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Mental Health/Behavioral Health

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When you join the Commissioned Corps, you become a part of a dedicated team of professionals who work to improve the health of individuals, communities, and the Nation.

Meet some mental health/behavioral health officers from the Commissioned Corps.

Lieutenant Commander Kay Beaulieu
Mental Health Officer, PHS-DOD Partners in Mental Health

Treated more than a thousand soldiers, and counting…
As a clinical psychologist, LCDR Kay Beaulieu treats warriors before and after deployment at the army base at Fort Carson, CO. She worked there as a civilian before joining the Commissioned Corps, where she now has additional duties as an officer. “When I put on the Corps uniform, I connect with the soldiers more than I did when I was a civilian,” she explains. LCDR Beaulieu is the team leader on a mobile behavioral health team, bringing mental health to the brigade. LCDR Beaulieu and her team are located in a building in the midst of the soldiers’ barracks and administrative offices. Through individual treatment and post-deployment groups, she has treated more than 1,000 soldiers who have deployed. LCDR Beaulieu says, “These patients are dedicated to their country and I’ve found them to have an incredible strength and tenacity.”


Lieutenant Commander Nicole Frazer
Mental Health Officer, PHS-DOD Partners in Mental Health

From airman to Commissioned Corps officer…
LCDR Nicole Frazer was an airman for 11 years and the day after she separated from the Air Force, she joined the Commissioned Corps. A clinical psychologist, she works at the Defense Centers of Excellence (DCoE) for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury for the DoD. She says, “It’s a joint assignment, the Army, Navy, Air Force, Veteran Affairs, and Commissioned Corps, working together to lead the Nation in resilience, recovery, and reintegration for service members and their families in all areas related to psychological health and traumatic brain injury.” LCDR Frazer is the chief, Division of Training Standards and Guidelines and the interim deputy of the Training and Education Directorate at DCoE, and the work she does has a population-wide impact. LCDR Frazer says, “I feel fortunate to wear the uniform every day and serve my country and continue to help warriors and their families. I read the online bios on the Web site in early 2008 and now here I am!”


Lieutenant Qiana Coffey
Mental Health Officer, PHS-DOD Partners in Mental Health

Helping soldiers with traumatic brain injuries…
LT Qiana Coffey works as a nurse manager at Fort Campbell, KY, treating soldiers in the Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) center. She says, “I’m learning how to help soldiers who have fought for a purpose and are now home fighting another fight—for their peace of mind and well-being of themselves and their families.” Soldiers who come to the TBI center are able to heal physically, mentally, and spiritually. Working in the Commissioned Corps, LT Coffey has the opportunity to make a real difference in people’s lives. “The Corps offers service, honor, and it’s really rewarding. I’m passionate about health promotion and prevention,” she says.


Lieutenant Commander David Thompson
Mental Health Officer, PHS-DOD Partners in Mental Health

When problems snowball…
LCDR David Thompson treats airmen, soldiers, and sailors before and after deployment at Eglin Air Force Base, FL, as a clinical psychologist with a specialty in substance abuse. LCDR Thompson says, “Sometimes things can snowball on returning warriors. They can have a little difficulty adjusting and that can bleed into work, family problems and then feel like the problems are piling on. It’s challenging for them and for us as providers.” Treating returning warriors can be complex, but LCDR Thompson has found his patients to be engaged, cooperative, and interested in treatment. His previous work in the Corps was in the Bureau of Prisons, where he was involved in treating Federal inmates who were getting ready to be released and helping them start their lives over. LCDR Thompson says, “Being a Corps officer means participating in its valuable public health mission. I’ve had lots of training in disaster mental health and crisis response and I get a lot of satisfaction from deploying with mental health teams.”


Lieutenant Commander Mike Tilus
Mental Health Officer, Indian Health Service

From Army chaplain to Commissioned Corps officer
LCDR Mike Tilus spent 12 years as an Army chaplain and served in the Gulf War. He wanted to stay in uniform and spend his professional career providing care to underserved communities, so he became a Corps officer in 2002. A psychologist in the Indian Health Service in South Dakota, LCDR Tilus treats six patients per day, providing counseling where there is an overwhelming need. He says, Clinicians in the trenches really count success one life at a time. I hope and pray that the resources I bring make a difference. LCDR Tilus has been deployed several times for disaster relief and finds it a tremendous opportunity to treat those who need it urgently. I provide help to people in crisis and get them to the next level of care, he says. Two of his three assignments in the Indian Health Service have been in remote sites, dealing with long-term chronic need with limited resources. An ordained minister, LCDR Tilus says, American Indians welcome spiritual people, and their culture includes spirituality in the healing process.


