The army has a new plan to fight rampant suicide, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder: a $117 million program to train soldiers in "emotional resiliency." Beginning in October, all 1.1 million soldiers will receive intensive training aimed at helping them identify and change destructive thinking patterns, reports the New York Times. Some observers and army officers are wary of the program.
Experts caution that the program's techniques have been tested only on children and teenagers, not adults, while sergeants worry the program is too "touchy-feely" to fit a military culture hostile to talking about emotions. But with a fifth of Iraq and Afghanistan vets suffering from mental health problems, commanders "need a program that gives soldiers and their families better ways to cope," said a general.
(More post-traumatic stress disorder stories.)