| ARMY'S MENTAL
HEALTH ADVISORY TEAM ISSUES NEW REPORT
MHAT-VI report finds biggest factors
contributing to mental illness are repeated combat tours, shorter
times between tours and the amount of combat a soldier sees.
NOTE from Larry Scott, VA
Watchdog dot Org ... You can find the complete MHAT reports
here ...
http://www.armymedicine.army.mil/reports/mh
at/mhat_vi/mhat-vi.cfm
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Army study: Mental health staff
lacking in Afghanistan
By NANCY A. YOUSSEF
McClatchy Newspapers
http://www.kansascity.com/444/story/1568811.html
An Army task force has found
that a growing number of soldiers serving in Afghanistan are
suffering from some kind of mental stress and is urging the
military to double the number of mental health professionals
deployed there.
The study, conducted by the Army Mental Health Advisory Team,
found that soldiers' morale Afghanistan is "significantly lower"
than it was in 2005 and 2007 studies, as soldiers face a resurgent
Taliban and the highest levels of
violence
of the war. Junior officers are under greater stress than senior
commanders are, the study found.
In 2009, 21.4 percent of the soldiers in Afghanistan were
suffering from depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress,
compared with 10.4 percent in 2005. In Iraq, the figure was 13
percent in 2009, the lowest level of that war.
There were seven confirmed suicides in Afghanistan in 2008; as of
May 31 of this year, there had been five. According to Army
statistics, 133 active-duty soldiers committed suicide from
January to October this year.
However, the Army's effort to get more mental health workers to
the front lines is confronting a national shortage of mental
health professionals that hasn't spared the military.
Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, 39, the Army psychiatrist who's accused of
shooting 55 people at Fort Hood, Texas, on Nov. 5, and killing 13
of them, was set to deploy to Afghanistan. He was one of 121 Army
psychiatrists, and the military is investigating whether the
shortage of mental health doctors may have prompted officials to
keep Hasan in the Army despite some of his colleagues' concerns
about his own condition.
Some Army officials who worked alongside Hasan during his tenure
at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington said his
performance was subpar. He was transferred to Fort Hood in July.
The study found that the biggest factors contributing to mental
illness are repeated combat tours, shorter times between tours and
the amount of combat a soldier sees during his or her tour. The
study also found that the effectiveness of a soldier's leaders was
one of the biggest factors in mitigating the threat of depression
or other mental illness.
The study also found that soldiers complained that they have a
difficult time finding mental health workers, and access to mental
health care is particularly difficult in Afghanistan because the
terrain and weather limit travel. In addition, because the
military is fighting the Taliban by spreading forces throughout
the country, soldiers are often sent to remote bases.
There are 40 Army mental health workers in Afghanistan, and
roughly 200 in Iraq, which has 120,000 U.S. troops.
The goal, Army officials said, is to get to a ratio of one mental
health worker for every 700 troops in Afghanistan, which would
require an additional 60 professionals, by December. That would
provide enough support for the 68,000 troops deployed there now.
Officials couldn't say, however, whether they could get more
workers to Afghanistan if President Barack Obama sends more
troops, a decision that he's currently deliberating.
"We have got to make the soldier understand this is real. They are
not weak. They are not imagining," said Lt. Gen. Eric Schoomaker,
the Army Surgeon General and the commander of the U.S. Army
Medical Command.
However, Schoomaker insisted that the military wouldn't compromise
quality "just to get a body out in the field." Army officials
didn't say whether they'd employed more stringent criteria since
the Nov. 5 rampage at Fort Hood, saying that case is under
investigation.
Although Secretary of Defense Robert Gates has pushed to remove
the stigma within the military for those who seek mental health
counseling, the study found that soldiers still aren't convinced.
Despite its effort tackle suicides and growing mental health
needs, the Obama administration still hasn't nominated an
assistant or deputy assistant secretary of defense for health
affairs.
The study is the sixth of its kind conducted by the Army, which
surveyed 2,400 troops in Iraq and 1,500 in Afghanistan.
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
Army, MHAT-VI, mental health, mental illness |