Commander Danisha Robbins
Scientist Officer, Health Resources and Services Administration

Transitioned from the military
Commander Danisha Robbins returned from Iraq having fulfilled her 7-year commitment to the Navy, where she provided mental health services to U.S. Marines. I loved the military, but as my children reached school age, I did not want to have to move every 2 years, she says. CDR Robbins joined another branch of the uniformed services, the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, as chief of psychology services at the Krome Service Processing Center in Miami, FL, currently the largest immigration detention center on the east coast. CDR Robbins sees patients from all over the world, providing mental health evaluations, psychotherapy, and hospitalizations to detainees. This job is very different from one I may have had as a civilian. The acute condition of some requires intensive treatment, but I love what I do and I wouldn't have it any other way, she says.


Commander Wanda Finch
Mental Health Officer, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration

Empowering people and communities
Commander Wanda Finch loves being a social worker and her enthusiasm is infectious. I empower people, give them skills, and teach them how to take care of themselves for a lifetime. I will handhold if I have to. Social workers are probably the most flexible people in the world. We get along with everybody and look out for the greater good, she says. CDR Finch works at the SAMHSA Center for Mental Health Services, where she ensures that adults with mental health issues can get the care that they need. We bridge gaps that exist for communities of color and for individuals who otherwise would not be served, she explains. As an officer in the Commissioned Corps, she is proud to wear the uniform and work with like-minded officers who love what they do, too. People respect the uniform and want to know what I do. I get to educate people about the important work of the Corps. I love knowing I can help people anywhere I wouldn't trade my job for anything in the world, she says.


Commander Deborah Price
Mental Health Officer, Indian Health Service

A Corps career in the Indian Health Service
Commander Deborah Price started her career in the Commissioned Officer Student Training and Extern Program (COSTEP) in 1987 in Fort Defiance, a Navajo community in New Mexico. I knew from the time the plane landed that this was it for me and I've never looked back, she says. Her career in the Commissioned Corps has allowed her to focus on public health, work in American Indian communities, treat American Indians in urban areas, and participate in emergency deployments. American Indian communities are a unique population that historically has been underserved. Even in the urban areas, many members choose to get treatment at the Indian Health Service because it's a cultural center as well as a health facility. We had the Indian market here yesterday and a powwow recently, she says. For the first 9 years of CDR Price's career she was a family nurse, and then she went back to school to become a psychiatric nurse practitioner. Being a psychiatric nurse practitioner is the best of both worlds, nursing and mental health. The great thing about being a Commissioned Corps officer is that we are able to provide care to clients who otherwise would not have received services. It's a privilege to work with American Indians, she says.


Lieutenant Commander Jamie Seligman
Mental Health Officer, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration

A new family tradition
Many officers in the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps speak about the brotherhood of the Corps, but for LCDR Jamie Seligman it really is. I saw my older brother become an officer in the Corps. I was in the Junior Commissioned Officer Student Training and Extern Program (JRCOSTEP) in 2000 and became a commissioned officer in 2001. My brother was my recruiter and he's a great mentor. It's brought us a lot closer, says LCDR Seligman. He was the first social worker at the El Paso Detention Center in El Paso, TX, where he treated hundreds of patients. Detainees often have to wait 6 to 12 months for processing and not knowing when they're being released is very stressful. Most of his patients were not criminals and not used to being in that kind of facility. LCDR Seligman loves his job and makes a difference in people's lives. There's a real camaraderie among the uniformed services. As an officer, I'm able to change my job track and focus on social work even when I'm not providing clinical care. There's no better career than the Corps, he says.


If you are a student or mental health/behavioral health professional interested in the Commissioned Corps, take the next step! E-mail us your questions, call us at 800-279-1605, or apply online now.

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Last updated on 4/23/2009