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U.S. Still Losing a Brigade's Worth of Vets Every Year to Suicide

By Penny Coleman, AlterNet. Posted November 11, 2008.


Obviously, the most immediate and reliable way to prevent soldier suicides is to get troops out of harm's way -- bring them home.
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It’s Veteran’s Day and exactly a week since Obama’s exhilarating victory. I know that I, like so many others, am filled with soaring hope and feeling expansive. In truth, so many Americans have been hurt so badly these past eight years, and so many of us are invested in the idea of change, that there will have to be disappointments, and compromise and patience.

For some, however, Patience = Death.

“Every year we lose about a rifle platoon worth of Marines to suicide,” Navy chaplain Lt. Wayne Tomasek recently told a gathering of recruits.

“There is no tomorrow. Tomorrow will be too late,” Tomasek said. “Intervene now. Don’t waste time. Are you up for that challenge?”

Throughout the campaign, Barak Obama repeatedly referred to the “sacred trust” he plans to establish with American veterans. "There is a U.S. military principle that we all admire: leave no one behind," he said. “This is a moral obligation. When I am President, we will not leave any of our veterans behind."

It will be a daunting undertaking. Suicides in the military have been climbing steadily since the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Veteran suicides, at last count (2005), were occurring at more than 6,200 a year, and suicide attempts at about 1000 a month. For all the much-touted attempts of military officials to intervene, those appalling numbers have not been checked.

Last week, announcing a new five-year, $50 million partnership with the National Institute of Mental Health to study the problem, Dr. S. Ward Cassells, Assistant Secretary of Defense for health affairs, admitted that in half the cases the Army can’t figure out why the suicide occurred.

He then trotted out all the same old demons: marital or relationship problems, financial problems, drug or alcohol abuse — all those things which suggest the responsibility of individual soldiers — but then he had to admit, “We’ve reached a point where we need some outside help. We’ve learned a lot. We’ve also learned we don’t understand it all.”

Dr. Thomas R. Insel, director of the National Institute of Mental Health, injected an optimistic note of sanity into the stale conversation, announcing that the study will focus on the role that combat and multiple deployments play in suicide. It is so way past time!

In 2003, the Bush administration decided to save money by limiting access to the VA health care system. That exclusionary policy left almost six million veterans and their families without insurance. Among his campaign promises, Obama said that one of his first acts as president will be to allow all veterans back into the VA. That alone might help prevent suicides.

He has also promised to establish a “zero tolerance” policy for veterans falling into homelessness, and, to that end, he sponsored legislation earlier this year in the Senate (that Bush has threatened to veto) which would provide support services — like mental health counseling, financial planning, and job training — to prevent veterans and their families from sliding into homelessness. Perhaps that will help prevent suicides as well.

He has also promised to reduce the benefit claim backlogs at the VA, to install oversight of the claims process to insure fairness and consistency, to help veterans, especially guardsmen and reservists, fight job discrimination, and in general, to make sure that the VA provides an example of single-payer quality health care delivery that will serve as an inspiration not only for veterans, but for all Americans.

Obama has made some very pretty promises to a population that can’t afford to be spun. What is happening to veterans now is a public health issue of immense proportion. There is no time to waste.

Obviously, the most immediate and reliable way to prevent soldier suicides is to get troops out of harm’s way -- bring them home.

On the first Veterans Day after the Obama election, I am hoping, in the words of the poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti, “for a rebirth of wonder,” hoping that maybe now, finally, “the American Eagle (will) really spread its wings and straighten up and fly right.”

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See more stories tagged with: mental health, suicide

Penny Coleman is the widow of a Vietnam veteran who took his own life after coming home. Her latest book, Flashback: Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Suicide and the Lessons of War, was released on Memorial Day, 2006. Her Web site is Flashback.

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FUBAR!
Posted by: peacefullaim on Nov 14, 2008 4:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So that's 24,800 suicides and 48,000 attempts by year's end...this is incredible to me. How far off the norm as compared to past wars is this?? The depth of this disgrace is beyond words. I want Bushco held accountable damn it! We cannot not let them walk away with this kind of blood on their hands...can we?

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Yes, they can walk with Blood in teirs hands
Posted by: AussieChe on Nov 14, 2008 5:47 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Looking back at the Secretary of States Henry Kissinger, who commit WAR CRIMES and got Nobel PEACE price................

