From Barbara Starr and Mike Mount
CNN
WASHINGTON (CNN) --
One week after the U.S. Army announced record suicide rates among
its soldiers last year, the service is worried about a spike in
possible suicides in the new year.
The Army said 24 soldiers are believed to have
committed suicide in January alone -- six times as many as killed
themselves in January 2008, according to statistics released
Thursday.
The Army said it already has confirmed seven
suicides, with 17 additional cases pending that it believes
investigators will confirm as suicides for January.
If those prove true, more soldiers will have
killed themselves than died in combat last month. According to
Pentagon statistics, there were 16 U.S. combat deaths in Afghanistan
and Iraq in January.
"This is terrifying," an
Army
official said. "We do not know what is going on."
Col. Kathy Platoni, chief clinical psychologist
for the Army Reserve and National Guard, said that the long, cold
months of winter could be a major contributor to the January spike.
"There is more hopelessness and helplessness
because everything is so dreary and cold," she said.
But Platoni said she sees the multiple
deployments, stigma associated with seeking treatment and the
excessive use of anti-depressants as ongoing concerns for
mental-health professionals who work with soldiers.
Those who are seeking mental-health care often
have their treatment disrupted by deployments. Deployed soldiers
also have to deal with the stress of separations from families.
"When people are apart you have infidelity,
financial problems, substance abuse and child behavioral problems,"
Platoni said. "The more deployments, the more it is exacerbated."
Platoni also said that while the military has made
a lot of headway in training leaders on how to deal with soldiers
who may be suffering from depression or
post-traumatic stress disorder, "there is still a huge problem
with leadership who shame them when they seek treatment."
The anti-depressants prescribed to soldiers can
have side effects that include suicidal thoughts. Those side effects
reportedly are more common in people 18 to 24.
Concern about last month's suicide rate was so
high, Congress and the Army leadership were briefed. In addition,
the Army took the rare step of releasing data for the month rather
than waiting to issue it as part of annual statistics at the end of
the year.
In January 2008, the Army recorded two confirmed
cases of
suicides and two other cases it was investigating.
Last week, in releasing the report that showed a
record number of suicides in 2008, the Army said it soon will
conduct servicewide training to help identify soldiers at risk of
suicide.
The program, which will run February 15 through
March 15, will include training to recognize behaviors that may lead
to suicide and instruction on how to intervene. The Army will follow
the training with another teaching program, from March 15 to June
15, focused on suicide prevention at all unit levels.
The 2008 numbers were the highest annual level of
suicides among soldiers since the Pentagon began tracking the rate
28 years ago. The Army said 128 soldiers were confirmed to have
committed suicide in 2008, and an additional 15 were suspected of
having killed themselves. The statistics cover active-duty soldiers
and activated National Guard and reserves.
The Army's confirmed rate of suicides in 2008 was
20.2 per 100,000 soldiers. The nation's suicide rate was 19.5 per
100,000 people in 2005, the most recent figure available, Army
officials said last month.
Suicides for Marines were also up in 2008. There
were 41 in 2008, up from 33 in 2007 and 25 in 2006, according to a
Marines report.
In addition to the new training, the service has a
program called Battlemind, intended to prepare soldiers and their
families to cope with the stresses of war before, during and after
deployment. It also is intended to help detect mental-health issues
before and after deployments.
The Army and the National
Institute of Mental Health signed an agreement in October to conduct
research to identify factors affecting the mental and behavioral
health of soldiers and to share strategies to lower the suicide
rate. The five-year study will examine active-duty, National Guard
and reserve soldiers and their families.
CNN's Adam Levine
contributed to this report.
All AboutU.S.
Army •
Suicide •
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder