Welcome to Gaia! :: View User's Journal | Gaia Journals

 
 

View User's Journal

Report This Entry Subscribe to this Journal
levelpastor8255 Journal levelpastor8255 Personal Journal


levelpastor8255
Community Member
avatar
0 comments
PTSD only Affects the Military?
User Image - Blocked by "Display Image" Settings. Click to show.

It is unrealistic to anticipate former company customers to instantly reintegrate to their former civilian lives, but they maybe experiencing serious mental health issues if they're moody or extremely agitated or sleeping or if they're not wanting to eat, Moutier said.

"a Number of The dishonorable discharges might be related to having a mental health condition and being unable to maintain that behavior under control and breaking the rules, plus some of the early separations could be persons in distress who properly decided from service," said Moutier, who wasn't active in the study.

Military suicides could be likely after members keep the service than during active duty deployment, particularly if their time in uniform is temporary, a U.S. study finds.

Support users having a dishonorable discharge were about doubly prone to commit suicide as those that had an honorable separation.

Access to weapons may exacerbate the issue for those contemplating suicide, Peterson said. " we've seen if they don't have access to firearms they're less likely to kill themselves, although It Is A risk factor that sometimes gets ignored."

"individuals who really have a problem with an implementation don't get the next time," said Peterson, a retired military psychiatrist who was not active in the study. " separation from the army is usually a sign for something else."

"This is the first-time this kind of big, comprehensive study has discovered an elevated suicide risk among those who have separated from support, specially if they served at under four years or had an other than honorable discharge," said Rajeev Ramchand, a specialist in military mental health and suicide prevention at Rand Corporation who wasn't active in the study.

To understand the link between suicide and implementation, Reger and colleagues examined military records for more than 3.9 million company customers in reserve or active duty in support of the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan to December 31, 2007 at any position from October 7, 2001.

Suicide rates were similar aside from deployment status. There have been 1,162 suicides among individuals who deployed and 3,879 among those who didn't, representing suicide rates per 100,000 individual-years of 17.78 and 18.86 , respectively.

Leaving the military significantly elevated suicide risk with a suicide rate of 26.06 after separating from company compared with 15.12 for many who stayed in uniform. Those that left sooner had a greater threat, using a rate of 48.04 among those who used less than a year in the military.

Some support members who keep the army early might have had risk factors for destruction such as mood disorders or drug abuse problems that added for their separation, especially if they had a dishonorable discharge, said Dr. Christine Moutier, chief medical officer of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.

"It was certainly intuitive since the battles went on and suicides went up for people to believe that arrangement was the main reason, but our data show that that is too easy; if you go through the overall population, arrangement is not connected with destruction," said lead writer Mark Reger, of Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Tacoma, Washington.

A total of 31,962 fatalities occurred, by December 31, 2009, including 5,041 suicides.

It is possible that pre-arrangement tests may screen-out people who have mental health issues, making individuals who deploy repeatedly a healthy, more resistant team, said Dr. Alan Peterson, a psychologist at the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio who focuses the PTSD effect on battle-related post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

"The lack of an association between suicide and deployment risk is not stunning," she said. "in A very high level, these results highlight the need for us to pay for closer focus on what happens when people keep the army."

Whilst the U.S. military has historically experienced lower suicide rates compared to the civilian population, suicides among active duty service customers have surged before decade, almost doubling within the Marines Corps as well as the Army, Reger said.




 
 
Manage Your Items
Other Stuff
Get GCash
Offers
Get Items
More Items
Where Everyone Hangs Out
Other Community Areas
Virtual Spaces
Fun Stuff
Gaia's Games
Mini-Games
Play with GCash
Play with Platinum