Tuesday, February 02, 2010

NFL Stars and Vets Support Injured Servicemembers

By Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class William Selby
Special to American Forces Press Service


MIAMI, Feb. 2, 2010 - Scientists, researchers and former NFL players
have joined together to raise awareness about post-traumatic stress
disorder, depression and brain injuries, a spokesman for the Defense
Department "Real Warriors" program said today.

It is important for everyone to understand the needs of servicemembers
returning from combat deployments, Army Brig. Gen. Richard Thomas,
assistant surgeon general for force protection, said during an
interview with The Pentagon Channel at the Super Bowl media center in
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

A substantial number of servicemembers returning from deployment have
sustained some type of traumatic brain injury, Thomas said.

Thomas was joined by NFL stars Eric Hipple, a former quarterback for
the Detroit Lions who is now the outreach coordinator with the
University of Michigan Depression Center, and Rocky Bleier, a Purple
Heart and Bronze Star recipient and four-time Super Bowl winner.

Bleier has documented the problems he had after returning from
Vietnam. He noted that both troops who return from war and NFL players
who have retired from football often are reluctant to seek help for
problems due to the stigma attached to counseling. Hipple added that
when you don't ask for help, problems can get worse.

"Identifying the symptoms early on is huge," Hipple said. He explained
that soldiers develop separation anxiety, which can lead to other
issues such as clinical depression. And, he said that many mental
health conditions constitute brain injuries, and like physical
injuries, they need to be treated to heal.

The impact of the trauma some former football players feel is
compounded for servicemembers, Bleier said.

"When football is over, you're out, you're done," he said. But for
those who have served in the military, it's "a double trauma."

Former servicemembers have to find a job, "and if they do find a job
and they also have these mental health issues, then they have to have
a supportive workplace that will allow them to deal with these
issues," Bleier said.

There are vehicles for servicemembers to get help for medical
problems, Thomas said, but they "have to initiate the process."

Bleier recommended that one step in the right direction is for
servicemembers to take the master resiliency training that is part of
the comprehensive soldier fitness program.

(Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class William Selby is assigned to Defense
Media Activity's Emerging Media Directorate.)

Related Sites:
Real Warriors
Comprehensive Soldier Fitness


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