Most suicides by U.S. veterans are by
those over age 50: study
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[July 08, 2016]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
(Reuters) - Well over half of U.S.
military veterans who took their own lives in 2014 were aged 50 or
older, the government reported on Thursday in a study indicating that
combat trauma predating the recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan still
accounts for many veteran suicides.
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs analysis, which shows the
suicide rate among veterans climbing over the past 15 years, is
based on millions of records and is touted as the government's most
comprehensive examination of the issue to date.
President Barack Obama has joined veterans groups in singling out as
a national priority the prevention of suicide among veterans, who
the study says are at a 21 percent greater risk of taking their own
lives than other Americans.
The latest report said 20 former members of America's armed forces
died of suicide each day on average in 2014, down slightly from a
previous study that put the daily average at 22 in 2010.
Of the veterans known to have committed suicide in 2014, the latest
year for which such data was available, 65 percent were at least 50
years of age, old enough to have served in the 1990-91 Gulf War, the
Vietnam War or previous conflicts.
Fewer members of that age group are likely to have seen combat since
the current stretch of U.S. military involvement in Afghanistan and
Iraq began in the early 2000s.
"One veteran suicide is one too many, and this collaborative effort
provides both updated and comprehensive data that allows us to make
better informed decisions on how to prevent this national tragedy,"
Dr. David Shulkin, the Veterans Affairs under secretary for health,
said in a statement.
Fuller analysis and details, including aggregate numbers of veteran
suicides on a yearly basis, are expected to be included in a final
version of the study to be released next month.
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A U.S. Army officer listens to a speaker with the U.S. flag in the
background at the Hiring our Heroes job fair in New York March 27,
2014. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Previous research of the link between battlefield trauma and suicide
has found that among veterans who endured combat, those who suffered
multiple wounds were at the highest risk of later killing
themselves, according to a fact sheet on the website of the
Department of Veterans Affairs.
The Department of Veterans Affairs has taken a number of steps to
prevent suicides, including the 2007 creation of a telephone
hotline.
The latest figures from the department show that since 2001 the rate
of suicide among veterans who do not use Veterans Affairs services
increased by nearly 39 percent, compared with less than 9 percent
for those who did.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Editing by Steve
Gorman and Leslie Adler)
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