Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— General Military Law › Part II— PERSONNEL › Chapter 55— MEDICAL AND DENTAL CARE › § 1074m
The Secretary of Defense must give every service member who is deployed for a contingency operation a one-on-one mental health check. The checks must happen once during the 120 days before deployment, once every 180 days while deployed, once after redeployment (between return and 21 days after post-deployment leave ends), and at least once a year after that (starting 21 days after leave ends, or 180 days after redeployment if the post-return check was done later). The check after return can be delayed to between 90 and 180 days if there are not enough people to do them or if return processing prevents an earlier check. The Secretary can skip the after-return or annual checks if doing them would pull someone off a forward mission or put people or the mission at risk. No after-return or annual check is required once the member is discharged or released. These checks must find PTSD, suicidal thoughts, and other behavior health problems so people get help. Trained and certified staff must do the checks. They must be private, include a face-to-face conversation, and review the member’s deployment health records. The Secretary may count other similar exams as meeting these rules if they match the standards. The Defense Department must share relevant assessment information with the Department of Veterans Affairs under a joint protocol consistent with the Wounded Warrior Act and section 1720F of title 38, and members must be told before each check that the information may be shared. The Secretary must write rules for how this works and tell the congressional defense committees within 270 days after those rules are issued.
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Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
10 U.S.C. § 1074m
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60