Posted on Nov 5, 2014
SSG Accountant
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This male soldier really needs to take care of personal hygiene. Several personnel noticed his poor hygiene and brought the concern to his Squad Leader.

How the squad leader should approach to the soldier? What if the soldier feels offended?
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Responses: 20
1SG Vet Technician
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Edited >1 y ago
In addition, it is important to try and find out the underlying reason. Is it an issue of poor time management in the mornings between PT and duty location?, perhaps the SM has an issue or even a phobia about showering around others (if he lives in barracks). He may benefit from a visit to the medical center and have a thorough physical. Sometimes disease states can increase body odor or change body odor, if the issue is oral hygiene, then dental care may be needed.
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SSG Tim Everett
SSG Tim Everett
>1 y
They make Febreeze for this sort of thing. I walk around "nerd" conventions (for lack of a better term) like DragonCon with a bottle of Febreeze for people that need it.
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SGT Team Leader
SGT (Join to see)
>1 y
Next year, when I see a dude spritzing Fabreeze, I'll know it's you. Don't talk. Just follow me to the after-party.
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SSG Keven Lahde
SSG Keven Lahde
>1 y
SGT (Join to see) 1SG (Join to see) SSG and SPC I totally agree that they should or any soldier for that matter with the right "TACT" should be able to approach a service member and tell them they need to shave, shower....ect. Its every soldiers due diligence to make sure we are all up to standards with personal hygiene.
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CPT Assistant Operations Officer (S3)
CPT (Join to see)
>1 y
1SG (Join to see) You bring up a great point. To often we just patch things or fix them without addressing the real issue. If you have a leaking pipe you can tighten the fittings but it is from over pressure you really didn't do anything but make this worse.
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SSG Tim Everett
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Tee-Eff? Seriously? Had the NCO Corps and aspiring NCO pool fallen this low, that we can't deal with this? Who cares if he feels offended? His hygiene is offensive.

Squad leader needs to ruck up, take his/her soldier aside, and say "Look bro. Your personal hygiene leaves something to be desired. You're not mission-capable right now because others are complaining." Document it, it's a counseling. Set aside points upon which the soldier needs to improve. Make sure the counseling is witnessed by another male NCO if the fear of offending him is so great.

I think there's even a reg about this kind of thing.
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MIDN 4/C (Pre-Commission)
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Lt Col Aerospace Planner
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First of all your duty as a leader is the morale and welfare of your troops. Sometimes the morale is for the masses and not the individual. Taking care of his welfare means that you are making him taking care of things he may not want to do. Yes, he will be offended, but that is not your concern. Your concern is to do what is necessary to take charge of those under you. And sometimes doing that requires tough love. Council him away from the rest of the troops. Be blunt and don't pull punches. Tell him you notice that he has been having strong body odor. I would send him off to get clean clothes and a shower and tell him never to do it again.
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SSG Kristell Lee
SSG Kristell Lee
9 y
We had a soldier with that issue, even his clothes stank. We had to teach him how to wash his clothes properly and give him extra time and make sure he got in the shower. He might get offended but he has to know he might not know how to properly wash his clothes or not know how bad he's affecting other ppl.
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