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Richard
07-16-2010, 07:06
And so it goes...:(

Richard :munchin

Army Reports Record Number Of Suicides For June
USAToday, 15 July 2010

Soldiers killed themselves at the rate of one per day in June making it the worst month on record for Army suicides, the service said Thursday.

There were 32 confirmed or suspected suicides among soldiers in June, including 21 among active-duty troops and 11 among National Guard or Reserve forces, according to Army statistics.

Seven soldiers killed themselves while in combat in Iraq or Afghanistan in June, according to the statistics. Of the total suicides, 22 soldiers had been in combat, including 10 who had deployed two to four times.

"The hypothesis is the same that many have heard me say before: continued stress on the force," said Army Col. Christopher Philbrick, director of the Army Suicide Prevention Task Force. He pointed out that the Army has been fighting for nine years in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Last year was the Army's worst for suicides with 244 confirmed or suspected cases.

The increase was a setback for the service, which has been pushing troops to seek counseling. Through May of this year, the Army had seen a decline in suicides among active-duty soldiers this year compared with the same period in 2009.

Philbrick expressed frustration over the June deaths. "Because we believe that the programs, policies, procedures ... are having a positive impact across the entire force. The help is there."

A leading military suicide researcher says changing a culture that views psychological illness as a weakness takes time.

"I would expect it to be years," said David Rudd, dean of the College of Social and Behavioral Science at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.

The mounting stress on an Army facing renewed deployments and combat in Afghanistan is also a factor, Rudd said. "That's not a challenge they (Army leaders) control. It's a challenge that the president and Congress controls," he said.

The Army also unveiled on Thursday a training video designed to combat suicides. It contains testimonials by soldiers who struggled with self-destructive impulses before seeking help. It is titled Shoulder to Shoulder: I Will Never Quit on Life.

Philbrick said this was an improved video that he hoped would reach troubled soldiers. The previous video did not resonate with average soldiers, he said. During a showing in Baghdad, soldiers laughed at it, Philbrick said. "In grunt language, it sucked," he said.

The Army's current suicide rate is about 22 deaths per 100,000, which is above a civilian rate that has been adjusted to match the demographics of the Army. That rate is 18-per-100,000. Only the Marine Corps has a higher suicide rate, at 24-per-100,000. Although Marine Corps suicides had been tracking similarly to last year's record pace, the service reported only one suicide in June.

Just among Guard and Reserve soldiers, suicides have occurred at a higher rate this year than last year, according to Army figures. There have been 65 confirmed or suspected cases this year, compared with 42 for the same period last year.

http://www.usatoday.com/news/military/2010-07-15-army-suicides_N.htm?csp=YahooModule_News

Buffalobob
07-16-2010, 07:57
It is sad. You see it in your newspaper when it happens locally or when a guy barricades himself and hurts his family first. The price of war is very high when you count in the human suffering. Probably if you looked at things like divorce rates, drug abuse, alcoholism you would find similar statistics for those serving. I am sure this went on in past wars but without computers and internet links the data could not be accurately compiled.

Just a very sad situation. A very heavy burden being carried by a few brave enough to shoulder the load.

Richard
01-05-2011, 22:11
:(

And so it goes...

Richard

Army Efforts Don't Stem Fort Hood Suicides
USAToday, 5 Jan 2011

The Army's largest post saw a record-high number of soldiers kill themselves in 2010 despite a mental health effort aimed at reversing the trend.

The Army says 22 soldiers have either killed themselves or are suspected of doing so last year at its post at Fort Hood in Texas, twice the number from 2009.

That is a rate of 47 deaths per 100,000, compared with 20-per-100,000 rate among civilians in the same age group and a 22-per-100,000 rate Army-wide.

"We are at a loss to explain the high numbers," says Maj. Gen. William Grimsley, acting commander. "It's personally frustrating."

The Army had boosted staffing and psychiatric services to address the problem, particularly after the fatal shootings of 13 people on the post in November 2009. The Army alleges that Maj. Nidal Hasan, a psychiatrist, fired his pistol indiscriminately at soldiers waiting for routine medical care.

Fort Hood now has one of the largest counseling staffs in the Army with more than 170 behavioral health workers.

"Any time they've asked for it, the Army has done everything it can to provide assistance," says Army Col. Christopher Philbrick, deputy commander of an Army task force on reducing suicides.

Many of the 46,500 soldiers at Fort Hood have either returned from war zones or are on their way to them.

