From Military.com:
“Alarming VA Report Totals Decade
of Veteran Suicides”
The Department of Veterans
Affairs released an alarming report Friday showing that at least 60,000
veterans died by suicide between 2008 and 2017, with little sign that the
crisis is abating despite suicide prevention being the VA's top priority. Although
the total population of veterans declined by 18% during that span of years,
more than 6,000 veterans died by suicide annually, according to the VA's 2019
National Veteran Suicide Prevention Annual Report. The report did not take into
account the possible effects of VA's programs aimed at outreach and removing
the stigma of seeking help for mental health. Overall, though, the data show
the suicide rate is increasing. In 2017, more than 6,100 veterans died by
suicide, an increase of 2% over 2016 and a total increase of 6% since 2008, the
report found. Firearms were the method of suicide in 70.7% of male veteran
suicide deaths and 43.2% of female veteran suicide deaths in 2017, the report
found. Of particular concern was the suicide rate among former National Guard
and Reserve members who were never federally activated and therefore, did not
receive VA services. Within that population, there were 919 suicides in 2017,
an average of 2.5 per day, the report said. Some 12.4% of all military suicides
in 2017 were among this population, the report found. Overall in 2017, the
suicide rate for veterans was 1.5 times the rate for non-veteran adults, after
adjusting for population differences in age and sex, the report said. The
report and an accompanying statement by VA Secretary Robert Wilkie emphasized
that the veteran suicide crisis went beyond the VA's capacity to address it,
and must be targeted in a coordinated approach with local, state and private
partners. "VA is working to prevent suicide among all veterans, whether
they are enrolled in VA health care or not," Wilkie said. "That's why
the department has adopted a comprehensive public health approach to suicide
prevention, using bundled strategies that cut across various sectors -- faith
communities, employers, schools and health care organizations, for example --
to reach veterans where they live and thrive." The new approach was meant
"to reach all veterans, even those who do not and may never come to us for
care," Wilkie said. In his cover letter for the report, Dr. Richard Stone,
the executive in charge of the Veterans Health Administration, said of suicide
prevention that "We cannot do this alone; we call on our community
partners to join us in this effort." "We will only be successful at
preventing suicide if we break this work into actionable, manageable
steps," Stone said.
If you or someone you know is
having thoughts of suicide, contact the Veterans Crisis Line to receive free,
confidential support and crisis intervention available 24 hours a day, 7 days a
week, 365 days a year. Call 1-800-273-8255 and Press 1, text to 838255, or chat
online at VeteransCrisisLine.net/Chat.
^ This report is extremely sad.
Every one of those 60,000 veteran men and women was a father, a mother, a son,
a daughter, a husband, a wife, a boyfriend, a girlfriend, a friend and a hero. I
don’t place complete blame on the VA for all of these suicides, but I know the
VA could have and should have done much more to help these men and women in
their time of need. The same should also be said about the US Military, the US
Government as a whole and the American people. We, as a nation, promise so much
to those that agree to risk everything to protect us and we often go-back on
those promises once their military service is completed. We basically use them
and then lose them. The US Government, US Military and the VA all need to start
keeping the promises we made to help soldiers, veterans and their families before,
during and after their service. Doing that we can help lower the 60,000 number
to near 0. ^
https://www.military.com/daily-news/2019/09/23/alarming-va-report-totals-decade-veteran-suicides.html
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