April 4, 2013 - Eight days into his job as the Army vice chief of staff, now-retired Gen. Peter Chiarelli was dumbfounded at the numbers of Soldiers returning from deployments with traumatic brain injuries and post-traumatic stress, coupled with the rising numbers of suicides in the ranks.“I felt like a fell into a hornet’s nest,” he told a Central Texas audience Monday.
Chiarelli, who now serves as the president and chief executive officer of One Mind for Research, an independent non-profit organization dedicated to curing brain diseases and eliminating the stigma associated with behavioral health issues and brain diseases, was in Central Texas Monday speaking at the McLane lecture at the University of Mary-Hardin-Baylor.
The lecture series is in its tenth year, and hosts nationally esteemed leaders from all sectors of business.
In his role as vice chief, Chiarelli was charged with caring for 1.1 million active-duty and reserve-component troops, many of whom were facing those “invisible wounds” from the war on terror. He took his mission to heart, and, one year after his retirement from the Army, continues the push to help those with TBI and PTSD today. read more>>>
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