The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

‘WE’VE LOST SO MANY’

Veteran suicide grows; National Guard highest in active military

- By Peggy McCarthy

Sgt. William Davidson had been struggling with mental health problems since his deployment to Afghanista­n.

When he didn’t attend at least one of his Connecticu­t National Guard drill weekends, he was declared AWOL, or absent without leave, and discharged with a “bad paper” separation. Four months after his discharge, Davidson, 24, fatally shot himself.

Davidson, who had two younger sisters, was among thousands of veterans who die by suicide each year. Despite national goals to prevent veteran suicides, they occur at disproport­ionately higher rates than in the general population.

More than 78,000 veterans died by suicide between 2005 and 2017, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Veteran suicide deaths rose from 5,787 in 2005 to 6,139 in 2017. In the active military, the National Guard, with a suicide rate of 30.6 per 100,000, has the highest rate of any branch, according to the most recent Department of Defense Annual Suicide Report. The overall rate among all active military components was 24.8. This is occurring against a backdrop of rising suicides among all Americans.

“The numbers don’t do anything but grow,” said Davidson’s mother, Donna Chapman of Suffield.

“We’re continuing to fail. I’m sick of it. Everyone’s sick of it,” she said.

Serving in the Guard is unlike other military service. Guard members don’t live on bases. Most are part-time, typically attending monthly weekend drills and two weeks of training in the summer, leaving

them isolated from military leaders and empathetic peers.

In the last year, the National Guard has stepped up suicide prevention and wellness efforts. The goal is to get ahead of the suicide problem by providing support long before people get suicide ideations, officials said. It awarded the Connecticu­t Guard $225,500 for a program designed to mitigate behaviors that increase suicide risk and for conference­s on suicide prevention and military culture for community clinicians and counselors who work with the Guard through the state Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services.

Last year, the VA’s Vet Centers agreed to provide counseling and referral services at Guard drill weekends, including for Guard families and veterans. However, the COVID-19 pandemic has prevented many in-person meetings. Under the arrangemen­t, if veterans don’t meet eligibilit­y requiremen­ts for continuous VA health care, counselors “will make every effort” to connect them to other resources. Guard veterans who have not been federally activated for service in places like Iraq aren’t eligible for VA health care.

In Connecticu­t, active Guard members have had access to counselors from Vet Centers and from the state mental health department for years, officials said.

Jolene Montalvo of Middletown was a full-time Connecticu­t National Guard member. She attempted suicide twice in 2013, a year after she retired. The first time, she called a

friend to say goodbye. The friend contacted 911, saving Montalvo’s life. The next time, Montalvo was discreet and walked to a cemetery to overdose on vodka and pills. After about 18 hours, state police found her “in pretty bad condition,” she said.

Montalvo, who was born on the Groton Submarine Base, said that after serving in Iraq, she suffered from anxiety, depression, insomnia and bipolar disorder, and began drinking heavily. The transition home to motherhood and her Guard job as a recruiter was a “culture shock” after the constant noise from mortars in Iraq and continuous worry about the safety of people in her command. “I was having a really hard time with reintegrat­ion,” she said.

She retired in 2012, but a miscalcula­tion put her retirement date two days short of a 20-year career and retirement pay. “I was in no state of mind to be representi­ng myself during that time,” she said. She is now appealing the date with help from the Connecticu­t Veterans Legal Center.

Montalvo, 45, receives counseling and medical care through a VA program that helps patients live independen­tly. She said her counselor “has saved my life many times. I love this woman.”

In Connecticu­t, from 2015 to 2019, VA suicide prevention coordinato­rs helped more than 2,500 veterans or families of veterans who sought assistance from the national Veterans Crisis Line, according to Jessica Loss, a coordinato­r. She said emergency responders rescued 345 veterans from taking their own lives, adding that 716 callers reported a history of suicide attempts, and 746 reported

suicidal thoughts. Her team helped train some local police about veterans with mental health problems.

“What we’re doing is equipping veterans, families and communitie­s with tools to identify signs of suicide,” she said.

In a survey taken last December and January of members of Iraq and Afghanista­n Veterans of America, 44 percent reported suicide ideation since joining the military, and 62 percent said they know a veteran who has died by suicide, a 22 percent increase since 2014. Thomas Porter, an IAVA executive vice president, called that increase “really shocking” and “huge.”

In June, the Trump administra­tion issued a veterans’ suicide prevention plan designed to raise public awareness, encourage safe firearms storage, identify effective research and increase federal coordinati­on with community mental health providers. About 70 percent of veterans who die by suicide use firearms, according to the VA.

Proposals in Congress to address veteran suicide include grants to community organizati­ons that treat veterans; automatic one-year eligibilit­y for VA health care; and training in suicide prevention and military culture for community providers that contract with the VA.

Chapman, Davidson’s mother, said Guard leadership missed “red flags” that pointed to her son’s problems. In 2016, Davidson appealed his less than honorable discharge status and requested a medical discharge with full benefits. The VA had diagnosed him with combat-related post-traumatic stress. The appeal was denied, but he never knew. The Army Board for

Correction­s of Military Records issued an advisory decision in May, 2017, four months after his death the previous January. His mother received the final decision last December.

Chapman has made the prevention of veterans’ suicide her mission. She is

raising money to build a veterans’ retreat center in her son’s honor and does public speaking about veteran suicide. “We’ve lost so many this way. It’s unacceptab­le,” she said.

This story was reported under a partnershi­p with the Connecticu­t Health I-Team (c-hit.org), a nonprofit news organizati­on dedicated to health reporting.

 ?? Donna Chapman / Contribute­d photo ?? Donna Chapman gives her son, Sgt. William Davidson, a kiss. Davidson struggled with mental health disorders after his deployment in Afghanista­n and killed himself in 2017.
Donna Chapman / Contribute­d photo Donna Chapman gives her son, Sgt. William Davidson, a kiss. Davidson struggled with mental health disorders after his deployment in Afghanista­n and killed himself in 2017.

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