Sunderland Echo

WHO WILL HELP US?

CALLS FOR THE GOVERNMENT TO DO MORE TO SUPPORT FORMER SERVICEMEN AND WOMEN

- By Gavin Ledwith gavin.ledwith@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @gledwijp

The Government is today urged to do more to support former armed forces personnel amid fears of a future “epidemic” of veterans with mental health issues.

An investigat­ion on behalf of Johnston Press, the Echo’s parent company, has found no comprehens­ive official records are kept for the number of British ex-servicemen and women ending their lives.

Coroners, for instance, are not obliged to flag up a person’s military past if they kill themselves in later life.

This is in stark contrast to allies such as America and Australia where official figures do exist.

In the US, veteran suicide rates have increased by nearly 20% since the onset of lengthy military campaigns in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

Our research suggests that in this country coroners are investigat­ing an average of one suspected veteran suicide every 11 days in 2018.

This compares to an average of one personnel death every 14 days due to enemy action in Iraq and Afghanista­n between 200114.

While the Ministry of Defence (MoD) insists Armed Forces suicides here are “significan­tly lower” than the 8% nationwide average, a leading clinician at veterans’ charity Combat Stress insists the Government is relying on data nearly a decade old and needs to do more to analyse the problem.

Support groups here in Sunderland and politician­s have also called for tighter records and more help generally for veterans.

Ger Fowler, founder of Veterans in Crisis Sunderland (VICs), who once considered taking his own life while he struggled with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), said: “How can we understand the extent of the problem unless we have the figures in front of us?

“Someone somewhere needs to do something. We have university research which shows that lads coming out of the forces are not talking about their problems for 18 years.

“Don’t get me wrong, the Armed Forces are helping more than they did when I left in the 1990s.

“But we could have an epidemic of people struggling with their mental health unless even more is done.”

A former head of the Royal Navy expressed his surprise at the lack of suicide records.

Admiral Lord West, who is now a Labour peer, said: “I’m very surprised there’s no kind of record of suicide from mental illness that stems from their time in the military. I think it would make absolute sense to do that.”

Figures from Combat Stress, which is treating more than 3,000 veterans, show that 19% of them have had moderate to severe suicidal thoughts.

Dr Dominic Murphy, from the charity, said: “From the mid-noughties onwards there has been a higher rate of suicide among American, Canadian and Australian veterans and some of our European allies and we just don’t know the situation in the UK because the last study was in 2009.

A MoD spokespers­on

said: “While rates of suicide are significan­tly lower in the Armed Forces than the general population, any suicide is a tragedy for the individual, their family, friends and colleagues and we take each case extremely seriously.

“The reasons people take their lives can vary and are not necessaril­y linked to their service. Help is available for serving personnel, their families and veterans, including through the two 24-hour mental health helplines provided by Combat Stress.”

Among measures launched in the last 18 months is an online Veterans’ Gateway to streamline access to help and a tailored NHS service to help personnel leaving the armed services.

A Veterans’ ID card to allow ex-servicemen and women to identify themselves and access services is also in the pipeline.

Tomorrow: Sunderland veteran’s battle with PTSD.

“We just don’t know the situation in the UK because the last study was in 2009” DR DOMINIC MURPHY

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 ??  ?? No comprehens­ive official records are kept for the number of British ex-servicemen and women ending their lives.
No comprehens­ive official records are kept for the number of British ex-servicemen and women ending their lives.
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