Posts Tagged ‘rangel’

Stress And Suicide In The Military

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Stress And Suicide In The Military

One great thing about the current state of journalism is that it is impossible to sweep things under the rug. Some blogger somewhere is going to take up the cause. It is, however, information explosion, and so some things go unnoticed and do not receive the attention they deserve. There is one issue that has reached both bloggers and the mainstream press. It is psychological stress and military suicide. The New York Times is running a series of articles, and the House Armed Services subcommittee on Military Personnel had a hearing about it on Wednesday.

In a statement released by Chairman Ike Skelton’s office, the Representative addressed the problem not as an end point but as a chain of events. He said, “It is the final step an individual takes when they can no longer deal with the stressors in their life.” He said that it was important to determine why the suicide rate has increased and what stressors led to it.

Some of the testimony came from Gen. Peter Chiarelli, vice chief of staff for the Army. His main point was that they couldn’t just focus on reducing the number of suicides; they have to address the stress and anxiety faced by the military and the results of that stress such as increased substance abuse, infidelity and even reckless driving. The numbers are not pretty. Last year in the Army alone there were 140 suicides, translating into a rate of 20.2 per 100,000 soldiers. In January and February there were 41 suicides compared with 16 in 2008. By anyone’s standards that is a whooping amount of suicides.

My view is that part of the problem lies with recruitment. Recruiters are rewarded with how many bodies they can bring in to the all-volunteer military. I once asked the head of recruiting for one of the military branches if he had one wish for training potential recruits before they signed up for active duty what would it be? He replied, “financial literacy.” He said they get credit cards, get a girlfriend or wife and start charging. Soon they are up to their necks in debt, and it adds huge pressure to their military service.

In the Air Force they found that young enlisted men with a rank of E1 to E4 and between the ages of 21 and 25 have the highest risk of suicide. That is not surprising given that brain development is more complete by age 25. The pre-frontal cortex, which helps reason over impulse, is more fully formed by then. There is a reason car companies don’t rent cars to people younger than 25 without a surcharge. The young adult brain is just not fully developed.

Other factors in the Air Force suicide rate include relationships gone awry and poor coordination among professionals. Weekends were the prime time for suicides, and there was also poor communication between the treating mental health providers and commanders. There is always tension in the military between confidentiality and the need to communicate with supervisors. This is now being addressed so that soldiers can discuss personal issues without being worried about facing discharge.

Each branch of service is engaging in suicide prevention programs. In Iraq they deal with post traumatic stress right away, not when someone gets home. Programs are set up so that there is immediate intervention before the trauma is replayed over and over by the less-advanced part of the brain.

There are some issues that go right back to engagement strategies, including too many back-to-back tours of duty and the fact that National Guard duty has become synonymous with active service. It was never intended to be that way, but it functions that way. The other problem is young wives who have not had parenting education and are raising children as a single parents because their loved ones are on active duty across the oceans. This puts enormous stress on them and their husbands who are alone and enlisted.

The military is doing its best to try and address these problems and has engaged in the lives of these soldiers in ways that have been previously unheard of. However, little of the testimony on Wednesday dealt with recruitment. It was a glaring deficit in the hearings and must be addressed by a more complete assessment of incoming recruits.
There also needs to be less focus on getting bodies in and more focus on finding recruits who can handle stress, as well as financial and family problems. It is time our military began to look at what happens before someone enters the service, not just after. The other option is the draft, and some liberals including Chairman Charlie Rangel thinks that would make a military more like the rest of America. It is worthy of consideration and may make a stronger and healthier military.

