Sea of Goodwill White Paper

Release of the Sea of Goodwill White Paper:  Building the Bridge to Help Veterans & Their Families

Creating and sustaining a long-term solution for better transitional support of veterans and their families as they return to civilian life requires participation and support of organizations and government at both the national and local levels.  Authored by Colonel David W. Sutherland, USA and Major John W. Copeland, USA, the Sea of Goodwill: Matching the Donor to the Need white paper seeks to foster this discussion.

The white paper focuses on three key elements in helping veterans and their families reintegrate into civilian society: education, access to health care for life, and employment. While these needs are simple, delivering the right service at the right time and place across more than 400,000 estimated service organizations is more complex.

Read the white paper.  Share it with your friends.  Tell us what you think.

To read the full Sea of Goodwill: Matching the Donor to the Need, click here to get the PDF.


Veterans Reintegration

Find us on the National Resource Directory

The Warrior Gateway is now among the 11,000+ resources listed in the National Resource Directory, the joint DoD-Labor-VA program that catalogs on- and offline resources for the military community.

The NRD has recently been revamped and redesigned to make it easier to search for resources. Try it out by searching for the Warrior Gateway!

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Then and now: a reflection on returning OEF/OIF veterans

Belleruth Naparstek has a good piece at the Huffington Post about the differing climate facing returning veterans from the Iraq/Afghan conflicts and the Vietnam War 40 years ago. She comments on medical advances in the understanding/diagnosis of PTSD, the cultural shift in valuing the sacrifices made by our service men and women, and a change in the DoD’s and VA’s attitude to treating  psychological wounds.

This new group of active military in Iraq and Afghanistan knows what’s happening to them, to a much greater extent. There’s been a push to educate our troops and the general public about posttraumatic stress as well as TBI’s (traumatic brain injury), thanks to a renewed commitment to the mental health of our troops, found in both the Department of Defense and the V.A. Secretaries Gates and Shinseki have been working hard at destigmatizing mental health problems, in ways never seen before. So that’s another lesson learned from Vietnam, and no small matter. Still, career soldiers still worry a lot about stigma.

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So now that we’re learning about the new barriers to receiving help — some quite positive, by the way (Indeed, what’s wrong with not wanting to be a career patient, anyway?), I expect the V.A. will get more flexible in how it offers services. And there will hopefully be much more widespread use of self-administered guided imagery downloads — shown at multiple research sites to reduce symptoms quickly and pretty dramatically while being a pleasant and self-reinforcing experience for the listener. Not to mention inexpensive and useable even in remote locations.

We are getting so much more interest and openness to guided imagery than even a year ago, from both the DoD and the VA. These are great trends, very hopeful. I do believe we’re gonna seriously help a lot of vets.

It’s a good read with some interesting discussion going on in the comments section; check out the full article here.

DoD embraces social media

After some shifts in their position on social media, the Department of Defense has finally come to embrace the social media world. DoD has launched its online Social Media Hub, which serves as a directory linking to the social media presences of a large number of DoD-affiliated programs and entities. That listing can be found here. Thus you can find in a single place the official blog of the Navy Experimental Diving Unit, the Facebook page of the U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command, the Flickr of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and so on.

The Social Media Hub even includes a number of games which emphasize the need for caution when using the web.

Checking in from the VA/DoD Mental Health Summit

We just came back from the Opening Session of the October 2009 Mental Health Summit, hosted by the Veterans Affairs Department and the Department of Defense. This looks like a wonderful putting-together of great minds to sit down and really think hard about the ways to prevent, identify, understand, and address mental health issues for veterans and active service members. Secretaries Gates and Shinseki both spoke, reaffirming their departments’ commitment to this serious issue.

Mentalhealthsummit

As part of the summit, the DoD and VA have assembled a panel of about 100 experts, ranging from doctors and  counselors, to professors and fellows. Additionally, they are looking for your help – the summit is soliciting advice and suggestions about the themes upon which the experts should be focusing and any solutions or ideas you might have about improving the situation of veterans’ mental health issues. You can also vote on others’ suggestions. The ideas board can be accessed here.