Why are troops killing
themselves?
The long awaited Army
report, �Health Promotion, Risk Reduction, Suicide Prevention� considers the
economy, the stress of nine years of war, family dislocations, repeated moves,
repeated deployments, troops� risk-taking personalities, waived entrance
standards and many aspects of Army culture.
What it barely
considers are the suicide-linked antidepressants, antipsychotics and
antiseizure drugs whose use exactly parallels the increase in US troop suicides
since 2005.
In the report Chief of
Staff General Peter W. Chiarelli acknowledges antidepressant risks, saying
there�s �fair quality evidence that second generation antidepressants (mostly
SSRI) increase suicidal behavior in adults aged 18 to 29 years,� while adding
that �other research evidence shows the benefit of antidepressant use.�
But nowhere does he
acknowledge the suicide potential of antiseizure drugs so widely used for pain
and as �mood stabilizers� by troops, even though the FDA mandated suicide
warnings on Lyrica, Topamaz, Depakote, Lamictal, Tegretol, Depakene, Klonopin
and 16 others in 2008.
(Lamictal also has the
distinction of wasting more taxpayer money than any other drug, according to a
July American Enterprise Institute report. Medicaid spent an unnecessary $51
million on Lamictal instead of buying a generic last year, thanks to GSK
salesmen. You go, guys,)
When asked by NPR�s
Robert Siegel if the high number of medicated troops contributed to suicide,
Gen. Chiarelli said, �The good thing about those numbers is . . . the
prescriptions were all made by a doctor.� Asked why troops who had not even
deployed were among the suicides, Chiarelli said there were other stressors
involved.
In June, Marine Times
reported 32 deaths on prescription drugs in Warrior Transition Units (WTUs)
since 2007 and said an internal review �found the biggest risk factor may be
putting a soldier on numerous drugs simultaneously, a practice known as
polypharmacy.�
But instead of citing
dangerous drugs and drug cocktails for turning troops suicidal (and accident
prone and at risk of death from unsafe combinations), the Army report cites
troops� illicit use of them along
with street drugs. (The word �illicit� appears 150 times in the Army report and
�psychiatrist� appears twice.)
No, it�s not the 8,000
urine samples in 2009 which showed prescription drug traces, according to the
Army report, it�s the fact that 21 percent of the drugs were �illicit.�
No wonder the revised
suicide report form suggested by the Army report doesn�t even have a box to
enter �adverse reactions to drug or drug combinations.� Instead, it has a box
that asks how long before a suicide a patient was �compliant� with the
prescription. Was the medication �taken as prescribed? Skipped?� Taken �in
excess of prescription? In different manner (e.g., crushed instead of in
capsule)?�
Nowhere is there the
possibility that the medication was taken as prescribed and compliance, not
noncompliance, was the problem.
On the same day the
Army report was released, another suicide report which ignores the elephant in
the room, called Big Pharma, was released.
In response to a
request from the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice for help after the
recent suicides of two youths in two of its eight WTU-like facilities, the
Illinois Models for Change initiative compiled a �Report on the Behavioral
Health Program for Youth Committed to Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice.�
Like the Army report,
the Juvenile Justice report notes lack of staff training and resources, lack of
assessment tools, lack of aftercare, family problems and repeated moves and
dislocations to explain suicides without mentioning suicide-causing
psychoactive drugs themselves.
The team of mental
health and corrections professionals mentions youths who fail to �follow the
medication orders� and revert to street drugs, but nowhere in the 146-page
report are the health and mental health effects of psychoactive drugs
mentioned. Even though 98 percent of
youth at one facility are on them, according to the report! Denial is not
just the name of a river in Egypt.
Worse, youths are
screened for suicide when they enter facilities not after they�re put on
psychoactive drugs.
The report explores
poor food and dorms with no electric sockets so youths �cannot have TVs in
their rooms and only Walkmans� and visitor policies, but doesn�t pursue the one
reference to psychoactive drugs: the youth who says he is pretty much �knocked
out� on the antidepressant Trazadone they give him.
Like the Army report,
the Juvenile Justice report ignores the pharmaceutical elephant in the room and
the tax dollars and human costs of feeding it.
Martha Rosenberg is a Chicago
columnist/cartoonist who writes about public health. She may be reached at martharosenberg@sbcglobal.net.