What additional metrics regarding attempted suicides are needed in order to tailor specific suicide prevention strategies to populations at ...
Brigadier General Sutton and Ms. Power, do military leaders routinely receive data on suicide attempts? If not, should they?
When one of these storms hits or a catastrophe hits, no one asks your party affiliation.
Okay. Major General Rubenstein and Brigadier General Sutton, is that disturbing?
I believe that the military has made progress on many fronts in confronting the issue of stigma.
I think what we have is a resource problem, but, more than anything else, we have a holdover of stigma.
The fact that no one was prepared for a million displaced families is not shocking.
NextGen is something that the FAA cannot do alone. It requires the involvement of academia, industry and all of our stakeholders as we move ...
Major General Rubenstein, we often hear that although the post-deployment health assessments are performed by a high percentage of soldiers ...
I know this is hard, but that's the most overwhelming evidence I've heard that there is a real stigma problem here.
But do we, as a matter of routine, inform the military, 'You have a problem here'?
What is your definition of a public health epidemic?
What is the source of data on suicide attempts within DOD?
what is your Service providing now in leadership training for noncommissioned officers (NCOs) regarding suicide prevention
What are the opportunities and the parameters of such discussions from both DOD and SAMSHA perspectives?
$50 million sounds like a lot of money to me. Do you support that initiative?
We know that statistically suicide is rare yet it remains one of the leading causes of death among young adults.
Major General Rubenstein, how do you track whether or not a soldier attains that care?