Perilous Times
Army reports record number of suicides for June
By Gregg Zoroya, USA TODAY
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.