The more severe combat a warrior experiences, the more likely he or she is to later attempt suicide, new research at the University of Utah’s National Center for Veterans Studies shows.
It might seem like common sense, says David Rudd, the center’s scientific director and the dean of social and behavioral sciences, but it had never before been empirically validated, he says.
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"This has enormous implications," says Rudd, who will discuss his research with the Congressional Veterans Caucus in Washington on Tuesday and at the American Psychological Association conference in August.
It shows there are ramifications when a nation sends a small, all-volunteer military into combat over and over and over again, he says.
"The severity of your psychiatric injury, the severity of your symptoms is clearly, undeniably tied to the severity of your combat exposure."
Moreover, it puts to rest the notion that warriors become more resilient, more comfortable the longer they are in combat. That’s a bromide sometimes used by those who dismiss combat as a cause because, after all, roughly half of suicides occur among military members who never leave the United States.
"It makes it hard to argue the case anymore that, ‘Hey, people who haven’t deployed are trying to kill themselves," says Rudd. "Yes, they are, but … it’s a separate issue. What this paper helps articulate is there are two different populations of people."
For those in his study who saw heavy combat, the findings are stark: 93 percent qualified for a diagnosis of post traumatic stress disorder and nearly 70 percent had attempted suicide.
Rudd surveyed 244 veterans through the Student Veterans of America for his study, which he expects to publish soon.
Col. Carl Castro, who oversees the Department of Defense’s (DoD) research into suicide prevention and treatment, says Rudd’s findings contribute to a growing body of research into the "tremendous psychological and physical burden" that combat places on service members.
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Says Rudd, who served as an Army psychologist during the Persian Gulf War: "I don’t think there’s anything more tragic than to have someone serve multiple tours in combat and survive and then kill themselves."
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War’s ‘most significant consequence’ » Suicide is a key focus of the National Center for Veterans Studies, which Rudd co-founded at the U. in 2010.
Rudd and the center’s new associate director, psychologist Craig Bryan, oversee projects that are teasing out causes and determining the best treatments. The research is funded by the Department of Defense, which in recent years has poured millions of dollars into the confounding issue.
It used to be that serving in the military made one less likely to commit suicide.
Several years of war in the Middle East, when units were deploying two, three, four times, changed that.
Between 1998 and 2011, a June report showed, 2,990 service men and women died by suicide. The number per year nearly doubled between 2005 and 2009, when it peaked at about 290.
The statistics were published in the Medical Surveillance Monthly Report, a publication of the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center.
When the number of active-duty armed service members taking their own lives dropped slightly in 2010 and again in 2011, the Pentagon took it as a sign its prevention efforts were paying off.
This year, however, suicides are on the rise again.
The Pentagon announced in June that 154 active-duty soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines took their own lives in the first 155 days of the year, outnumbering those killed in combat in Afghanistan.
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