Warfighter Brain Health Hub

Healthy brains are essential for warfighters to do their jobs well. Tough missions demand quick thinking to make smart choices. That's why protecting warfighter brain health is so important for a strong military.

The Department of Defense Warfighter Brain Health Initiative works to reduce risks of injury, understand more about the brain, and improve treating brain injuries. Checking brain health regularly helps the DOD catch problems earlier. DOD aims to quickly treat warfighters to keep them healthy and ready.

Here's some areas of focus:

  • Helping warfighters think and move at their best
  • Checking up on brain health
  • Preventing and treating Traumatic Brain Injuries
  • Quickly spot TBIs to reduce their harm
  • Protecting warfighters from things that may hurt their brains, like blast overpressure
  • Reducing long-term problems from brain injuries
  • Researching and learning more about how to keep warfighters' brains healthy 
 



You also may be interested in...

Article
Sep 5, 2024

Uniformed Services University Professor Dr. Michael Roy Receives $500,000 Grant for Blast Exposure Research

U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Adrianna Williams, left, and U.S. Air Force Airman Madalyn Duke, 66th Security Forces Squadron entry controllers, wear female body armor during a training at Hanscom Air Force Base, Massachusetts, June 29.

Dr. Michael Roy, professor of medicine and deputy director of the military traumatic brain injury initiative at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, has been awarded a $500,000 grant from the Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine to conduct research on the effects of blast exposure among military ...

Article
Aug 15, 2024

Department of Defense Spells Out New Requirements to Counter Blast Overpressure Risks

A soldier with the 82nd Airborne Division fires a howitzer during a range exercise.

The Defense Department released requirements meant to help manage the risks to brain health from blast overpressure, which can be generated by weapons systems such as howitzers, mortars and shoulder-mounted weapons. The policy memorandum, signed by Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks, aligns squarely with the department's warfighter brain health ...

Video
Jul 23, 2024

Military Leaders: Prevent, Recognize and Treat Brain Injuries

Warfighter Brain Health for Leaders Training Video

The Warfighter Brain Health for Leaders Training video is an essential resource for enhancing the Department of Defense's Warfighter Brain Health Initiative. It empowers military leaders with strategies for preventing, protecting against, and managing brain injuries. Additionally, the video enhances leaders' abilities to assess and recognize symptoms ...

Publication
Jul 10, 2024

DVBIC-TBICoE 15-Year Studies Population and Demographics: Caregiver and Family Member

.PDF | 979.96 KB

TBICoE's 15-year caregiver and family member study seeks to understand the health and service needs of caregivers of service members and veterans with TBI. This infographic provides an overview of study demographics.