![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
| |||||||
| Forums | Register | Groups | Awards | Arcade | Pets | T-Bucks / T-Store | Invite Your Friends | Blogs | Mark Forums Read |
| General Military Discussions General discussions about the militaries of the world and the issues that affect them. |
General Military Discussions | |||||||||
· · · Military Operations, Battles & Wars 14 photos 3 comments |
· · · Military Operations, Battles & Wars 14 photos 3 comments |
· · · Military Operations, Battles & Wars 14 photos 3 comments |
· · · Military Operations, Battles & Wars 14 photos 3 comments |
· · · Military Operations, Battles & Wars 14 photos 3 comments | |||||
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools |
| | #1 (permalink) |
| Monkey Mouse ![]() | As an internist at New York's Mount Sinai Hospital, Dr. Stephanie Santos is used to finding odd things in people's stomachs. So last spring when a young man, identifying himself as an Iraq-bound soldier, said he had accidentally swallowed a pen at the bus station, she believed him. That is, until she found a second pen. It read 1-800-GREYHOUND. Last summer, according to published reports, a 20-year-old Bronx soldier paid a hit man $500 to shoot him in the knee on the day he was scheduled to return to Iraq. The year before that, a 24-year-old specialist from Washington state escaped a second tour of duty, according to his sister, by strapping on a backpack full of tools and leaping off the roof of his house, injuring his spine. Such cases of self-harm are a "rising trend" that military doctors are watching closely, says Col. Kathy Platoni, an Army Reserve psychologist who has worked with veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan. "There are some soldiers who will do almost anything not to go back," she says. Col. Elspeth Ritchie, the Army's top psychologist, agrees that we could see an uptick in intentional injuries as more U.S. soldiers serve long, repeated combat tours, "but we just don't have good, hard data on it." Intentional- injury cases are hard to identify, and even harder to prosecute. Fewer than 21 soldiers have been punitively discharged for self-harm since 2003, according to the military. What's worrying, however, is that American troops committed suicide at the highest rate on record in 2007—and the factors behind self-injury are similar: combat stress and strained relationships. "It's often the families that don't want soldiers to return to war," says Ritchie. Soldiers have long used self-harm as a rip cord to avoid war. During World War I, The American Journal of Psychiatry reported "epidemics of self-inflicted injuries," hospital wards filled with men shot in a single finger or toe, as well as cases of pulled-out teeth, punctured eardrums and slashed Achilles' heels. Few doubt that the Korean and Vietnam wars were any different. But the current war—fought with an overtaxed volunteer Army—may be the worst. "We're definitely concerned," says Ritchie. "We hope they'll talk to us rather than self-harm." The Source
__________________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ How May I Help You? ![]() PM me through this link if clicking on those banners doesn't help with your questions ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| | |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Cops: Man Beat Iraq GI's Son to Death | leobold1 | News Articles | 1 | 05-26-2007 12:02 |
| U.S. Says More GI's May Be Needed in Iraq | Snowden | News Articles | 0 | 10-24-2006 22:13 |
| Protesters face off at Ky. GI's funeral | Woodmonkey | Point/Counterpoint | 7 | 10-03-2006 08:56 |
| Ambused US GI's kill 26 militants--strike one up for the good guys! | cb88 | Point/Counterpoint | 9 | 03-22-2005 19:39 |
| GI's Body returned 60 years later | sfga6970 | Virtual Arlington | 1 | 01-30-2005 02:30 |
![]() | ![]() | ![]() |