- Read IAVA Executive Director Paul Rieckhoff's
Military.com op-ed on the report.
- Get a copy of the full report (PDF).
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Associated Press | August 16, 2007
WASHINGTON - Army Soldiers committed suicide last year at the highest
rate in 26 years, and more than a quarter did so while serving in Iraq
and Afghanistan, according to a new military report.
The report, obtained by The Associated Press ahead of its scheduled
release Thursday, found there were 99 confirmed suicides among active
duty Soldiers during 2006, up from 88 the previous year and the highest
number since the 102 suicides in 1991 at the time of the Persian Gulf
War.
The suicide rate for the Army has fluctuated over the past 26 years,
from last year's high of 17.3 per 100,000 to a low of 9.1 per 100,000
in 2001.
Last year, "Iraq was the most common deployment location for both (suicides) and attempts," the report said.
The 99 suicides included 28 Soldiers deployed to the two wars and 71
who weren't. About twice as many women serving in Iraq and Afghanistan
committed suicide as did women not sent to war, the report said.
Preliminary numbers for the first half of this year indicate the
number of suicides could decline across the service in 2007 but
increase among troops serving in the wars, officials said.
The increases for 2006 came as Army officials worked to set up a
number of new and stronger programs for providing mental health care to
a force strained by the longer-than-expected war in Iraq and the global
counterterrorism war entering its sixth year.
Failed personal relationships, legal and financial problems and the
stress of their jobs were factors motivating the Soldiers to commit
suicide, according to the report.
"In addition, there was a significant relationship between suicide
attempts and number of days deployed" in Iraq, Afghanistan or nearby
countries where troops are participating in the war effort, it said.
The same pattern seemed to hold true for those who not only attempted,
but succeeded in killing themselves.
There also "was limited evidence to support the view that multiple
... deployments are a risk factor for suicide behaviors," it said.
About a quarter of those who killed themselves had a history of at
least one psychiatric disorder. Of those, about 20 percent had been
diagnosed with a mood disorder such as bipolar disorder and/or
depression; and 8 percent had been diagnosed with an anxiety disorder,
including post traumatic stress disorder - one of the signature
injuries of the conflict in Iraq.
Firearms were the most common method of suicide. Those who attempted
suicide but didn't succeed tended more often to take overdoses and cut
themselves.
In a service of more than a half million troop, the 99 suicides
amounted to a rate of 17.3 per 100,000 - the highest in the past 26
years, the report said. The average rate over those years has been 12.3
per 100,000.
The rate for those serving in the wars stayed about the same, 19.4 per 100,000 in 2006, compared with 19.9 in 2005.
The Army said the information was compiled from reports collected as
part of its suicide prevention program - reports required for all
"suicide-related behaviors that result in death, hospitalization or
evacuation" of the Soldier. It can take considerable time to
investigate a suicide and, in fact, the Army said that in addition to
the 99 confirmed suicides last year, there are two other deaths
suspected as suicides in which investigations were pending.
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