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Home : News
NEWS | Aug. 20, 2007

Suicide seen as major threat to National Guard Soldiers

By Sgt. 1st Class Erick Studenicka

ARLINGTON, Va. - In terms of a threat to Army National Guard Soldiers, it easily rivals rounds from a concealed sniper, the devastation of an improvised explosive device or a blast from rocket propelled grenade.

The threat doesn't stem from any foreign armed forces or military power, and casualties resulting from this threat are often the saddest and most heartbreaking of deaths for the family and friends of these Soldiers.

The threat is suicide, which ranked as the No. 3 cause of death for Army National Guard Soldiers through Aug. 13, according to the Army National Guard's Suicide Prevention Program. There have been 42 cases of suicide in the Army National Guard this fiscal year, and it narrowly trails only combat (47) and accidents (45) in terms of Soldier deaths.

Statistics reveal the National Guard suicide trend mirrors the active-duty Army and the numbers are increasing. The Army Suicide Event Report released Aug. 16 reported there were 99 confirmed suicides among active duty Soldiers in calendar year 2006, its highest number since 1991. The Army National Guard's total of 42 is already 17 more than the 2006 total and marks the highest total since the Army National Guard began keeping suicide statistics in 2004.

The comparison to the active duty has one major difference though, said Master Sgt. Marshall Bradshaw, the National Guard Bureau suicide prevention manager.

"The active duty Army has resources and facilities available to the Soldiers 24 hours a day, seven days a week," Bradshaw said. "They have a greater ability to track information and provide suicide prevention resources to their Soldiers.

"Providing suicide prevention resources (for the National Guard) is a greater challenge," he said.

Bradshaw is the subject matter expert for the National Guard Bureau, and he attended the Army suicide media roundtable held in conjunction with the Army's release of its 165-page Army Suicide Event Report.

Bradshaw said that current suicide numbers for the Army National Guard may be skewed high due to recent changes in reporting methods and improved information collection.

"The National Guard appointed its first full-time suicide prevention program manager in August 2006. Until that time, there weren't good tracking mechanisms in place," said Bradshaw, an Oregon National Guardsman, who became the program manager on Aug. 1. "We believe much of our information, our increased numbers, is due to better tracking mechanisms.

"However, logic would tend to agree, along with the Army and its increased deployments, that our suicide numbers would increase also," Bradshaw said.

It's yet to be proven, however, that there is a direct correlation between deployments and suicide. Col. Elspeth Ritchie, the behavioral health psychiatry consultant to the U.S. Army surgeon general and roundtable participant, said there is currently little statistical evidence linking suicide with the number and length of Soldiers' deployments.

She did say that said failed relationships are believed to be the cause of 70-80 percent of suicides and that deployment-linked stress definitely could be a factor behind strained relationships.

Finances and employment issues are two other major causes of suicide, Bradshaw said.

National Guard statistics reveal 60 percent of Soldiers, who committed suicide this year, have been on a previous deployment.

Other National Guard suicide statistics from this fiscal year show that gunshot wounds are the most common method of suicide (67 percent) and lower enlisted ranks make up the majority of suicides (32 of the 42 suicides were committed by the ranks of sergeant and below). Thirty-nine of the 42 suicides this year were committed by male Soldiers.

The National Guard's suicide rate (12 per 100,000) remains about the same as that of the general U.S. population, which is 11.05 per 100,000, according to the Center for Disease Control.

Every Soldier is an important, valuable resource to the military, and the National Guard will continue to prioritize suicide prevention, Bradshaw added.

In addition to the National Guard's commitment toward funding a full-time suicide prevention program manager, 30 states have now appointed part-time managers as an additional duty. Training for the state suicide prevention program managers is set for the spring of 2008. Also, funding is being pursued to establish a permanent position in each state.

NGB has adopted the Ask your buddy, Care for your buddy, Escort your buddy (ACE) Suicide Awareness and Prevention Training and disseminated it to all ranks. All Army National Guard chaplains have been or will be trained in this program at the annual Chaplain Area Sustainment Training this year.

The suicide prevention program will also team with the U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventative for the release of the ACE Suicide Intervention Program in January 2008, and NGB will host "Train the Trainer" events for all state suicide prevention managers at their training event during the spring of 2008.

Future plans are to include this training during all Army National Guard resident training courses at all National Guard training centers around the country.

Lt. Gen. Clyde A. Vaughn, director of the Army National Guard, has declared September to be Suicide Prevention Month, and all units will incorporate suicide prevention awareness into their September unit training.

Bradshaw said anyone considering suicide but fearing the stigma associated with seeking help should know that studies have shown careers are not affected by requests for mental-health guidance or counseling. Anyone considering suicide or who knows someone pondering suicide is encouraged to contact their local chaplain or call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK, the civilian suicide prevention number at 1-800-SUICIDE or military OneSource at 1-800-342-9647.