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ON SEPT. 12, MOAA AND THE NATIONAL DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL ASSOCIATION cohosted the Warrior-Family Symposium at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center in Washington, D.C. The program, “Mental Health: Linking Warriors and Their Families, Government, and Society,” took a broad look at mental health and the challenges facing wounded warriors and their family members in a post-war environment.


Panelists and key speakers discussed the scope of mental health among military families; the mental health implications for individuals, government, and society; and innovative solutions taking place in the mental health field — culminating in a call to action for individuals and organizations to effect change outside of the forum to help warriors and their families today and tomorrow.


Emerging themes focused on erasing the stigma associated with mental health issues, the value of peer support to encourage treatment and during the treatment process, innovations in the mental health field, and integration between the mind and body and the public and private sectors and among DoD, the VA, and the Department of Health and Human Services. Panelists discussed the effects of psychological-cognitive traumas on servicemembers and their families. What emerged from the discussion were stories of struggle and hope that shed light on the power of peer support.

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