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.

Targeted Care for Mental Health Issues Rolling Out Across Department of Defense

Image of Targeted Care for Mental Health Issues Rolling Out Across Department of Defense. A U.S. Air Force graphic demonstrates the process of mental health care and additional resources through targeted care. Targeted care refers service members and other beneficiaries to the clinical or non-clinical mental health resources best suited to support their needs, offering earlier interventions and promoting force resilience and readiness. (U.S. Air Force graphic by 94th Airlift Wing, 59th Medical Wing).

[Editor’s note: This article discusses mental health, its challenges, and treatments. If you or someone you know is having a mental health crisis, call the 988 National Suicide and Crisis Lifeline and press “1”, or text 838255, or chat, or contact the dedicated Veterans Crisis Line and Military Crisis Line. For Spanish, press “2”. Remember, mental health is health.]

The Defense Health Agency is introducing a new approach at behavioral health clinics, called targeted care, to help improve access to mental health resources.
Targeted care refers service members and other beneficiaries to the clinical or non-clinical mental health resources best suited to support their needs, offering earlier interventions and promoting force resilience and readiness.

Pivoting off an Air Force Medical Service model with a vision to expand it across all military hospitals and clinics, DHA conducted a six-month targeted care pilot at 10 military behavioral health clinics. The pilot ran from April to October 2023.

Results from the pilot found that about 40% of individuals who contacted outpatient behavioral health clinics at the pilot sites did not require medical intervention or have a diagnosable mental health condition; however, they would benefit from other mental health services.

The results demonstrated that sites were able to use targeted care to successfully connect more than 2,600 individuals to other medical or nonmedical counseling resources.

Given the success of the pilot, targeted care is being deployed to military hospitals and clinics across the Military Health System. All military hospitals and clinics will have targeted care available by 2025.

U.S. Army Maj. Daniel Good has a doctorate in clinical psychology and serves as the deputy director of psychological health at the General Leonard Wood Army Community Hospital, Missouri, which participated in the pilot. He said targeted care was “a wonderful opportunity for our hospital to dramatically revamp our behavioral health service line and restructure and remake it into a much more efficient and well-organized framework.” Targeted care “is helping us do better than would have been possible before we rolled it out.”

Targeted care helps people get the specific care they need in a timely manner.

It starts with a simple, preliminary screening assessment. You can meet with or call a health care professional who will listen to what you’ve been experiencing, assess your needs, and refer you to the best resource to get the help you need, whether it’s specialty mental health treatment at the outpatient behavioral health clinic, other clinical services, or a nonclinical support resource such as a military or family life counselor or chaplain.

You won’t need a referral and you will never be turned away from specialty care. The process allows the behavioral health specialist to focus their efforts on more frequent evidence-based therapy for patients with the most critical needs while offering support and resources to all others.

To provide timely and tailored care, targeted care synchronizes clinical mental health programs with nonclinical resources available in the local military community. This includes chaplains, military and family life counselors, Military OneSource, warrior fitness centers, installation activity centers, embedded mental health providers in a unit, and off-post community resources.

Talking to a Professional Through Targeted Care

Your mental health occurs on a continuum. Where an individual falls on the continuum depends on a number of personal and life circumstances, and there is a clinical or nonclinical resource that can meet your needs at any given point on the continuum.

The initial screening assessment in targeted care is the first step in determining where you fall on this continuum. If your symptoms are found to fall within the clinical range toward a mental health disorder, you will be scheduled for an intake evaluation at the outpatient behavioral health clinic for further assessment and treatment. If your stress levels are within the milder range but steadily increasing, a nonclinical or other prevention resource could address the issue before it reaches clinical levels.

You will be matched to the best resource depending on your responses and immediate concerns or needs.  If your best option is primary or specialty care, you’ll get an appointment at your clinic, or with a behavioral health specialist in the local TRICARE network if no space is available on base.
The DHA website has many frequently asked questions about targeted care.

Successful Implementation of Targeted Care in Pilot Markets

Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri was the first base within the Air Force Global Strike Command to fully roll out targeted care after a pilot phase, said Whiteman Mental Health Flight Commander U.S. Air Force Maj. Callie Cooper, a doctor of clinical psychology.

