Posted on Jun 21, 2018
CPT Public Affairs Officer
2.05K
8
6
3
3
0
What class does your organization offer, such as the Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training ( ASIST) or any other related classes?
Avatar feed
Responses: 6
CW3 Kevin Storm
1
1
0
In-vivo sessions has show a lot of success with PTSD related issues. The person relives the situation(in a controlled environment with a trained practitioner) to a point where it becomes boring and no longer a major factor, they come up with ways to over come what triggers the PTSD event. I am not MH professional and can't say if this is applicable to what you are looking for. Having listened to things at VA I work at, I have heard good things about it.
(1)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
SFC William Stephens A. Jr., 3 MSM, JSCM
1
1
0
put this out to anyone you know with PTSD related problems.
Book two is in full swing collecting stories from First responders and medical
personnel and military and just normal people who have gotten or suffer from
PTSD related problems. Looking for their stories to add to my book and no
one will know it is their story unless they want people to know. I am going
to write off of them stories and print my new book next year. All they have
to do is send email to [login to see] or
[login to see]

thanks
(1)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
MCPO Aviation Maintenance Technician
1
1
0
I had a member make a comment on two separate occasions to two different junior members that he “felt like suck-starting a mossberg (shotgun)”. Clearly a cry for help, these junior members reported it to the Division Senior Chief who called me stating he hadn’t been trained to handle situations like this. The point is that training more members at various levels (rank) in ASIST, not just the Command Cadre. The member was immediately escorted to interview with the Medical Officer who set him up with counseling. The two junior members were given high praise privately in the CO’s office to keep the situation as confidential as possible.

We’re training our supervisors (E7-E9) to get to know those members in their charge. Meet their spouses and children during morale days. It’s a solid practice for many reasons but in this instance these members can identify behavior changes, family stresses, and mood shift. When an otherwise stellar performer starting showing up late for work, despite counseling at many levels, the Chiefs wanted to hold a Chiefs board on him. I advised the Chiefs that a board would not be effective if something external had made a change in his behavior. The Division Senior Chief interviewed him and found that he had recently gone through a divorce, sold everything he owned except his guns, moved into a second-hand RV isolating himself, and began drinking heavily every night….making him late every morning. This intervention got him the counseling he desperately needed and back on his feet again.

I hope this helps a little.
(1)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close