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Iraq
Affecting Mental Health of Troops
(AP, 7/29/05)
Lt. Gen. Kevin Kiley, the Army's surgeon general, reports
that a survey of 1,000 US soldiers returning to their home
bases in Italy from combat in Iraq indicates that 30 %
experience mental health problems—including anxiety,
depression, nightmares, anger and inattentiveness—after three
to four months. These are in addition to 4 to 5 % who develop
the serious mental illness known as post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD). Col. Elspeth Ritchie, a psychiatrist on
Kiley's staff, noted that, while the military usually screens
soldiers when they leave combat, the Army has recently begun
following up three to six months later. Military medical
officials claim that stress reactions are normal after combat
and say mental health is improving based on a drop in suicides
in Iraq and Kuwait from 24 in 2003 to nine in 2004. |