Spring, MD.
Student, National War College, Fort McNair, 300 D St, Washington, DC.
Mil Med. 2019 May 1;184(5-6):e183-e191. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usz017.
The division psychiatrist has been a bedrock U.S. Army institution for nearly 100 years. The role of the position in combat is well established, but its role in garrison has historically been less well defined. Prevention of behavioral health casualties has long been a governing objective of the division psychiatrist and forms the cornerstone of the behavioral health (BH) readiness concept. Accordingly, the Army's increased emphasis on readiness mandates that the division psychiatrist maximize BH force readiness through applied prevention methods. This process begins in garrison, and the crucible of recent protracted conflict has yielded effective BH screening principles applied in that environment. Despite this achievement, an evolving operational environment threatens the blanket effectiveness of BH screening and prevention in garrison. This article examines the historical evolution of the division psychiatrist's role in garrison, elucidates division psychiatry BH readiness principles in garrison, and expands on previously documented division psychiatry led efforts to maximize BH readiness levels.
A historical review of the division psychiatrist was conducted in order to analyze the role of the position in BH prevention operations. Identified division psychiatry preventive lessons are leveraged against current BH readiness challenges resulting in proposed solutions from a division psychiatry perspective.
The historical trajectory of the division psychiatrist's role in garrison prevention operations has advanced significantly in the last 17 years. With the advent of evidence-based BH readiness findings, the division psychiatrist's garrison readiness duties have expanded to include analysis of unit BH readiness levels. By applying pre-deployment screening principles in new ways to existing BH readiness platforms, the division psychiatrist can analyze BH readiness levels much earlier than immediately prior to deployment. The resultant BH readiness feedback allows for individualized readiness improvements for the BH systems that serve Army units. The division psychiatrist is the natural proponent of such readiness efforts, and will require staff officer, consultant, liaison, and trainer skill sets in order to be successful.
The division psychiatrist's role must adapt to a changing operational environment in order to preserve and build on historical successes. The recommended end state would see the division psychiatrist maintaining a robust pre/post-deployment BH screening process and organizing the regular analysis of BH readiness levels to optimize existing BH clinical platforms. Systematically pursued, this would not only maximize BH readiness, but dramatically enhance safety and the provision of resources towards soldier health and welfare across the Army. The division psychiatrist should lead this effort.
师级精神科医生作为美国陆军的一个基石机构已近百年。该职位在战斗中的作用已得到充分确立,但其在驻防时的作用在历史上一直界定得不够清晰。预防行为健康伤亡长期以来一直是师级精神科医生的一项主要目标,也是行为健康(BH)战备概念的基石。因此,陆军对战备的日益重视要求师级精神科医生通过应用预防方法来最大限度地提高行为健康部队的战备水平。这个过程始于驻防阶段,最近长期冲突的严峻考验产生了适用于该环境的有效行为健康筛查原则。尽管取得了这一成就,但不断演变的作战环境威胁着行为健康筛查和预防在驻防时的全面有效性。本文审视了师级精神科医生在驻防时角色的历史演变,阐明了师级精神科在驻防时的行为健康战备原则,并详述了先前记录的由师级精神科主导的旨在最大限度提高行为健康战备水平的努力。
对师级精神科医生进行了历史回顾,以分析该职位在行为健康预防行动中的作用。利用已确定的师级精神科预防经验教训来应对当前行为健康战备挑战,从而从师级精神科的角度提出解决方案。
在过去17年中,师级精神科医生在驻防预防行动中的角色历史轨迹有了显著进展。随着基于证据的行为健康战备研究结果的出现,师级精神科医生在驻防时的战备职责已扩大到包括分析部队的行为健康战备水平。通过以新的方式将部署前筛查原则应用于现有的行为健康战备平台,师级精神科医生能够比紧临部署前更早地分析行为健康战备水平。由此产生的行为健康战备反馈可为服务陆军部队的行为健康系统提供个性化的战备改进。师级精神科医生是此类战备工作的天然支持者,并且为了取得成功将需要参谋、顾问、联络和培训技能。
师级精神科医生的角色必须适应不断变化的作战环境,以保持并在历史成功的基础上继续发展。建议的最终状态是师级精神科医生维持强有力的部署前/后行为健康筛查流程,并组织对行为健康战备水平进行定期分析,以优化现有的行为健康临床平台。系统地推进这一工作,不仅能最大限度地提高行为健康战备水平,还能显著增强安全性,并为陆军士兵的健康和福利提供更多资源。师级精神科医生应引领这一工作。