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MULTIPLE DEPLOYMENTS RAISE MENTAL HEALTH RISKS --
Trigger drug and alcohol abuse and contribute to
record
suicide levels, say reports from the American
Psychological Association.

For more about veterans and mental health issues,
use the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
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h.php?q=mental+health&op=ph
Story here...
http://www.usatoda
y.com/news/health/2008-08-14-veterans-mental_N.htm
Story below:
-------------------------
Multiple deployments
raise mental health risks
By Marilyn Elias, USA TODAY
Multiple combat
deployments to Iraq are increasing serious mental health problems among
soldiers, triggering drug and alcohol abuse and contributing to record
suicide levels, suggest reports out Thursday at the American Psychological
Association meeting in Boston.
In a typical unit headed to Iraq, 60% are on their second, third or fourth
deployment, lasting about a year each, says U.S. Army Col. Carl Castro,
who directs a medical research program at Fort Detrick, Md.
More
time in Iraq means heavier exposure to violence, which leads more soldiers
to develop symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and
depression, Castro told the psychology meeting. By their third tour to
Iraq, more than a quarter of soldiers show signs of mental problems, such
as PTSD, and it's about 1 out of 3 for those exposed to heavy combat,
according to a U.S. Army Surgeon General report in March on more than
2,000 soldiers.
In another report at the meeting, deployment correlated with more heavy
drinking and illegal drug use, according to anonymous questionnaires given
to about 34,000 active duty troops, Reservists and National Guard members.
Deployed Reserve troops had the highest traumatic stress symptoms and
rates of "seriously considering suicide," according to the Defense
Department-funded study by RTI International, Research Triangle Park, N.C.
National Guard and Reservists sent to Iraq and Afghanistan are
disproportionately represented in returning veteran suicides, according to
a Department of Veterans Affairs analysis. There were 115 Army suicides
and 935 reported attempts in 2007, a record high, show Army reports.
"There are concerns about the reserves," says Lynn Pahland, a health
promotion policy director in the Defense Department. But the military is
increasing efforts to prevent, identify and treat troubled troops,she
adds.
At a crisis hotline for veterans, about 75% of the 400 calls a weekcome
from Reserve and National Guard troops or their families, says Shad Meshad,
president of the National Veterans Foundation (1-888-777-4443), which runs
the line. "Many have been sent back three or four times," he says.
On Wednesday, a Texas Reservist going to Iraq for the fourth time called
"in a hysterical state" because his house is being foreclosed on, and his
wife is taking the kids and leaving him. Says Meshad: "We're just trying
to help him out with the financial stuff and keep him from hurting
himself."
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
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