"It's like a chain reaction," says Maxine Trent, director of a free mental health clinic for soldiers near Fort Hood. "Being the front and back door to (Iraq and Afghanistan), on top of having had a massacre on post, we've got some pretty psychologically fragile folks."

The number of suicides at Fort Hood is far greater than at other large Army posts. Fort Bragg, N.C., reported the second highest with 12 cases. The previous high in recent history was 21 suicides in 2009 at Fort Campbell in Kentucky.

All the victims at Fort Hood were men; three killed themselves after serving in combat zones.

One was Army Sgt. Douglas Hale Jr., who had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder after completing his second tour in 2007. He texted his mother, Glenda Moss, on July 6 asking forgiveness before shooting himself to death in a restaurant bathroom near Fort Hood. During the last week of September, four soldiers committed suicide.

"It's just devastating really because they're all so young, with their lives ahead of them," says Linda Chupik, a marriage family therapist who contracts with TRICARE, the Pentagon health care system, to treat soldiers at Fort Hood.

For the first time since 2003, most soldiers assigned to Fort Hood were home from deployment in 2010. The Army believes that problems relating to combat strains and family separation often surface during the months immediately after a soldier comes home.

While final numbers have not been released, the Army was hopeful that suicides among active-duty soldiers might be tracking lower than 2009. However, overall numbers — when suicides among non-active members of the National Guard and Reserve are included — will make 2010 a record year for Army suicides, it says.

"I think the military is busting their butts trying to get some answers on what the best practices will be for this population," Trent says. "It's a bloody learning curve."

http://www.usatoday.com/news/military/2011-01-06-suicides06_ST_N.htm?csp=YahooModule_News

trvlr
01-05-2011, 22:22
2 of the 3 suicide loss reports I've seen over this past year in my BDE (3 suicides over the last year) have involved soldiers with very questionable pasts. Marital issues, family issues, and substance abuse issues pushed them into the army. They remained troubled until they ended their lives. None of them had combat deployments.

I think the entry standards dropping has at least partially led to an increase in suicides.

FYI, over the last year my BDE has force fed us over 20 hours of anti suicide/stress management training. Most of that in 4 hour blocks. It briefs well, but I think some people just can't be helped.

1stindoor
01-06-2011, 07:49
FYI, over the last year my BDE has force fed us over 20 hours of anti suicide/stress management training. Most of that in 4 hour blocks. It briefs well, but I think some people just can't be helped.

I'm not trying to make light of the issue...but a four hour brief? If you can't relax and sleep during that brief you have way too many issues.

mojaveman
01-06-2011, 10:00
Could the military possibly find a better way of screening applicants who might suffer from clinical depression?

trvlr
01-06-2011, 13:03
I'm not trying to make light of the issue...but a four hour brief? If you can't relax and sleep during that brief you have way too many issues.

My BDE employs roving field grades during briefs :D

Dusty
01-06-2011, 13:14
I just pray the leaders bring every asset and tactic to bear on the problem to prevent as many as possible. I'm sure it's top priority, but it is boocoo bad juju in so many aspects, and can't be fixed quick enough IMO.

1stindoor
01-06-2011, 13:46
I just pray the leaders bring every asset and tactic to bear on the problem to prevent as many as possible. I'm sure it's top priority, but it is boocoo bad juju in so many aspects, and can't be fixed quick enough IMO.

I agree. I personally feel that part of the problem is the fact that we've raised one, if not two, generations of kids that have not learned basic coping skills growing up. They've lost their ability to be resilient and as a result are poorly equipped to handle any kind of setback. Couple a divorce on the heels of a major deployment and some of today's youth see no way out.

Richard
01-06-2011, 14:08
It's a scary issue to deal with. When I was Tower Branch Chief, I had an excellent NCO who had failed the JM course and took a lot of ribbing for it by the other instructors. We prepped him and, when we thought he was ready, sent him back...but he failed again. He couldn't take the ding to his pride from failing and drove out to Fryar DZ on a Saturday, parked his car in the woods along the North end of the DZ, taped a hose around his car's exhaust pipe and ran it through the back window, closed all the windows and started the car. It was August in Georgia and we found him on Monday when checking the DZ while prepping for the start of another Jump Week class. He had literally exploded inside the car and everything was covered in body fluids crawling with maggots. I've never forgotten it. :( :(

Now, on a lighter note, I'm glad trvlr's unit has found another useful chore for its junior field grade officers - classroom monitor. :p

And so it goes...

Richard :munchin