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Peace to our veterans
Posted by: Bliss Doubt on Nov 15, 2008 8:16 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As much as I hate war, I do respect those who risk their lives, no matter what the reasons why they entered military service. From what people have told me who've been to war, and from what I've read, I can see that war ruins lives, even the lives of those who are never killed or maimed. It ruins minds, and forever banishes peace from the heart of the warrior. The experience of war creeps into your sleep, into your quiet moments, and taps you on the shoulder in your most joy filled moments. May we learn peace once and for all, and forever put away our notions of war, because once we've killed everyone that can be called an enemy, we will turn on each other. Those who have been to war even turn on themselves. That is the nature of war.

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Its called 'Conscience' stupid
Posted by: Paxmana1 on Nov 18, 2008 2:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The American Army along with their Israeli Brothers are probably the most bestial in the world.

When was the last time either of your nations obeyed a UN resolution on war crimes?

When the military are ordered to go into places like Fallujah and do what they did .. what does one seriously expect?

When one has slaughtered near on 2 million Iraqis and displaced 4 million more what does one seriously expect?

Shake and bake babies in their cots with white phosphorous .. bayoneting pregnant women .. raping mothers in front of their children and then killing the evidence .. America like Israel forgets that the proof of their video taped atrocities are all over the internet. America forgets that some conscience stricken grunt will spill his guts.

What does one seriously expect .. its called conscience .. all hail to those that have one.

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Cure Exists; But They Won't Use It
Posted by: scottportraits on Nov 18, 2008 4:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, the figure is over 20,000 and may go as high as 48,000 soon.
An interesting note here: the Israeli's also noticed their soldiers coming home with PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder) and attempting suicides, too. But they tried something bold, daring, and innovative: they boiled cannabis (confiscated black market pot) in vegetable oil and give it to the soldiers like castor oil. At any rate, IT WORKS, and they have a 90%+ success rate using this novel 'medicine'.
Here in America we are too Puritanical, hypocritical, and prudish to try something so bold, daring, and innovative. We simply just say "NO"!! ...and abandon those kids to such a terrible fate.
What phoney policies we have, and what a shabby way to treat a bunch of youngsters who've risked their neck so we can have cheap gas at the pump. We should be ashamed of withholding this medicine which would work miracles in most cases.

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Private Hell (PTSD-drug therapy part of the problem) Part 1
Posted by: cocacolocao on Nov 22, 2008 7:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Soldiers are dying in their thousands from suicide following traumatisation in the theatre of War, and the treatment they receive may well be the culprit!

Many vets returning from war, and civilians with trauma related injuries will be medicated. Some of the medications used to treat the condition are extremely dangerous, not only to the medicated sufferers, but to their future offspring as well. That is assuming they are fortunate enough to be able to form meaningful relationships and reproduce once they are well enough to rejoin 'this thing we all take for granted-this thing called LIFE'.

Antidepressant medications are downright dangerous, and the combinations of psychiatric medications prescribed by shrinks, are often less about aiding the sufferer to recover than about medicating the 'soldiers' into a state where they will not pose a threat to the very society that sent them to war in the first place. And these drugs are themselves dangerous-Venlafaxine (Effexor)-Quetiapine (Seroquel)- Amisulpride (Solian)- some of them directly related to the suicidality issue we are discussing here.

It seems that the Veterans returning from War, by reason of their experience and training, are being treated as if they are already Guilty (of future crimes) until they can be proven insane? Why else would PTSD sufferers be covertly medicated with 'drugs which are supposed to help them overcome their PTSD symptoms' when in fact they are being prescribed psychiatric medications for schizophrenics, which are only useful to treat acute Psychosis? Solian-Seroquel, both anti-schizophrenics aren't prescribed for any other reason than to make 'mongs' out of previously high functioning individuals?

Recent studies reveal that 74% of antidepressant medications are no more effective than placebos in the treatment of depression. So what is their function? One of the most common prescription medications, purportedly to treat the depression associated with PTSD, is in actual fact used to treat Mania- the opposite end of the spectrum to depression-hence its use in treating people with bi-polar disorder. Mania is the euphoric side, but it can have dangerous consequences, but so too can the drug, including suicidal thoughts.

