Again, I would caution the committee on this, because there's no evidence base that shows that. Online, PowerPoint, and web-based training can bring awareness about PTSD and OSI, but we know from the neurobiology of learning that if you want to link rational thought—how you should do something, or what you know you should do—with the motor movements and how you should do those in high-stress incidents, you have to practise them together, and that means actively. Again, in high-stress critical incidents, you start relying on your automatic fight-or-flight response, so if you haven't trained that automatic fight-or-flight response to be doing the correct thing, then it's going to go back to instinctual behaviour, which often puts you at risk for OSI and PTSD and mistakes. Really, a wise use of money, at least for prevention in the use of force, is to do these two things together rather than to sit and listen to something.
On March 22nd, 2016. See this statement in context.