HealthPop
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Michelle Castillo /

CBS News/ July 10, 2012, 3:01 PM

Study: Suicide rates among army soldiers up 80 percent

CBS

(CBS News) - A report published in Injury Prevention shows that suicide rates among U.S. Army personnel increased 80 percent between 2004 and 2008. Out of the 255 soldiers who had committed suicide between 2007 to 2008, 17 percent of the soldiers had previously been diagnosed with a mental health problem. Fifty percent had visited a health professional for a mental issue.

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"While suicide remains a relatively rare event, the results of this study suggest it is increasing at an unprecedented rate and, unlike any other time in history, U.S. military suicide rates now appear to have surpassed those among comparable civilian populations," Dr. Simon Rego, a supervising psychologist at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City, told HealthDay. "It is therefore critical that we address this emerging public-health problem."

Rates of mental health issues like anxiety, personality disorders, substance abuse, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among soldiers correlate to the suicide increase, the researchers said.

It's a problem that has existed since soldiers have returned from deployment, but Dr. Joseph Hullett, a board-certified psychiatrist who is also a Vietnam-era Marine, believes it's only going to get worse. He says the problem is that combat exposure during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars was very high, meaning more soldiers are likely to suffer from mental health problems.

"There are people in the service right now who are remaining in the service who probably have the kinds of multiple deployments and multiple year combat situations that make them vulnerable," Hullett, senior medical director of clinical strategy for Optimum Health, Behavioral Solutions, explained to Healthpop.

According to the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, 7 to 8 percent of the U.S. population will have PTSD at some point in their lives. About 5.2 million adults are affected every year -- and not all of them have gone through a traumatic event.

When it comes to people in the military the numbers increase. For every 100 Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans, 11 to 20 of them will have PTSD, and female soldiers are overrepresented. Not only are women more likely to get PTSD, 23 percent report sexual assault when in the military, and 55 percent say they have experienced sexual harassment, factors that can add more stress to an already stressful situation, according to the department.

A 2008 study found that there was a link between PTSD and extreme stress or trauma associate with war, and many soldiers will turn to alcohol to cope with their problems, Medscape reported.

The study found 63 percent of Reserve or National Guard solders were more likely to start heavily drinking, with nearly 26 percent participating in binge drinking after deployment. Women were 1.2 times more likely to start drinking heavily, but less likely to report alcohol-related problems. Younger troops, reservists and National Guard members were the most at risk.

During Hullet's era, he heard stories from returning soldiers who said they would tell others that they wanted to commit suicide, only to have their problems dismissed by their non-commissioned officers. Hullett, who did not serve overseas himself, said some NCOs would even tell the soldier to use their gun or take some poison, thinking that this form of intimidation would dissuade the person from taking his or her own life, he said.

"There is this macho attitude of not receiving help in the military," Hullett said. "That kind of culture, people feel they don't have the kind of resources (available to help them), even though they do."

Methods in treating at-risk soldiers however have changed since Vietnam, and Hullett applauds the military's current efforts for providing mental health services. He's noticed how all branches are working to make soldiers and veterans more aware of how to respond and recognize people who may want to commit suicide and says there are more resources than ever through local VAs and 24-crisis support hotlines.

It's not only the time in the service that makes it difficult for soldiers: It's returning back to daily life, either after the war or between deployments. Many times a PTSD-affected individual may not show signs for three to four months after coming home. Hullett said there is a natural period of decompression after returning from combat zones. "The fact is you have changed when you come home, and your family has changed too," he said.

"If you were a male that was in the service when you were 18, you may not know the family you left behind, and your family is a stranger to you," he added.

Because so many soldiers refuse to talk about their experiences, it can be difficult to find out if something is wrong. Hullett said family members should be aware if their loved one starts displaying symptoms of PTSD, which include startled responses, hypervigilance, nightmares, general overall anxiety or fear and flashbacks of experiences, which may be similar to hallucinations. Other symptoms include being numb to one's surroundings (also known as the "thousand-yard stare"), clinical depression, shame and survivor's guilt.

Hullett said it is of the utmost importance that veterans and their family members recognize if someone was suffering from PTSD and get help before it was too late. It's not easy though for returning veterans, many of whom become isolated. He emphasized that it was important that both sides reach out to each other. "(Veterans) need to be in a situation where they can talk with people," he said.

The National Center for PTSD of the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs has more.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
5 Comments Add a Comment
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robert4health says:
A new study on the Breakthrough Remedy for Veteran Suicide has been released through an E-book titled: Veteran Suicide Breakthrough. Go here to learn more http://www.opsetthemfree.com/ Apparently the VA is unaware of the alternative breakthrough solution that they have validated to prevent 80-90% of veteran suicides, as discovered by Harvard Medical School. Help us get the word out.
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rfores22 says:
Mental health problems are a serious issue amongst returning veterans. Brandon Nealy, a soldier who fought in the War on Iraq, was quoted in the novel Tortured by Justine Sharrock as saying that he believes every soldier that comes back from war must suffer from PTSD. Although I have never been to war myself, I do have to agree with this. War is a traumatizing experience in itself and having been in a situation like this causes a variety of problems for your psyche. The United States should be giving more aid to helping soldiers overcome this struggle once they return home as well as on the battlefield itself.
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MagnaCartaUK says:
I know, or rather knew, of three Second World War veterans who suffered and found extreme difficulty in adjusting to 'normal life' after the conflict. One was a prisoner of the Japanese - captured at Singapore - and carried the physical scars for it too. Another, a close relative, fought with the Parachute Regiment at Arnhem, the third, ironically, was a member of the German Parachute Regiment who fought in Italy - he stayed here in Britain as his home was in what became Communist East Germany, and his family were all dead by war's end anyway. All of them suffered from nightmares well into the 1980s, and found adjusting to 'normal' civilian life nigh on impossible for a considerable time. They all suceeded in the end, but why after all these years are veterans STILL not given the support they need - support on THEIR terms, not people who don't know war from their left leg? The answer is I think, that the military everywhere only value them for a certain period of time. Society doesn't understand them because society hasn't been to war, and those charged with their healthcare haven't either, or else don't care enough. Here in Britain, there's been many cases of ex-forces being homeless - and if that doesn't outrage society - then frankly society isn't bloody worth fighting for. I hope a veteran somewhere over there reads this - and at least knows that they're still many that do understand the feelings of unnecessary guilt, or the reasons for behaviour that you, yourself don't quite understand nor want either. As always, you have had to be there to fully understand - or have been given certain medication. Some do understand though - it's just a matter of knowing you judge yourself with hindsight, and knowing that P.T.S.D. sufferers see and feel things the rest of us don't have to. .... Neither should they ever feel like people don't understand - and that IS something society can face up to. Best Wishes to those who suffer from this illness - don't ever give up!
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lillyhorton says:
One way to stop this is to stop the war. They could help these men and women by bringing them home to protect US borders.
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FormerUSMCSergeant says:
"army soldiers"

Redundant.
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