I think it's a little complicated with the military. The long term solution is probably more prevention than attempting to treat later. Building resilience and having appropriately time interventions. But, like healthcare in this country, the general approach is "fix it later." Preventative maintenance/medicine is limited.Tanker123 said:
What needs to be invented is a comprehensive healing program from start to finish. That is what is sorely missing. What I have seen is a rather random approach.
The thing with the military, and really every organization/company, is that you need healthy fighters/employees, but you also need them to do their job. When individuals start spending more and more time doing personal things (doctor's appointments, family time, the gym, partying, vacations, etc) their mental health will probably be great, but their training and productivity will decrease. When a small percentage of the organization does this, no big deal. But as more and more do it, the organization suffers, but also the people not doing it suffer as they have to take on a greater work load.
Society in general has moved towards people wanting more of a work life balance, and I think the military needs to figure out how to do that as well. Not only to recruit better, more resilient, and higher quality individuals, but to retain them.