Its benefits quickly became apparent, said Cooper, with “notable reductions” in patients receiving off-base mental health referrals. There were 180 airmen referred off base before Whiteman started targeted care in the fall of 2022, and only 40 in the year after implementation. For those patients not referred off base, targeted care assessed the patient’s needs and, where appropriate, referred them to on-base services for immediate support.

Targeted care reduced wait times, created prompt access to specialty mental health services, and lowered provider caseloads, said U.S. Air Force Capt. Oliver Bauer, a doctor of psychology and a staff clinical psychologist in Whiteman’s mental health clinic.

“By decreasing the number of individual patients per provider from over 40 to a more manageable range of 20 to 30, Whiteman has enhanced the quality of care,” said Bauer.

During Whiteman’s early implementation of targeted care, “some service members were accustomed to the traditional model—where seeking mental health support meant being seen in the clinic—and felt turned away when referred to other helping agencies,” Bauer said. To address this concern, “socialization was crucial.”
“It was imperative to have base leadership, mid-level supervisors, and new airmen well-informed and associated with the new model of care,” Bauer explained.

“Service members reported feeling more heard and valued as their needs are thoroughly assessed and matched with the most appropriate resources,” Bauer said. “They also have reported feeling they have received timely and effective care.”

Prior to the rollout, “it was essential to secure not only the buy-in and support from the service members, but also from the personnel within the mental health clinic who are promoting and supporting this initiative,” Bauer pointed out.

DHA’s behavioral health team worked closely with communications experts to develop information materials. Each installation received these products through their public affairs office and military hospital or clinic and used them to educate their beneficiaries on this new service. Behavioral health leads also gave information briefings to senior leaders on the installation and provided newcomer briefings to service members and their families.

Targeted Care’s History

The main principles of targeted care are outlined in a 2023 Air Force Medical Service report titled, Mental Health: An Overview for Service Members.

The report has three main messages applicable everywhere in the MHS:

  • Most service members who are struggling with mental health do not have a mental health disorder.
  • Most resources to help are nonclinical.
  • Getting help early and often prevents the need for clinical mental health care.

Angelica Escalona, who holds a doctorate in clinical psychology with a specialization in neuropsychology, is the clinical director of outpatient behavioral health within DHA’s behavioral health clinical management team.

Escalona said targeted care was developed by the Air Force Medical Service to “address increased mental health utilization and limited access to services.” It was successfully piloted at military hospitals and clinics on nine U.S. Air Force installations in fiscal year 2022 and generated interest on how this process could be applied across the entire MHS.

DHA subsequently hosted a three-day targeted care summit in December 2022 attended by mental health leaders from all military departments and subject matter experts from other agencies. They developed the groundwork for a DHA-wide targeted care model and identified the pilot sites at U.S. Army and U.S. Navy installations.

Escalona said the DHA worked closely with each behavioral health clinic lead, the military community and family program office leads, the chaplain corps, TRICARE, DHA’s Healthcare Optimization Division, and other key stakeholders to refine and develop strategy for targeted care’s implementation at those 10 pilot sites.

Since then, there have been a number of MHS early adopters of targeted care in the U.S. and overseas. These early adopters may serve as models for successfully rolling out targeted care across all MHS hospitals and clinics by 2025.

 

Resources

 

PublicOutreach

 

Mental Health Videos

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 ...

Fact Sheet
Aug 30, 2023

Breathe2Relax App

.PDF | 384.67 KB

Initially designed for the military community but beneficial for use by anyone, the relaxation app trains you on the “belly breathing” technique that has proven benefits for your overall mental health. Use the app’s breathing exercises to learn and practice the breathing technique on your own or as part of a stress management program supervised by ...

Fact Sheet
Aug 30, 2023

Virtual Hope Box App

.PDF | 778.13 KB

The Virtual Hope Box is a smartphone application designed for patients and their behavioral health providers as an accessory to treatment. The VHB contains simple tools to help patients with coping, relaxation, distraction and positive thinking.

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

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

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 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 ...

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 ...

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: August 12, 2024
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery