Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Clear Your Browser Cache

This website has recently undergone changes. Users finding unexpected concerns may care to clear their browser's cache to ensure a seamless experience.

Confidential Mental Health Resources Available to Military Families

Image of Confidential Mental Health Resources Available to Military Families. U.S. Marine Corps Pfc. Christian Luna Salvador, right, a postal clerk with Headquarters and Support Battalion, Marine Corps Installations Pacific, speaks to Tarra Brannon, a social worker with Marine Corps Community Services Okinawa, in a family evacuation drill during Exercise Constant Vigilance 2022 on Camp Foster, Okinawa, Japan, on Oct. 20, 2022. The Military Health System offers many services to service members in a variety of settings in times of stress and anxiety. (credit: U.S. Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Thomas Sheng)

The Military Health System recognizes that military life can be mentally stressful on service members, veterans, and their families. That’s why MHS has a wealth of resources for those coping across a spectrum of mental health challenges—in both clinical and non-clinical settings.

“Mental health is essential to readiness,” said Dr. Maria Mouratidis, deputy branch chief of the Defense Health Agency’s Psychological Health Center of Excellence. “You matter enough to get support at the first sign that it may help you or improve your quality of life. Peers and leaders are essential in helping service members to seek care.”

While high-quality treatment for mental health disorders is available at your military facility, resources that are available in a non-clinical setting, such as a crisis line, website, or your unit’s chaplain, can also be good options to access resources, counseling, and support.

Past culture of the military has played into the stereotypes that one must be tough and stoic, talking about mental health is weak, and a service member should not show weakness.

“It is important to note that seeking mental health support is a sign of strength, not weakness,” said U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Anna Fedotova, a mental health flight commander at Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico.

MHS Offers a Variety of Resources and Counseling Services

  • Military OneSource: “Military OneSource is a Department of Defense-funded program that provides a wide range of support and resources to service members, their families, and survivors,” said Fedotova. “The program offers confidential counseling services, financial and legal assistance, education and employment resources, and support for military life transitions, such as deployments and relocations. Military OneSource is available 24/7 via phone, online chat, or video counseling, and all services are free and confidential.”
  • inTransition Program: inTransition is a free, confidential program that offers specialized coaching and assistance for active-duty service members, National Guard members, reservists, veterans, and retirees who need access to mental health care. This includes services for relocating to another assignment, returning from deployment, transitioning from active duty to reserve component or reserve component to active duty, preparing to leave military service, and any other time they need a new mental health provider or need a provider for the first time.  
  • Military and Family Life Counseling Program: The Military and Family Life Counseling program supports service members, their families, and survivors with confidential non-medical counseling where they are stationed. Non-medical counseling can help individuals address issues such as improving relationships at home and work, stress management, adjustment difficulties, parenting, and grief or loss.  
  • Military Crisis Line and Veterans Crisis Line: The Military Crisis Line and Veterans Crisis Line are free, confidential resource for all service members, including members of the National Guard and Reserve, and veterans. Call, chat, or text with a qualified responder, who will listen and can connect you with the resources you need. There's no charge and you decide how much information to share. The resource is accessible 24 hours a day. For the crisis lines, dial 988, then press 1.
  • Psychological Health Resource Center: “The Psychological Health Resource Center is available 24/7 to assist service members, families, clinicians, and commanders with any psychological health related questions,” said Fedotova. They specialize in information and resources related to combat stress, depression, reintegration, accessing treatment, types of treatment for mental health conditions, and many other topics. The center can also assist service members, families, clinicians, and commanders with locating available resources in the community.  
  • Real Warriors Campaign: The campaign promotes a culture of support for psychological health by encouraging the military community to reach out for help whether coping with the daily stresses of military life, or concerns like depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder.
  • Chaplains are often the first line of defense for service members’ moral and spiritual concerns. Military chaplains and behavioral health providers have collaborating roles in coordinating support to service members and their families.

You can also use the services offered at your base to address potential stressors to your mental health, including:

  • Financial counseling services. You don’t need to tackle issues like mounting debt or saving for college or retirement alone. Financial counselors are available in person, over the phone, and via video.
  • Relationship counseling services. If a relationship is causing mental stress, relationship and marriage counselors can be a good resource.
  • Peer counseling. A peer-to-peer specialty consultation is a relaxed conversation about the challenges of life and can be done virtually, and in a non-clinical setting.
  • Substance abuse programs. Prevention, education, and treatment programs are available for substance use disorders at military hospitals and clinics. Other non-clinical programs like Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, and others can provide an alternative approach for those to work with others in similar situations to get back on track.

Often, a service or family member just needs to look at those around them for help.

“Service members and their families are our most valuable resources,” said U.S. Public Health Service Cmdr. Brandy Cloud, chief of research adoption with the Psychological Health Center of Excellence.

“There are services available to ensure our most valuable resources have access to what they need to ensure the total health of themselves and their families,” she added. “If you think you might need care, chances are you need help, reach out to someone, there is no wrong door, and no wrong time to getting the help and services you need.”

You also may be interested in...

Article Around MHS
Sep 15, 2023

Preventing Suicide Through Social Connectedness

Suicide is a significant public health issue that impacts individuals, families, communities and society at large. Many risk and protective factors play an integral role in the prevention of suicide, including social connectedness, which occurs when people or groups are engaged in relationships that create a sense of belonging and being cared for, valued and supported. (Defense Centers for Public Health-Aberdeen graphic illustration by Jason Embrey)

Suicide is a significant public health issue that impacts individuals, families, communities and society at large. The issue is also tied to what the U.S. Surgeon General, Dr. Vevek Murthy, called an “Epidemic of Loneliness and Isolation” in a May health advisory that calls for a National Strategy to Advance Social Connection.

Article Around MHS
Sep 7, 2023

Dog Jog for Life: Unlocking the Power of Pets in Suicide Prevention

For Suicide Prevention Month, emphasize the importance of escorting individuals in need to the best available help, ensuring they receive the assistance they require. However, in our efforts to support human lives, we sometimes overlook a remarkable source of solace and strength—our pets.  (Photo By Russell Jordan)

A U.S. Army public affairs officer highlights the importance of dogs in mental health while promoting "Dog Jog for Life," an event that embodies the spirit of suicide prevention, intervention, and postvention at U.S. Army Garrison Rheinland-Pfalz. “Our dogs often understand our moods better than we do ourselves. They offer us empathy, share in our ...

Video
Aug 23, 2023

Who can I talk to? - Some Tips for Mental Health Care

Image asks: Who can I talk to? Some tips for mental health care.

Dr. Joshua Morganstein gives some ideas on who you can talk to if you are having a difficult time. Some people you might want to talk to are a peer, a trusted supervisor, someone who has gone through what you've been through, someone who you trust to keep your confidentiality, a faith leader, a mentor, your primary care provider, or a mental ...

Video
Aug 23, 2023

Will Mental Health Services Affect My Security Clearance?

Image asks the question, Will mental health services affect my security clearance?

Dr. Joshua Morganstein addresses a very common question: Will seeking mental or behavioral health services affect my security clearance? The short answer is: No. A study from 2012 - 2018 looked at 2.3 million security clearances. Of those 2.3 million clearances, almost 47,000 people reported psychological health issues. Of those 47,000 people, ...

Video
Aug 23, 2023

Top Signs You Might Need Some Help

Image says: Top signed you might need some help.

We all have difficulties. Dr. Joshua Morganstein gives us his top signals that let us know we might need some help. - not sleeping well - trouble at work - continuing conflicts with people - increased substance use (alcohol, tobacco, medication) - thinking about hurting yourself or other people This video is part of a series addressing ...

Video
Aug 23, 2023

3 Tips for Coming Home from Deployment

Image states three tips for coming home from deployment.

Coming home from deployment can be challenging. We might feel a sense of loss of meaning or that other people don't understand the experiences we had. Dr. Morganstein gives 3 easy tips for adjusting to life back at home. 1. Give yourself time and space. 2. Talk to your loved ones about what's going on. 3. Give your loved ones time and space ...

Video
Aug 22, 2023

3 Easy Tips for Hard Conversations - Part 2

3 Easy Tips for Hard Conversations - Part 2

Part 2 - Find the Words Is a friend having a tough time? Do you want to talk to them and don't know how? Dr. Joshua Morganstein gives 3 tips on how to talk to a friend or colleague who you think might be having a hard time. 1. Set the stage for a conversation 2. Find the words 3. Follow-up This is the second video in a series that gives ...

Video
Aug 22, 2023

3 Easy Tips for Hard Conversations - Part 1

3 Easy Tips for Hard Conversations  - Part 1

Is a friend having a tough time? Do you want to talk to them and don't know how? Dr. Joshua Morganstein gives 3 tips on how to talk to a friend or colleague who you think might be having a hard time. 1. Set the stage for a conversation - find a time when you both have the time and aren't rushed 2. Find the words 3. Follow-up This is the first ...

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: September 28, 2023
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery