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Main description:
Not since the great military suicide epidemic of the American Civil War have we seen so many of our heroes, our soldiers and veterans, die by suicide. Why? War is violence. There is intent to cause death, or serious injury, or threat to the physical and psychological integrity of others. War stress is unforgiving. Suicide is an all too frequent response. Today, one member of the military dies by suicide every day. This is a new epidemic. This book addresses some tough questions: What do we know about suicides in the military? Are rates high? Or low? Is military suicide the same or different in the United States and Canada? Is military culture relevant? Do we know the causes, patterns, and associations? Is suicide among the armed forces similar to or different from suicide among civilians? Can it be altruistic? Through individual case studies and general/population approaches, we attempt to understand the cost of military service. It is especially through the personal stories of the great Civil War hero General Emory Upton, Admiral of the Navy Mike Boorda, and Hospital Corpsman Chris Purcell that we find answers. We learn there is a relative lack of understanding about military suicides, mainly due to the very complexity of suicide. The nature of suicide is not monolithic--it is multi-determined. Military service, we find, is a risk factor for suicide and suicidal behavior. Military veterans are twice as likely as civilians to die by suicide. Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain Injury (TBI) are especially noted to be huge risk factors, but so are other physical and psychological injuries. Sadly, the aftershocks of war include not only suicides but also incarceration, motor vehicle accidents, homicides, homicide(s)-suicides, and many more faces of violence. And there are many more, uncounted, wounded and dead. The families of traumatized soldiers and veterans, too, are indirect victims of their traumatic experience and, for some, their suicides; there is secondary traumatization. Yet, as this book shows, we must not forget that despite the unbearable pain of war, soldiers, veterans, and their military families, including children, are typically resilient. They can survive! Without question, our vulnerable heroes and veterans are at risk for suicide. But there is secrecy surrounding this, which may well be the biggest barrier. The government, the Department of Defense, the military, veterans groups, survivors, health providers, and other stakeholders need to develop and support more research, more programs, and more care for suicidal and disabled armed services personnel, veterans, and survivors. This war stress needs to stop.
Contents:
Preface
Acknowledgments
PART ONE Introduction
CHAPTER 1
The Military and Suicide
CHAPTER 2
Suicide
CHAPTER 3
The Psychological Autopsy
PART TWO Historical Study
CHAPTER 4
Military Suicide: A Classic Population Study
CHAPTER 5
Military Suicide: A Historical Individual Case Study
PART THREE Current Study
CHAPTER 6
Suicide among the American Armed Forces
CHAPTER 7
Suicide among the Canadian Forces
CHAPTER 8
Surveillance and the Reliability of Military Suicide Statistics
PART FOUR Beyond Suicide
CHAPTER 9
The Many Faces of Violence: Homicide, Accidental Deaths, Self-Harm, and Incarceration
PART FIVE Military Efforts
CHAPTER 10
The Psychology of Military Suicide
CHAPTER 11
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
CHAPTER 12
Suicide Prevention in the Military
PART SIX A Case Study
CHAPTER 13
A Soldier's Story Told: A Psychological Autopsy
PART SEVEN Prevention and Policies
CHAPTER 14
Military Suicide: Policies and Prevention
References
Index
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Baywood Publishing Company Inc
Publication date: March, 2014
Pages: 366
Weight: 516g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Accident & Emergency Medicine, Psychology, Psychotherapy