Effexor, an SSRI-antidepressant widely used to 'treat PTSD sufferers and people with mental health illnesses (note the distinction)' can not only ruin your sex-life, killing your libido-thereby causing the very depressive symptoms it is meant to prevent. It can also lead to males developing breasts (gynecomastia, can prevent the metabolism of cholesterol into the very thing that makes men men-Testosterone-which in combination with opioids can lead to CASTRATE LEVELS OF TESTOSTERONE in a very short time. I include these points, because the co-morbidity of pain among vets with PTSD is well documented. Some reward for coming home with an injured psyche developed in an illegal war, eh? Is it any wonder people are taking their own lives?

But wait! There's more. And this is something of vital importance to men returning from war with injuries to their minds. Drugs like Effexor are also known to cause damage to the DNA in your sperm, and may also cause the cessation of sperm production (arrests spermatogenesis-Wyeth).

Veterans with an injured psyche are saddled with enough to deal with, without the men undergoing incidental "pharmaceutical sterilization" as well. Depressing isn't it?
Medication is not treatment, and it seems to promote suicidality rather than prevent it. It causes sufficient symptoms to cause severe depression, rather than preventing it. This is quite apart from the debilitating effects of the 'bio-warfare' pills and vaccines they were ordered to take, linked to Gulf-War Syndrome, which up until very recently was 'just another name for PTSD'.

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Private Hell (PTSD-drug therapy part of the problem) Part 2
Posted by: cocacolocao on Nov 22, 2008 7:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have PTSD from life-threatening inuries 'behind enemy lines' living in anticipation of a bullet in the head for over a year. I hid in plain sight, blended in and eeked out a miserable existence supplicated with self-medicating on cocaine and booze to treat a problem I didn't even have a name for- in a country where the language barrier, not to mention poverty issues made seeking support impossible.

When I finally sought help,the shrink refused to accept the veracity of my trauma, withdrew his diagnosis of PTSD, covertly prescribed 'anti-psychotics' used only in the treatment of schizophrenia, but prescribed to PTSD sufferers, not to assist them with recovery, but to 'control' psychosis. Both Solian and Seroquel, used to 'treat PTSD', are anti-schizophrenics. Seroquel is reputed to be one common factor in the deaths of numerous Iraq War Veterans, who die in their sleep. Throwing the baby out with the bathwater is preferable to the 'baby going berzerk' due to an injury to their psyche caused by trauma.

I am not sure what anti-depressant medication these Vets were prescribed, but some of the meds lead to suicidal thinking (Wyeth Pharmaceuticals-Effexor, whose suicidality risk warning was forcibly removed by your own FDA. I never self-harmed nor had major suicidal thoughts until I began taking Effexor. Almost from the moment I commenced on this drug prescribed by a new Psychiatrist with a great deal of experience in the VA field, a leading expert in PTSD- from oz Veterans Health-which was contra-indicated with the Tramal (tramadol) opioid painkiller, I began experiencing intense thoughts of suicide. Almost without exception i was experiencing acute suicidal thoughts about 17 times a day. Within 12 days of commencing on the 'PTSD-drugs' I was self-harming, experiencing homicidal ideation and disordered thinking.

My psychiatrist refused to accept that this was a side-effect of the two contra-indicated drugs. Well of course he would, otherwise he might be challenged about his negligence in prescribing medication which was contra-indicated with the medication I was already on.
It would appear that it is never the fault of the medication. Hell before I was put on methadone six months ago, for my pain (caused by a severe beating and pistol-whipping) and 5 years of brutal work, I was taking 7000mgs of a variety of drugs, all of which were likely candidates for the 'mis-diagnosed schizophreniform psychosis, paranoia etc, but at no stage was there any investigation into the possible organic cause of the 'wrongly assumed symptoms' ie the very drug-cocktail i was on.

Blame the patient. Say they are insane, but for God's sake, and the budget, don't diagnose a compensible injury like PTSD. Sound familiar?

I was recently told when I decided to stop taking that medication because of the various complications, which included profuse sweating, weight gain, and suicidal/homicidal ideation, that there was no link between Effexor and the suicidal thinking I experienced. What a lot of crap! It even refers to the very suicidality risk in the literature produced by Wyeth pharmaceuticals.

How can the patient get fair and appropriate treatment with these very denials by the people prescribing the drugs that cause the very suicide risks that seem to be affecting an overwhelming number of PTSD sufferers returning from the theatre of War. It wouldn't have anything to do with the 'plumbii penduloso', LMF (Lacking Moral Fibre),cowardice, Malingerer Tag frequently used by the military as a form of regimented bastardisation?

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