The Columbus Dispatch

Military suicides increase by 20 percent

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Lolita C. Baldor and Robert Burns

WASHINGTON — Military suicides have increased by as much as 20% this year compared with the same period in 2019, and some incidents of violent behavior have spiked as service members struggle under COVID-19, war-zone deployment­s, national disasters and civil unrest.

Though the data is incomplete and causes of suicide are complex, Army and Air Force officials say they believe the pandemic is adding stress to an already strained military.

And senior Army leaders — who say they've seen about a 30% jump in active duty suicides so far this year — told the Associated Press that they are looking at shortening combat deployment­s. Such a move would be part of a broader effort to make the well-being of soldiers and their families the Army's top priority, overtaking combat readiness and weapons modernizat­ion.

The Pentagon refused to provide 2020 data or discuss the issue, but Army officials said discussion­s in Defense Department briefings indicate there has been roughly a 20% jump in overall military suicides this year. The numbers vary by service. The active Army's 30% spike — from 88 last year to 114 this year — pushes the total up because it's the largest service. The Army Guard is up about 10%, going from 78 last year to 86 this year. The Navy total is believed to be lower this year.

Army leaders say they can't directly pin the increase on the virus, but the timing coincides.

“I can't say scientific­ally, but what I can say is – I can read a chart and a graph, and the numbers have gone up in behavioral health-related issues,” Army Secretary Ryan Mccarthy said in an AP interview.

Pointing to increases in Army suicides, murders and other violent behavior, he added, “We cannot say definitive­ly it is because of COVID. But there is a direct correlatio­n from when COVID started, the numbers actually went up.”

Preliminar­y data for the first three months of 2020 show an overall dip in military suicides across the active duty and reserves, compared with the same time last year. Those early numbers, fueled by declines in Navy and Air Force deaths, gave hope to military leaders who have long struggled to cut suicide rates. But in the spring, the numbers ticked up.

“COVID adds stress,” said Gen. Charles Brown, the Air Force chief, in public remarks. “From a suicide perspectiv­e, we are on a path to be as bad as last year. And that’s not just an Air Force problem, this is a national problem because COVID adds some additional stressors – a fear of the unknown for certain folks."

The active duty Air Force and reserves had 98 suicides as of Sept. 15, unchanged from the same period last year. But last year was the worst in three decades for active duty Air Force suicides. Officials had hoped the decline early in the year would continue.

Navy and Marine officials refused to discuss the subject.

It's unclear how the military suicide rate this year compares with the civilian rate. The most recent civilian suicide data is from 2018.

James Helis, director of the Army’s resilience programs, said virus-related isolation, financial disruption­s, remote schooling and loss of child care all happening almost overnight have strained troops and families.

“We know that the measures we took to mitigate and prevent the spread of

COVID could amplify some of the factors that could lead to suicide,” said Helis, who attended department briefings on suicide data.

Army leaders also said troops have been under pressure for nearly two decades of war. Those deployment­s, compounded by the virus, hurricane and wildfire response and civil unrest missions, have taken a toll.

Soldiers’ 10-month deployment­s have been stretched to 11 months because of the two-week coronaviru­s quarantine­s at the beginning and end. Mccarthy said the Army is considerin­g shortening deployment­s.

Gen. James Mcconville, Army chief of staff, said there's new attention to giving service members "the time that they need to come back together and recover.”

“We were very focused on readiness four years ago because we had some readiness challenges, and we did a great job. The force is very, very ready now. But I think it’s time now to focus on people,” he told the AP.

Mcconville and Army Sgt. Maj. Michael Grinston said units have begun “stand-up” days, where commanders focus on bringing people together, making sure they connect with one another and their families and ensuring they have strong values in how they treat one another.

The isolation is also taking a toll on veterans, particular­ly the wounded.

Sergio Alfaro, who served in the Army for 4-1/2 years, said fears associated with the virus intensifie­d his PTSD and suicidal thoughts.

“It's definitely something that’s made things a bit more chaotic, trying to plan for the future, do things together,” said Alfaro, who deployed near Baghdad in 2003, facing daily mortar rounds, including one that killed his commander. “It’s almost like adding more trash on the heap.”

Though he once feared that strangers passing by might hurt him, now he fears people have COVID and not show symptoms. Others in support groups, he said, "are just sick of living this way, worried about what’s coming over the next hill, what next horrible thing are we going to be confronted with.”

Roger Brooks, a senior mental health specialist at the Wounded Warrior Project, said veterans are reporting increased suicidal symptoms and anxiety. Between April and the end of August, the group saw a 48% jump in referrals to mental health providers and a 10% increase in mental health calls and virtual support sessions, compared with the previous five months.

Brooks said there's anecdotal evidence that the pandemic has made wounded warriors like amputees feel more isolated, unable to connect as well with support groups. He said injured vets also have seen disruption­s in medical visits for pain management and other treatments.

Need help? Call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline (1-800-273-8255). Military veterans press 1. Individual­s can also go to: https://suicidepre­ventionlif­eline.org/talk-to-someone-now and veterans can go to woundedwar­riorprojec­t.org or call the project’s resource center at: 888-997-2586.

 ?? [ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Gen. James Mcconville, Army chief of staff, said soldiers need to be given time to touch base with family and “the time that they need to come back together and recover.” With him at left is Secretary of the Army Ryan Mccarthy.
[ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS] Gen. James Mcconville, Army chief of staff, said soldiers need to be given time to touch base with family and “the time that they need to come back together and recover.” With him at left is Secretary of the Army Ryan Mccarthy.
 ?? [ELAINE THOMPSON/ ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? A U.S. Army soldier works inside a Fort Carson, Col., mobile surgical unit that was being set up in March because of the pandemic. The coronaviru­s, natural disasters and civil unrest are taking a toll on members of the military, experts say.
[ELAINE THOMPSON/ ASSOCIATED PRESS] A U.S. Army soldier works inside a Fort Carson, Col., mobile surgical unit that was being set up in March because of the pandemic. The coronaviru­s, natural disasters and civil unrest are taking a toll on members of the military, experts say.

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