| Literature DB >> 22851956 |
Vsevolod Rozanov1, Vladimir Carli.
Abstract
Studies aiming to identify if war veterans are at higher risk of suicide have often produced inconsistent results; this could be due to the complexity of comparisons and different methodological approaches. It should be noted that this contingent has many risk factors, such as stressful exposures, wounds, brain trauma and pain syndrome. Most recent observations confirm that veterans are really more likely to die of suicide as compared to the general population; they are also more likely to experience suicidal ideation and suffer from mental health problems. Suicides are more frequent in those who develop PTSD, depression and comorbid states due to war exposure. Combat stress and its' frequency may be an important factor leading to suicide within the frame of the stress-vulnerability model. According to this model, the effects of stress may interact with social factors, interpersonal relations and psychological variables producing suicidal tendencies. Modern understanding of stress-vulnerability mechanisms based on genetic predispositions, early life development, level of exposure to stress and stress-reactivity together with interpersonal aspects may help to build more effective suicide prevention programs based on universal/selective/indicated prevention principles.Entities:
Keywords: mental health problems; prevention; suicide; war and military services veterans
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22851956 PMCID: PMC3407917 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph9072504
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Studies on suicidality among war veterans.
| Author(s) | Country | Contingent | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pokorny, A., 1967 [ | USA | Total veterans from the state of Texas for the year 1960, N = 1,154,458 | Suicide rates in veterans do not differ from suicide rates of the same age and sex groups from general population. |
| Adena, M.A.; Cobbin, D.M.; Fett, M.J.;
| Australia | All national servicemen, 19,205 of them served in Vietnam (war veterans) compared to 25,677 who served only in Australia (non-veterans) and to Australian population. | Number of deaths of veterans and of non-veterans was less than expected from Australian population, when veterans were compared with non-veterans there was no statistically significant difference in deaths. |
| The CDC Vietnam Experience study, 1987 [ | USA | Cohort of 9,324 Vietnam veterans compared to 8,989 veterans who served in Korea, Germany or USA randomly selected from ~5 million USA veterans from national database. | Total mortality in the 5 years after discharge was 17% higher in Vietnam veterans, excess mortality was due to external causes (including suicide). |
| Breslin, P.; Kang, H.K.; Lee, Y.;
| USA | Mortality among 24,235 US Army and Marine Corps Vietnam veterans were compared with that of 26,685 non-Vietnam veterans. | Excess deaths were observed among Army Vietnam veterans for motor vehicle accidents, non-motor vehicle accidents, and accidental poisonings. Suicides were not elevated. |
| Bullman, T.A.; Kang, H.K., 1994 [ | USA | 4,247 Vietnam veterans from Agent Orange Registry with PTSD diagnosis compared with 12,010 veterans without PTSD. | Veterans diagnosed with PTSD were 3.97 times more likely to die of suicide (SMR was 6.74 for veterans with and 1.67 for those without PTSD). |
| Bullman, T.A.; Kang, H.K., 1996 [ | USA | Risk of suicide for 34,534 veterans who were wounded in Vietnam was evaluated with regards of severity of wound and number of times being wounded. | In comparison with the US male general population, veterans hospitalized due to combat wound or wounded more than once had a significantly increased risk of suicide (SMR 1.22 and 1.58 respectively). |
| Kang, H.K.; Bullman, T.A., 1996 [ | USA | Retrospective cohort study of postwar mortality among 695,516 Gulf War veterans and 746,291 other veterans followed through September 1993. | There was a small but significant excess of deaths in the Gulf War veterans mainly caused by accidents. No difference in suicides was found (RR = 0.94). |
