Suicides rise as combat time increases

Published: Jan. 13, 2009 at 12:07 PM

WASHINGTON, Jan. 13 (UPI) -- U.S. military officials say a record number of soldiers and veterans have killed themselves at a time when the Pentagon has stretched military deployments.

Long and multiple deployments in combat zones result in excessive stress and divisions among families, said Col. Carl Castro, an Army psychologist and suicide researcher.

The suicide rate among veterans who served in Afghanistan and Iraq is higher than the rate among civilians, which is troubling because the military screens soldiers for mental health issues and military personnel typically are healthier than civilians, said Han Kang, an epidemiologist with the Department of Veteran Affairs.

Suicides among Iraq and Afghanistan veterans rose from 52 in 2004 to 110 in 2006, the latest statistics available, USA Today reported.

In 2008, the Marine Corps reported 41 suicides -- a 20 percent increase over 2007. The Army reported 115 suicides in 2007 -- the most since the Army began tracking suicides in 1980. By October 2008, that record had been surpassed with the Army reporting 117 suicides, USA Today reported Tuesday, noting final numbers for 2008 have yet to be released.

© 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Protein might aid probiotics producers (12 min)
Airports seeking to raise facility fee (18 min)
Physical therapy good for microdiskectomy (44 min)
UPI NewsTrack Business (57 min)
Firm questions British hospital efforts
Indianapolis tennis event likely moving
S. Williams fined for U.S. Open outburst
fark
"She puts her hands flat against his chest and leans into him in a simulacrum of a swoon, making...
Burglar patiently explains to residents' children that "Obama let him in" while taking a shower
Some guy sues because people have been photoshopping his mugshot
Men and women respond differently to danger, brain scan shows. Especially if written by Andrew Lloyd...
Two Illinois cities have been planning for a pandemic like swine flu for years, and their efficiency...
Moller skycar nearing 'virtual flight testing', says company spokesman Duke Nukem