Pentagon May Drop Mental Health Question
By PAULINE JELINEK and ROBERT BURNS
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. troops would no longer be asked to reveal
previous mental health treatment when applying for security
clearances under a proposal being considered by the Pentagon.
The idea stems from the finding that service members avoid
needed counseling because they believe that getting it - and
acknowledging it - could cost them their clearance as well as do
other harm to their careers, The Associated Press has learned.
``This is just one of several items under review by the
Department of Defense and the services in an effort to remove the
stigma associated with mental health issues,'' said Air Force Maj.
Patrick Ryder.
The proposal is to omit a question regarding mental health
treatment that appears on a form required by the Office of
Personnel Management, the agency that does the majority of
investigations for granting clearances to military and civilian
workers in the federal government.
Currently, the questionnaire asks applicants whether they have
consulted a mental health professional in the last seven years. If
so, they are asked to list the names, addresses and dates they saw
the doctor or therapist.
The Pentagon has been working for some time to end the stigma of
counseling. Studies indicate that soldiers most in need of
post-combat health care are the least likely to get it because they
fear that others will have less confidence in them, that it will
threaten career advancement and that it could result in loss of
their security clearance and possibly removal from their unit.
Statistics indicate that the perception of stigma is ``far worse
than the reality'' when it comes to getting security clearances,
Ryder said. Last year, less than .05 percent of some 800,000 people
investigated for clearances were rejected on the sole issue of
their mental health profile, he said.
That's because the clearance process is done on the
``whole-person concept'' - that is, it weighs a number of factors
about the person's past and present, favorable and unfavorable.
People can be prevented from getting a clearance if they have been
convicted and imprisoned, are addicted to any controlled substance,
have been discharged dishonorably from the service or are currently
mentally incompetent.
If the application for clearances is changed to omit the
question on previous counseling, it would be just a small part of
the effort to encourage service members to get mental health care.
An education program for personnel at all levels of the military
is among main recommendations of a yearlong mental health study.
The task force study, ordered by Congress, called for urgent action
to improve care for members of the military, under strain from
simultaneous wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, officials said earlier
Friday.
A change already made is a program called Respect.mil, Maj. Gen.
Gale Pollock, the acting surgeon general of the Army, said at a
news conference on the task force report. Under the program,
instead of requiring soldiers or their family members to go to a
designated location where it's clear they're getting behavioral
health care, they can get the care at a primary care center.
The overall conclusion of the report was that it will take more
money and staff to keep up with health care needed because of the
high tempo of operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. Long and repeated
deployments in the wars have been blamed for some of the mental
health problems.
The two ``signature injuries'' from the conflicts - mostly Iraq
- are post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury,
the task force said, adding that the new demands ``have exposed
shortfalls'' on a system that has not been war-focused for decades.
The military also needs to train leaders to understand that
physical health and psychological health are equally important,
said Vice Adm. Donald Arthur, co-chair of the task force.
``We concentrate a great deal on ... how fast can you run a
mile, how many sit-ups and push-ups can you do,'' Arthur told
reporters. ``But we don't often concentrate on the psychological
health of the service member.''
``If you break your leg, it's not your fault; if you get cancer,
it's not your fault; if you have a post-traumatic stress reaction,
it's not your fault,'' he said.
Noting that the problem of stigma is pervasive not only in the
military, but in American society as a whole, they said the
evidence in the military is overwhelming. Fifty-nine percent of
soldiers and 48 percent of Marines said thought they would be
treated differently by leadership if they sought counseling,
according to a survey among troops who had been deployed.
Of even greater concern, the report said, are recent findings
that service members who screened positive for symptoms consistent
with mental illness were twice as likely as those without symptoms
to express concerns about stigma.
``Individuals exhibiting the greatest need were the most
hesitant to seek care, even though empirical data from at least one
military study indicates that service members do not suffer any
negative career impact from seeking services related to their
psychological health,'' the report said.
``Post-traumatic stress, combat stress is an absolutely normal
reaction to a very abnormal situation,'' Arthur said, adding that
care can prevent it from turning into a disorder.
``Combat is like nothing else that one can experience in
peacetime. It is not like you see in the movies,'' he said. ``It's
not 90 minutes of show with 30 minutes of commercials and the good
guy wins in the end. You have a real chance of being seriously
injured or killed in your service to your nation.''
Associated Press writer Lolita Baldor contributed to this
report.
06/16/07 04:26
© Copyright The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained In this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.