Military Psychiatry

Military Psychiatry is one of the subcategories of Psychiatry that covers specific aspects of mental health within the military context. It encompasses preventive measures, treatment, and research. Preventive measures are evidence-based interventions to optimize the readiness and resilience of serving personnel across the deployment cycle (e.g. alcohol awareness, sleep hygiene, stress management, anger management, grounding technique etc). <br><br>
Emergency psychiatric treatment is delivered during war time usually on-site (e.g. psychological first aid, initial psychotherapeutic and pharmacological treatment etc.) with the aim to reduce the prevalence of psychiatric morbidity within the military context. Treatment in peacetime focus on screening, diagnosing, and treating patients that may be current or retired military personnel and their families. Research in the field of military psychiatry provides better insight in mental health issues within the military context and the basis for improvement of the existing interventions.
Section Officers
Chair
officer
Marina Letica-Crepulja
star
Department of Psychiatry and Psychological Medicine, Faculty of Medicine University of Rijeka, Clinical Hospital Center Rijeka, Referral Center for PTSD of the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Croatia, Mihanovićeva 1, 51000, Rijeka,
location
Croatia
Contact here
Co-Chair
officer
Kristina Adorjan
star
University Hospital of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Bern Bolligenstrasse 111, 3000 Bern,
location
Switzerland
Contact here
Secretary
officer
Elspeth Cameron Ritchie
star
Medstar Washington Hospital Center Department of Psychiatry 110 Irving St NW
location
Washington DC 20010, USA
Contact here


Section member list can be found here
Section activities
Section for Military Psychiatry Annual Activity Report 2024 - read full report here. Position Statement on Military Personnel and Veterans’ Mental Health This statement is intended to enhance efforts in addressing mental health and suicide prevention among military personnel and veterans and we in the Military Psychiatry section believe it will reach those who can contribute to this goal. You can read the full Position Statement here.