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Army Suicides Rise Sharply

January Figures Up Six-Fold From Same Time in 2008

The U.S. Army is investigating 24 potential suicides in January, a number six times higher than in January 2008.

Photo: Officials: Army Suicides at 3-Decade High: Officials say Army suicides rose again last year, are at 3-decade high
In this file photo, a U.S. soldier lies down during a break at an outpost base in the Sadr city section of Baghdad. Suicides among soldiers are on the rise, statistics show.
(Petros Giannakouris/AP Photo)

Seven of the January 2009 cases already have been ruled suicides and an additional 17 are under investigation as potential suicides, the Army reported.

The jump in January suicides went public a week after the Army announced there were 128 suicides in 2008, the highest since it began keeping records in 1980. It was the fourth year in a row that the numbers rose despite efforts toward increased awareness and intervention. There were 67 suicides in 2004.

The 2008 numbers could end up higher because an additional 15 deaths are being investigated as possible suicides.

The 24 potential Army suicides in January exceeded the 16 U.S. combat deaths that occurred in Iraq and Afghanistan during the same month throughout the armed forces.

There were four combat deaths in Iraq and 12 combat deaths in Afghanistan. Including non-combat deaths, the total number of deaths in Iraq last month was 14, the total number in Afghanistan was 15.

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The numbers prompted enough concern among the Army's senior leadership that Army Secretary Pete Geren made the unusual decision of briefing Congress on the increase and ordering the data's public release.

The release of last year's numbers prompted the service to order a "stand down" for a window of 30 days beginning Feb. 15, when soldiers will be trained to help identify behaviors that could lead to suicidal behavior and help them intervene.

The stand down will be followed for three additional months by a "chain-teaching program" focused on suicide prevention.

It is the Army's biggest initiative ever to battle the rising number of suicides.

Geren told reporters last week that the rise in suicides remains puzzling.

"Why do the numbers keep going up? We cannot tell you," he said.

Army Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Peter Chiarelli, however, is convinced that combat stress is a factor in the equation.

"There's no doubt in my mind that stress is a factor in this trend we're seeing," he said.

Army officials added that the most common factors for soldier suicides appear to involve personal relationships, legal or financial issues and problems on the job.

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