Vets’ suicides are not rare

By IR Staff - 11/01/07

Just as the self-inflicted death of Helena Guardsman Chris Dana following a tour in Iraq has spurred the Montana National Guard to action, recent data about the suicide rate among war veterans nationally is prompting the VA to intensify its prevention programs.

Dana killed himself last March after he was given a less-than-honorable discharge for his faltering performance caused by the post traumatic stress disorder he was suffering from.

Since then, Gov. Brian Schweitzer created a task force to study PTSD and come up with solutions. Among the recommendations the task force made was to evaluate soldiers’ mental health every six months for the first two years after deployment.

The Guard has hired Helena psychotherapist Carroll Jenkins to train therapists across the state in recognizing and dealing with the disorder. He’s also involved in a conference scheduled for next month in Helena hosted by the Montana Chapter of the National Association of Social Workers on the subject of PTSD and other needs of veterans and their families.

These are all welcome developments, even if they spring from tragedy, but it is becoming clear that Dana’s death was no isolated event.

Preliminary VA research obtained by the Associated Press this week reveals that there were at least 283 suicides among veterans who left the military between the start of the war in Afghanistan in October, 2001, and the end of 2005. And that doesn’t count the 147 troops who have killed themselves in Iraq and Afghanistan since the wars began. (Nor does it count soldiers who have killed themselves after returning to the U.S. but before they leave the military. Those deaths aren’t tracked by the Pentagon.)

A separate study earlier this year by researchers at Portland State University found that veterans were twice as likely to commit suicide as male nonveterans.

PTSD is nothing new. It used to called “shell shock” or “battle fatigue.” But maybe, at last, real and effective help will be available for war veterans. It’s the least the county can do for people that Americans keep professing to honor.

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Reader Comments:

consider_this wrote on Nov 2, 2007 11:00 AM:

" It's all cost-benefit analysis. World War II was horrific in its devastation. But what was the benefit? A world significantly freer from tyranny. The Civil War killed half-a-million, I believe. But the benefit was the very existence of our country as it is today. So the question is, what benefit has been derived from all the destruction and suffering visited on the people of Iraq and the families of the dead and wounded in the US by this president’s immoral hobby war? Well, besides the destruction of Iraq’s society and economy, the price of oil is now near $100/barrel, and the whole world -- including all of our former friends -- now hates the United States, so I don’t see any real gain. That was my point. "

purple wrote on Nov 1, 2007 8:58 PM:

" So I guess President Bush is responsible for the suicides of those who fought during World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, etc., etc. What won't the defeatocrats blame on President Bush? I wonder if "consider this" is willing or able to blame President Carter for the mis-steps he made which resulted in the Iranian government holding 52 Americans hostage for 444 days! Or is President Bush responsible for that too? "

consider_this wrote on Nov 1, 2007 1:22 PM:

" This is just more evidence of the very real but hidden costs of this president's immoral hobby war -- costs that this criminal administration fails to own up to. Who is counting these suicides? Who is counting the millions of refugees in Jordan and Syria? Who is counting the dead Iraqi civilians, euphemistically known as "collateral damage?" Who is counting all the PTSD vistims? Who is counting the broken families of the dead and seriously wounded? This president's war has cost so much -- and for what purpose?--to satisfy his twisted sense of revenge for his father? "


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