WASHINGTON - More than 22,000 veterans have sought help from a special suicide hot line in its first year, and 1,221 suicides have been averted, the government says.
According to a recent RAND Corp. study, roughly one in five soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan displays symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, putting them at a higher risk for suicide. Researchers at Portland State University found that male veterans are twice as likely to commit suicide than men who are not veterans.
This month, a former Army medic, Joseph Dwyer, who was shown in a Military Times photograph running through a battle zone carrying an Iraqi boy, died of an accidental overdose after struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder for almost five years.
"I Can't Wait to Do a Tracheotomy" and other love songs available just because you damn well want them.
Monday, July 28, 2008
22,000 Vets Call Suicide Hotline
The fruits of George Bush's unnecessary war:
Labels:
iraq war,
ptsd,
veteran suicides
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