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Journal Article

Citation

Stein MB, Kessler RC, Ursano RJ. JAMA Psychiatry 2019; 76(5): 466-468.

Affiliation

Center for Studies of Traumatic Stress, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, American Medical Association)

DOI

10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2018.3943

PMID

30758483

Abstract

Suicide is a major worldwide public health problem. In the United States, death rates by suicide have incrementally increased by about a third since 2000 to their 2017 levels of 23.6 per 100 000 men and 6.7 per 100 000 women. Approximately 50 000 US residents died by suicide in 2017. This increase has been greater in recent years in the civilian sector than the military sector, leading to an approximate equalization of the 2017 suicide death rate of civilians with that of active-duty military personnel. The military suicide death rate was higher than the age-matched and sex-matched civilian rate for the prior decade. However, given that military personnel are healthier overall that the civilian population, other sources of death are low, leading to suicides accounting for a higher proportion of military than civilian deaths. In particular, 30% of US service member deaths unassociated with war since 2006 were the result of self-inflicted wounds, leading to a prioritized mission of suicide prevention in the US military.


Language: en

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