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Army What's up with the Army?

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Old 05-13-2008, 04:52 PM
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Post We are losing 18 Veterans a day to Suicide

We are losing 18 Veterans everyday to suicide

Posted by: "Colonel Dan" colonel-dan@sbcglobal.net coloneldan1

Tue May 13, 2008 10:12 am (PDT)

Note: Veterans we must look after each other

Vets' growing suicide rate worries officials

<mailto:jkoopman@sfchronicl e.com> John Koopman, Chronicle Staff Writer

Monday, May 12, 2008

(05-11) 19:26 PDT -- Tim Chapman hit bottom on a trip to Reno.

He had been a soldier and served in the Middle East. But after his discharge
for mental health problems, he returned to his home in Manteca and started a
rapid descent. He joined a gang, sold and used drugs. His wife left him.

He wanted to commit suicide. And almost did.

The number of veterans who commit suicide is growing, and it is causing
major concern among veterans groups and lawmakers. A recent report by CBS
News, now supported by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, indicates
that an average of 18 veterans commit suicide every day nationwide.

[See PDF tables for veteran and non-veteran suicides for
<http://www.sfgate. com/chronicle/ acrobat/2008/ 05/09/vetsuicide 05.pdf> 2005
and <http://www.sfgate. com/chronicle/ acrobat/2008/ 05/09/vetsuicide 06.pdf>
2006.]

In California in 2006, 666 veterans committed suicide - 21 percent of the
3,198 suicides that year, according to the California Department of Public
Health. Yet that year, the 2.1 million veterans in the state represented
only 6 percent of the state's 37.1 million residents.

The suicide figures among veterans have caught congressional attention. Two
senators have demanded the resignation of Ira Katz, the VA official who
wrote "Shh" at the top of the e-mail dealing with suicide attempts and
disputed the statistics in public testimony while confirming them in
internal documents. A House committee has scheduled a hearing on veterans'
suicides this week.

Suicide hot line

Kerri Childress, a VA spokeswoman, said the department has more than 17,000
mental health workers and is hiring 3,700 more, making the VA the largest
mental health provider in the nation. The VA has also created a veteran
suicide hot line, which is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and
the agency has suicide prevention coordinators at each of its medical
centers.

The VA has not disclosed what proportion of suicidal veterans served in Iraq
and Afghanistan. But testimony in a lawsuit - brought by veterans groups
seeking an order to force the VA to promptly screen and treat those at risk
of suicide and set timetables for handling claims for medical benefits -
indicated there was evidence that returning troops are taking their own
lives in greater numbers. Witnesses and plaintiffs said there has been a
steady increase in the veterans' suicide rate since 2001, and a
comparatively high rate among veterans ages 20 to 24. The suit was heard by
federal District Court Judge Samuel Conti, who has yet to make a ruling.

During the trial, witnesses testified the suicide rate for those veterans
was anywhere from two to 7.5 times the rate among the general population.

The causes for this increase in veterans' suicide rates aren't well
understood, but mental-health professionals say the biggest problem is
post-traumatic stress disorder. The ailment, better-known as PTSD, is
thought to afflict up to 30 percent of the troops who have served in Iraq
and Afghanistan.

Stress and trauma

Dr. Frank Schoenfeld, assistant chief of mental health at the San Francisco
VA Medical Center, said suicidal impulses and PTSD are two distinct
afflictions, but that the stress and trauma of war, or serving during
war-time, can exacerbate suicidal impulses.

"We've seen this throughout military history, whether Vietnam or the first
Gulf War and earlier," he said. "There are increased mental-health problems
and a corresponding increase in suicide rates. That this is happening with
veterans returning from Iraq is not surprising."

Schoenfeld said the issue might affect younger veterans more, because they
are less likely to seek treatment and they don't have strong family ties, as
do older veterans. They might be more likely to seek solace in alcohol or
drugs, which only make matters worse.

Dr. Mel Blaustein, an expert on suicide and a former army therapist, said
some veterans can feel isolated and helpless. If those feelings spiral out
of control, the individual feels intense emotional pain, and might believe
the only way to relieve it is to commit suicide.

For troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, the conditions are ripe for mental
health problems.

All service in the war zones is not the same. Many live comfortably on bases
with all sorts of amenities, including base exchanges as big as department
stores and access to Burger King. Others live in tents or old buildings with
no running water, and get ambushed or shot by snipers while on patrol in
dirty, filthy neighborhoods.

Something in common

But they all share one thing: the ever-present possibility of instant death.
Anyone in a convoy on a roadway might be blown up by a roadside bomb, what
the military calls "IEDs" or improvised explosive devices. Even on the most
secure base, insurgents lob mortars and rockets, and people die in their
sleep, or walking to the post office.

Romeo Horvath returned from Iraq with a bad case of PTSD, and while he is
not suicidal, he said, that's not uncommon even in Iraq.

A military police officer, Horvath was on watch in a guard tower one night
and heard a gunshot from within the compound. Over the radio, someone
announced that a Marine had just shot himself.

"A lot of people get this feeling of helplessness, " he said. "Some guy has a
girlfriend, and she's cheating on him. Can't call home, can't go try to work
things out. You just sit there and think about it over and over again. You
can go crazy."

Janie Patterson, the suicide prevention coordinator for the VA Medical
Center in Palo Alto, said much of her job involves training VA personnel how
to identify and offer help to veterans who might be thinking of killing
themselves. The trick, she said, is finding those veterans and convincing
them that it's all right to have those problems and it's all right to seek
help.

"Everyone thinks a mental problem means you're nuts," she said, "instead of,
you just need help. It's like drinking or gambling or any disability. There
are avenues to help you function."

Trouble at home

Chapman, who is 24, started suffering from depression after he was sent to
the Middle East. He was having trouble at home, and his grandfather was
dying. He said he just needed to go home to straighten things out, then he
would have returned to his unit.

But the depression hit hard, and the army discharged him for mental-health
reasons. Disillusioned, he somehow figured a trip to Reno would help.
Chapman found himself facing the edge of a steep cliff, revving the engine
and contemplating whether to kill himself.

"I was sitting there, crying so hard, I felt like my eyeballs were melting,"
Chapman said.

As he sat and pondered the end of his life, Chapman said, a ball of light
appeared to him and slowly settled over his head. It might have been the
drugs he'd been taking, he realizes. Or it might have been God speaking to
him. In either case, he woke from his stupor and looked up. Just ahead was a
blue highway sign that said, "Hospital."

Chapman lived through his ordeal. He is now in recovery at San Francisco's
Swords to Ploughshares and living in an apartment on Treasure Island.

Chapman likes the place a lot. He smiles, and he's put on some weight. He
lives with other veterans, and the people who run the place were in the
military, too. They understand, he said.

"It's a little easier to talk to these guys," he said. "I can work on my
issues."

Suicide hot line

To reach the veteran suicide hot line, call (800) 273-8255 and press 1. The
line is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

E-mail John Koopman at <mailto:jkoopman@sfchronicl e.com>
jkoopman@sfchronicl e.com.

http://sfgate. com/cgi-bin/ article.cgi? f=/c/a/2008/ 05/12/MNE810FAIK .DTL

This article appeared on page A - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle
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