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Congress Wants Data on Vet Suicides
Associated Press
December 13, 2007
WASHINGTON - The parents of an Iraq war veteran who committed suicide
and members of Congress on Dec. 12 questioned why there's not a
comprehensive tracking system of suicide among Iraq and Afghanistan
veterans.
Mike Bowman, of Forreston, Ill., said his son, Spc. Timothy Bowman, 23,
is a member of the "unknown fallen" not counted in statistics. His son,
a member of the Illinois National Guard, took his own life in 2005
eight months after returning from war. Bowman said he considers his son
a "KBA" - killed because of action.
"If the veteran suicide rate is not classified as an epidemic that
needs immediate and drastic attention, then the American fighting
soldier needs someone in Washington who thinks it is," Bowman said.
Bowman was one of several witnesses who testified before the House Veterans' Affairs Committee on the issue.
Rep. Bob Filner, the committee chairman, questioned why the comprehensive tracking wasn't already being done.
"They don't want to know this, it looks to me," said Filner, D-Calif. "This could be tracked."
Dr. Ira Katz, the VA's deputy chief patient care service officer for
mental health at the Department of Veterans Affairs, defended the work
being done by his agency to tackle the issue, including implementing a
suicide prevention hotline.
"We have a major suicide prevention program, the most comprehensive in
the nation," Katz said. Katz questioned why Filner was focusing on the
number of suicides instead of looking at treatment programs implemented
to help prevent suicide.
Awareness of suicide among Iraq and Afghanistan veterans was heightened
earlier this year when the Army said its suicide rate in 2006 rose to
17.3 per 100,000 troops - the highest level in 26 years of
record-keeping.
The Department of Veterans Affairs tracks the number of Iraq and
Afghanistan veterans who commit suicide, but only if they have been
discharged from the military.
The Pentagon tracks the number of suicides in Iraq and Afghanistan. For
an earlier story, a Pentagon spokeswoman told The Associated Press the
military does not keep track of whether active duty troops who took who
took their own lives served in Iraq or Afghanistan.
In an e-mail on Wednesday, the same spokeswoman, Cynthia Smith, said,
"We track all suicides, I just don't have combat service information
readily available."
At least 152 troops have committed suicide in Iraq and Afghanistan,
according to the Defense Manpower Data Center, which tracks casualties
for the Pentagon.
On Oct. 31, the AP reported that preliminary research from the
Department of Veterans Affairs had found that from the start of the war
in Afghanistan on Oct. 7, 2001, and the end of 2005, 283 troops who
served in the wars who had been discharged from the military had
committed suicide. On Wednesday, Katz said the VA's number had been
changed to 144 because some of the veterans counted were actually in
the active military and not discharged on the day they committed
suicide.
Smith said that the military's suicide rate is still lower than that of the general population.
After leaving the military, however, veterans appear to be at greater
risk for suicide than those who didn't serve. Earlier this year,
researchers at Portland State University in Oregon found male veterans
were twice as likely to commit suicide as their civilian counterparts.
In a report last May, the VA Inspector General said VA officials
estimate 1,000 suicides per year among veterans receiving care within
the agency and as many as 5,000 per year among all veterans.
"When decision makers do no have reliable data, we must rely on
anecdotal evidence," said Rep. Steve Buyer, R-Ind. "While these may
help inform us, it does not help us to develop strategies to diminish
the risk and prevent incidents of suicide."
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