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Full Version: Army: soldier suicide rate may set record again
Ed Schultz Message Board > Message Forums > National Security
aquahusseingreen
This is a tragedy and a travesty.
QUOTE
Soldier suicides this year could surpass the record rate of last year, Army officials said Thursday, urging military leaders at all levels to redouble prevention efforts for a force strained by two wars.

As of the end of August, there were 62 confirmed suicides among active duty soldiers and Guard and Reserve troops called to active duty, officials said. Another 31 deaths appear to be suicides but are still being investigated.

If all are confirmed, that means that the number for 2008 could eclipse the 115 of last year — and the rate per 100,000 could surpass that of the civilian population, Col. Eddie Stephens, deputy director of human resources policy, said at a Pentagon news conference.

"Army leaders are fully aware that repeated deployments have led to increased distress and anxiety for both soldiers and their families," Army Secretary Pete Geren said.

"The Army is committed to ensuring that all soldiers and their families receive the behavioral health care they need," he said in a statement distributed at the press conference on National Suicide Prevention Week starting Sunday.

<snip>
To try to stem the continually growing number of suicides, the Army already has been increasing the number of staff psychiatrists and other mental health staff as well as chaplains and bolstering programs both at home and at the battlefronts. Officials also are about to issue a new interactive video for troops and will be adding a new program on resilience to basic training starting in January, said Brig. Gen. Rhonda L. Cornum, an assistant Army surgeon general.

"There are no simple problems and there are no simple solutions," Cornum said. "There is no program that has been shown to be truly effective at preventing suicides ... Success will be the sum of a number of smaller steps."
<snip>
Officials last year also budgeted $25 million for the "Strong Bonds" program, run by chaplains and aimed at strengthening personal relationships strained by long and repeated separations as well as other stresses.
The contributing factors are likely numerous, complex, and additive in nature. They may include, but are not limited to: longer, repeated deployments, combat and deployment stress (including PTSD), combat related injuries, anxiety and stress from home life (including separation from families, financial struggles, etc.), altered recruitment criteria that has reportedly allowed in more soldiers with pre-existing mental health issues, etc.

Supporting the troops ought to include taking care of them and their well-being while enlisted and after discharge while under the VA's watch.
Izzzatso
The rates for those serving in the National Guard are the highest.

http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/09052008/watch2.html

http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/09052008/watch3.html
aquahusseingreen
QUOTE(Izzzatso Hussein @ Sep 6 2008, 02:11 AM) *
Thanks for posting. That's terrible. The demands placed on those men and women are unforgivable.

Bill Moyers does excellent work.
Cementmonkey
Cant even get the suicide right. When one of theirs commits suicide they strap on a bomb and take out a bunch of targets with them. When one of ours does it, they are always alone.
Izzzatso
QUOTE(Cementmonkey @ Sep 8 2008, 03:17 PM) *

Cant even get the suicide right. When one of theirs commits suicide they strap on a bomb and take out a bunch of targets with them. When one of ours does it, they are always alone.

That has to be one of the more tasteless posts I've seen in a long time.
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