4/5/2013 - When it comes to preventing suicides, the Army believes it often has enough information about the risk factors that lead up to a soldier taking his or her own life long before the actual event and to intervene beforehand.The trouble is that the data is not shared between the various Army components and commands that own and maintain it. An IT program the service is just beginning to roll out aims to fix that disconnect.
The idea behind what is now called the Commander's Risk Reduction Dashboard is not new. It was first proposed three years ago in a report on suicide prevention by the vice chief of staff of the Army. But it's only begun to finally become a reality within the last few months.
Listen to Report The idea, according to Lt. Gen. Susan Lawrence, the Army's chief information officer, is to bring together the information the Army already has on individual soldiers and use it to proactively warn their commands that there may be a problem. read more>>>
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