US Army suicides are leveling off but rates of domestic violence and sex crimes among soldiers have increased, a report says.
Suicides among active duty soldiers, as well in the National Guard and the Reserve, totaled 278 in 2011, down 9% from 2010.
It was the first decline in four years.
The report
also calls post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) an "epidemic",
estimating there could be as many as 472,000 troops with the condition.
"There's a lot of good news in this report, but there's also
some bad news," Gen Peter Chiarelli told reporters at a Pentagon news
conference. "We know we've got still a lot of work to do."
Violent sex crimes and domestic violence have increased more than 30% since 2006 and child abuse by 43%.
Repeat offenders
The findings follow a 2010 report that said the Army was
either missing signs that suicidal soldiers were trouble or were looking
the other way as commanders tried to keep up with tight deployment
schedules in both Iraq and Afghanistan.
Gen Chiarelli said commanders were now getting more soldiers
into substance abuse programs, and kicking out more troops for
misconduct.
The report also shows an increase in soldiers being brought to hospital for suicidal thoughts.
"After 10 years of war... you're going to have problems that no-one could have foretasted" said Gen Chiarelli.
"I think we've at least arrested this problem and hopefully will start to push it down," Gen Chiarelli said.
Part of the increase in domestic abuse, the report says, is
recidivism from previous offenders. Both domestic and child abuse
associated with alcohol has increased since 2006.
Such an increase "may be associated" with research linking
high rates of drinking and aggression among veterans suffering from
combat-related wounds, injuries and illnesses, according to the Army's
findings.
While the report notes that screening and treatment for
traumatic brain injury (TBI) has improved, the Army currently has over
126,000 diagnosed cases of traumatic brain injury, 3,500 of them severe,
penetrating injuries.
As of mid-2011, there were over 187,000 diagnosed cases of
PTSD, but projections of the number of veterans and current soldiers
with the disorder were much higher.
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