Chairman Rangel Says America’s Health Care System Must Stay Competitive

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.), Chairman of the House Committee on Ways and Means, talks about keeping America’s health care system competitive. He also notes that, “No matter what the President’s hopes and dreams are, unless we get our ship out there [health care reform legislation]… we can’t protect it.” (0:44)

 
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Late Night Health Care Discussions Bring Historic Progress, Says Pelosi

Friday, July 17th, 2009

By Courtney Ann Jackson-Talk Radio News Service

Two more House committees have passed versions of health care reform legislation following discussions that stretched into the early hours of Friday morning. That brings the total up to three out of the five House and Senate Committees that have now reported legislation. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) noted in Friday’s press conference that this is the farthest comprehensive health reform has ever gotten in Congress.

The House Committee on Ways and Means chaired by Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) completed their discussion and reported legislation at around 2 AM Friday. The Committee on Education and Labor chaired by Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.) had an even longer discussion which lasted till 6 AM and came back at 9 AM to complete the votes.

Pelosi said, “Congress has made historic progress on health insurance reform that will put patients and doctors back in charge and ensure quality, affordable, accessible health care for America’s middle class.”

Pelosi also noted the recent endorsement from the American Medical Association (AMA) of America’s Affordable Health Care legislation.

“This legislation includes a broad range of provisions that are key to effective, comprehensive health system reform…The AMA wants the debate in Washington to conclude with, real, long overdue results that will improve the health of America’s patients.”

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) joined the Speaker and two Chairmen to announce the “historic progress.”

“These next pivitol months will finally be our chance to deliver-and we will,” said Hoyer.

Pelosi: Reducing Health Care Surcharge For Wealthy A Possibility

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

The 1-5.4% surcharge proposed by Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) for those making over $280,000 to help cover the costs of health care reform could be reduced, said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) during a press conference Wednesday.

The current version of health care reform that passed through the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Tuesday is expected to draw half of it’s funding from revenue streams, notably the proposed surcharge, and the rest from surplus funds taken from other programs, such as $500 billion in savings from the Medicare program.

“I believe that all the costs of the health reform bill can come from squeezing more savings out of the system,” the Speaker said.

If successful in acquiring enough savings, Pelosi noted that reducing the surcharge was one possibility. Another would be maintaining the surcharge at the current cost and reallocating it towards paying off the U.S. deficit.

House Majority Leader: Republicans Are Consistent With Being Consistently Wrong

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

By Justin Duckham-Talk Radio News Service

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) offered a biting rebuttal to complaints levied by congressional Republicans that the Democrats have botched the recovery of the U.S. economy.

“Republicans are consistent with being consistently wrong,” Hoyer quipped during a pen and pad session with reporters Tuesday.

The Majority Leader pointed to the economic program pursued by the Democratically controlled Congress in 1993, noting that although Republicans issued warnings of job loss and and out of control deficits, the economy faired quite well.

“Exactly the 180 degree opposite happened. Deficits were eliminated [and] we created 20.8 million jobs,” Hoyer said.

Hoyer contrasted the 1993 economic program with the one proposed by the GOP controlled Congress in 2001.

“[Congressional Republicans] indicated that if we adopted their economic program…our economy would explode: creation of jobs, elimination of the deficit, and that our economy would be in very good shape,” Hoyer said. “What happened? Exactly the opposite.”

“Our policy worked, [the Republicans'] policy failed,” Hoyer added. “The American public decided they needed a change and they asked us to get the economy moving again.”

The Majority Leader also touched upon Rep. Charles Rangel’s (D-N.Y.) proposal to apply a surtax to individuals making over $280,000 in order to help cover the cost of health care reform. If adopted, Hoyer noted that he does not expect the proposal to harm small businesses.

“I don’t know many small businessmen or women who are making $280,000, so I’m not sure that very many small businesses are going to be affected by this.”

Health Care Reform Bill Still Needs Tweaking

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

Chairman Charles B. Rangel (D-NY) stated that the new health care reform bill that was drafted on Friday, still needs to be perfected. (0:34)

 
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Congressman Rangel discusses the need for the government to provide social security benefits

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

Congressman Charles Rangel (NY-D), chairing a hearing on social security benefit backlogging, discusses the need for the government to provide Americans with the benefits they deserve. (0:37)

 
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