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Sharp increase in mental illness among US troops during 2007
By James Cogan
29 May 2008
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American military personnel deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan
are being diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
in rapidly increasing numbers, according to statistics released
on Tuesday by the US Army Surgeon-General.
In 2003, 1,020 army personnel and 206 marines were diagnosed
while on deployment. The figures had climbed to 6,876 and 1,366
by 2006. Last year, PTSD cases leapt to 10,049 and 2,114ten
times the number before the Bush administration launched the invasion
of Iraq in 2003.
Including Navy and Air Force cases, 39,366 members of the US
military were officially diagnosed as suffering from the debilitating
illness between January 1, 2003 and December 31, 2007, during
their deployment in Iraq or Afghanistan.
The release of the figures follows testimony in March by Gerald
Cross, Deputy Under Secretary for Veterans Health Administration,
in a class action against the US government by Veterans for Common
Sense and Veterans United for Truth. Cross testified that of 300,000
Afghanistan and Iraq veterans who had been treated in Department
of Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities, half were diagnosed with
a serious mental illness, including 68,000 with PTSD.
PTSD is defined as a common anxiety disorder that develops
after exposure to a terrifying event or ordeal in which grave
physical harm occurred or was threatened. Its symptomssuch
as flashbacks, nervousness, insomnia and avoidance of contact
with othershave been noted among soldiers returning from
war for hundreds of years. Sufferers are prone to self-harm, ranging
from suicide to substance abuse, as well as to outbursts of aggression
against others.
It is no surprise that soldiers who have been sent to fight
in the Bush administrations wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
are succumbing at a staggering rate. Few military experiences
can be as traumatic as serving in occupation armies that are hated
by the civilian population and targeted by a resistance movement.
The troops are encouraged to view everyoneincluding the
old, women and childrenas potential insurgents. They live
in terror of being captured. Even soldiers in administration and
logistical roles live on edge. Nervous or trigger-happy troops
have killed civilians as a result.
Where conventional combat has taken place in Iraq, it has involved
intense street-to-street fighting, often over weeks. In general,
however, there is no frontline or identifiable location of the
enemy. Most American casualties have been caused by
roadside bombs, unseen snipers or helicopter crashes. Tens of
thousands of US troops have endured multiple tours of duty in
these conditions.
Soldiers are surviving roadside bombings with horrifying injuries,
due to advances in medical treatment. Only about 9 percent of
American casualties who are not killed outright die from their
wounds in Iraq, compared with 17 percent in Vietnam and 23 percent
during World War II. Over 3,000 troops have returned from Iraq
or Afghanistan with severe brain damage, damaged spinal cords,
lost limbs or third degree burns to large parts of their body.
In many cases, these injuries will disable them for life.
Better vehicle armour and body protection has meant thousands
of American soldiers whose vehicles have been hit by roadside
bombs suffered only minor wounds or no obvious injury at all.
They have still lived through the trauma of an attack, however,
and did not necessarily escape psychological and physical harm.
In April, the Rand Corporation released an estimate, based
on surveys of veterans, that of the 1.6 million American military
personnel who had served in Afghanistan and Iraq, at least 300,000
are suffering from PTSD or major depression. The Rand think tank
also estimated that as many as 320,000 may have suffered some
form of brain damage from explosion blast waves, affecting their
long-term cognitive capabilities.
The Army Surgeon-General, Lieutenant General Eric Schoomaker,
did not comment on the Rand findings, but he did admit that the
official tally of PTSD cases is most likely only the tip of the
iceberg. He told journalists on Tuesday: I think were
still in the infancy of fully knowing how to track it [PTSD].
Indicating that he believed that the number was far higher,
Schoomaker underscored the relationship between combat deployment
and serious mental illness. We know that human beings exposed
to that environment are susceptible to developing symptoms. Soldiers
are human beings and they are subject to extreme stress,
he said.
The sharp increase in PTSD cases during 2007 is partly because
more soldiers than ever before were in a combat zone as a result
of the Bush administrations surge of some 30,000
additional troops to Iraq. In many cases, it was their second,
third or even fourth deployment. The fighting in the first eight
months of last year was also some of the most intense of the conflict,
particularly in Baghdad, Anbar province and Diyala province. Iraqi
insurgents made greater use of bombs designed to penetrate armour.
More US troops were killed and wounded than in any other year
of the war thus far.
The large discrepancy between the official number of PTSD cases
and the Rand Corporation estimate is due to lack of diagnosis.
Of those surveyed by Rand, half said that a friend of theirs had
been killed or wounded; 10 percent had been injured themselves;
and 45 percent said they had seen dead or seriously wounded civilians.
However, of those who described symptoms of PTSD or depression,
only 53 percent had sought medical help. That suggests some 150,000
Afghanistan and Iraq veterans remain undiagnosed.
It is also possible that veterans genuinely afflicted with
PTSD have been assessed as suffering milder psychological illnesses
such as adjustment disorders or short-term depression for which
they do not receive a disability pension. A veterans group exposed
earlier this month that a psychologist in a VA clinic in Texas
had emailed staff advising them not to diagnosis PTSD as we
are having more and more compensation veterans. While the
case was dismissed as an isolated one, it points to the tremendous
pressure applied to VA employees to give out as little as possible
in the way of compensation.
Veterans Affairs actually used budgetary limitations
as one of the governments defences in the class action against
the slow time taken to process compensation claims. According
to attorney Daniel Bensing, the VA received 838,000 new claims
in 2007, a 25 percent increase. Much of the increase was due to
Vietnam veterans entering the system in larger numbers, but claims
by Afghanistan and Iraq vets were a significant proportion.
The veterans groups suit, representing some 12,000 individuals,
cites estimates that over half a million veterans are waiting
for their claims to be acted on, with the process often taking
more than 180 days. The class action argues that a pattern
of neglect puts lives at risk, particularly those of veterans
suffering PTSD. The suit presents figures that among the 5.6 million
veterans of US wars that were being treated by VA in 2005, 6,250
committed suicide and some 12,000 others attempted suicide.
The Bush administrations refusal to spend the necessary
resources to adequately treat those suffering from PTSD is most
poignantly revealed in the tragic stories that appear with increasing
frequency in the US media. Case after case has surfaced of veterans
of Afghanistan and Iraq taking their own lives while in the grip
of severe mental illness.
The Arizona Republic reported this month on the recent
case of 36-year-old Sergeant Travis Twiggs, a father of two and
a marine who did four tours in the two war zones. On May 12, he
and his older brother were suspected of a carjacking at the Grand
Canyon. Two days later, a police pursuit ended with Twiggs shooting
his brother and then turning the gun on himself.
His wife, Kellee Twiggs, explained that he had displayed PTSD
symptoms after his second tour but was still sent back on active
duty. After his return from his fourth tour, he authored an article
on the impact of PTSD for the January edition of the Marine
Corp Gazette. He wrote: When I arrived back in the States,
it was as though I had never left. All my symptoms were back and
now I was in the process of destroying my family. He had
been hospitalised twice but had been discharged on medications
to treat his condition.
Kellee Twiggs said: Thats not what he needed. He
needed help.
See Also:
US: Emails suggest Veterans
Administration cover-up of suicide rate
[26 April 2008]
Needs outstrip military health
services for returning US veterans
[18 February 2008]
Mounting social distress among
returning US troops
[7 February 2008]
Suicides by US soldiers
and war veterans surge
[13 December 2007]
US veteran population:
a mounting social catastrophe
[20 November 2007]
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