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To: oldbill; no dems; unkus; B4Ranch
100000 Vietnam Vet suicides? I have difficulty accepting that figure. That’s one out of every 28 Vietnam vets who served in theater.

I have no difficulty with that figure whatsoever...

Granted, the majority of V.N. Vets returned home to full productive lives.

However, the true numbers of those who took their lives upon returning will never be verified. I personally know some I served with that never recovered from the trauma of combat and the horrific treatment they encountered when they came home. Some swallowed bullets, many drank and drugged themselves to death. Both are a form of suicide in my book.

35 posted on 08/28/2010 8:10:29 PM PDT by JDoutrider
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To: JDoutrider

Well said.


40 posted on 08/28/2010 8:48:27 PM PDT by unkus
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To: JDoutrider; oldbill; no dems; unkus; B4Ranch

Myth 3: The suicidal grunt

Source: The support group Disabled American Veterans published a 1980 pamphlet, “Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders of the Vietnam Veteran,” stating that the number of all Vietnam veterans who had committed suicide had reached 58,000 – the number of overall U.S. deaths in the war.

That estimate quickly grew. A broadcast of CBS’ “60 Minutes” on Oct. 4, 1986, put the number at more than 100,000. Less than 10 years later, a California chapter of the Vietnam Veterans of America projected it to be “approximately 150,000.”

Reality: Exact numbers are unknown. Suicide, with its social stigma, is notoriously difficult to pin down.

The 58,000 figure was based on an assumption that the suicide rate during the initial postwar period had continued unabated. Instead, it dramatically slackened. In 1999, the Centers for Disease Control conducted the most extensive study to date on this issue. It found that the risk of suicide increased with exposure to combat. Still, the CDC concluded that the overall rate for Vietnam-theater veterans is roughly one per 100 veteran deaths. This would bring the current total to about 6,500.

Michael Kelley, a Vietnam veteran who lives in Sacramento, has spent years tracking the wildly varying suicide estimates.

“In the final analysis,” Kelley wrote in a 1999 Washington Post story, “Vietnam veterans likely die from suicide at about the same rate and for the same reasons that everyone else in America does.”

http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20051111/news_lz1n11vets.html


55 posted on 08/28/2010 10:18:29 PM PDT by ansel12
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To: JDoutrider

We’ll “Carry on”.


57 posted on 08/28/2010 10:45:22 PM PDT by unkus
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