| Macfarlane, G.J.; Thomas, E.; Cherry, N., 2000 [ | UK | A retrospective cohort study including all 53,462 UK Gulf War veterans in comparison to equivalent cohort of personnel who were not deployed. | Mortality from “external” causes was higher in the Gulf cohort (mortality rate ratio 1.18) however, no excess of deaths were recorded as suicide. |
| Boehmer, C.;
| USA | Mortality of 9,324 Army veterans was compared to 8,989 non-Vietnam veterans from the date of discharge the end of the year 2000. | The crude RRs for suicides and homicides were somewhat elevated in the first 5 years (1.72) but not in the next 5 years of follow-up (0.93). |
| Boscarino, J.A., 2006 [ | USA | 7,924 “Vietnam theater” veterans were compared to 7,364 “Vietnam era” veterans with and without PTSD ~30 years after their military service. | Veterans diagnosed with PTSD had an increased risk of death from multiple causes, especially from external, which included suicide, hazard ratio 2.3. |
| Zivin, K.; Kim, M.; McCarthy, J.F.;
| USA | A retrospective cohort study of 807,694 veterans from the National Registry of Depression for the period of 1999–2004. | 0.21% of veterans completed suicide during the follow-up, younger and older veterans were at higher risk than middle-aged ones, those with PTSD had overall lower risk of suicide. |
| Kaplan, M.; Huguet, N.; McFarland, B.H.;
| USA | Prospective follow-up study, sample of 320,890 persons from National Health Interview Survey, among them 104,026 veterans. | Over time veterans were twice as likely (adjusted hazard ratio 2.13) to die of suicide compared with male nonveterans in the general population. |
| Kang, H.K.; Bullman, T.A., 2008 [ | USA | Veterans were identified by the Defense Manpower Data Center. The final cohort included all 490,346 veterans who served in Iraq (OIF/OEF) and were separated alive from active duty between October 2001 and December 2005. | The overall risk for suicide was not significantly elevated (SMR 1.15) but was increased for former active duty veterans (SMR1.33) and for veterans diagnosed with a selected mental disorder (SMR 1.77). The most common methods of suicide were by firearm (73%) and by hanging (21%). |
| Gutierrez, P.M.; Brenner, L.A.; Huggins, J.A., 2008 [ | USA | 114 acute psychiatric admissions, 22 veterans with a history of traumatic brain injury, measured suicidal ideation, nature of suicide attempts. | From post-traumatic patients 6 (27.3%) has made a total of 14 suicide attempts. |
| Jakupcak, M.; Cook, J.; Imel, Z.;
| USA | Iraq and Afghanistan War veterans (N = 407) referred to Veterans Affairs mental health care. | Veterans with PTSD were more than 4 times as likely to endorse suicidal ideation. Risk for suicidal ideation was 5.7 times greater in veterans who screened positive for two or more comorbid disorders. |
| Miller, M.; Barber, C.; Azrael, D.;
| USA | Prospective cohort study of 499,356 male participants in the Cancer Prevention initiative. | In age-adjusted analyses the risk of suicide did not differ by veteran status. |
| Pfeiffer, P.N.; Ganoczy, D.; Ilgen, M.;
| USA | 887,859 patients with depression from Veterans Administration databases. | Odds of completed suicide were significantly increased for patients with panic disorder (OR 1.26) and who received any antianxiety medication (OR 1.71). Odds of completed suicide were decreased among patients with comorbid posttraumatic stress disorder (OR 0.87). |
| Kaplan, M.S.; McFarland, B.H.; Huguet, N., 2009 [ | USA | Data from 28,534 suicide decedents from the 2003 to 2006 National Violent Death Reporting System. | The male and female veteran suicide decedents were, respectively, 1.3 and 1.6 times more likely to use firearms relative to nonveterans. |
| Ilgen, M.A.; Zivin, K.; Austin, K.L.;
| USA | Analysing medical records and National Death Index (N = 260,254). | Veterans with severe pain were more likely (hazards ratio 1.33) to die by suicide than patients experiencing none, mild or moderate pain. |
| Brenner, L.A.; Ignacio, R.V.; Blow, F.C., 2011 [ | USA | Individuals who received care at US Veterans Administration between fiscal years 2001 to 2006, all patients with a history of traumatic brain injury (n = 49,626). | Veterans with a history of TBI were 1.55 times more likely to die by suicide, those with concussion/cranial fracture were 1.98 times, and those with contusion/ /traumatic intracranial hemorrhage were 1.34 times more likely to die by suicide. |