Rates of suicide in the military were slightly worse during the war 
years than what the Pentagon previously reported, according to new 
calculations released by Defense Department officials Friday.
The 
new arithmetic shows that from 2006 forward — during the fighting in 
Iraq and Afghanistan — the true suicide rate across the U.S. military 
was actually several tenths of a percent to 1% or more higher than what 
was being reported.
"It took us time and effort to sit down and 
really just kind of figure out a better way to do the math," says 
Jacqueline Garrick, director of the Defense Suicide Prevention Office. 
She said the delay was a need to standardize how suicides are counted 
across the military.
The problem with the old, now-abandoned 
calculation, is that it relied partly on an estimated figure in 
determining a suicide rate rather than precise numbers, says Army Lt. 
Gen. Michael Linnington, the military deputy to the under secretary of 
Defense for personnel and readiness.
The old rates were calculated by the Office of the Armed Forces Medical Examiner, according to the Pentagon,
"It's
 jaw-dropping that the Pentagon would use this kind of crass calculation
 to measure the impact of the suicide epidemic within their ranks," says
 Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., a senior member of the Veterans Affairs 
Committee. "If that recalculation in any way indicates a need for 
additional funding or new services, the Pentagon and Congress must 
respond to address a problem which is clearly worse than we had been led
 to believe."
Beginning in 2005, suicide within the military — 
particularly for the Army — steadily began increasing to record levels 
every year, and may have peaked in 2012.
Among full-time soldiers,
 the suicide rate soared to 29.7 deaths per 100,000 in 2012, well above a
 25.1-per-100,000 rate for civilians of a similar age group during 2010,
 the latest year available, according to a Pentagon report. Among male 
soldiers, the rate was 31.8-per-100,000. There were  a record 164 
soldier-suicides that year.
The overall national civilian suicide 
rate was 12.1-per-100,000 in 2010 and 19.9-per-100,000 for men in 2010, 
according to the Centers for Disease Control.
The Army National 
Guard rate for 2012 reached 30.8 deaths per 100,000 with 110 suicides. 
The suicide rate for men in the Army National Guard was 
34.2-per-100,000,Pentagon data shows.
For full-time troops across 
the U.S. military, the suicide rate peaked at 22.7-per-100,000 in 2012 
and fell to 19.1-per-100,000 last year, according to the Pentagon.
Defense
 officials said that their old rates for suicide were flawed because 
officials did the math using only a percentage of National Guard and 
reservists — and not the true number — who were serving on active-duty 
status.
"It wasn't precise," says Linnington. "Having a better 
picture of what's going on ... helps better align and focus the efforts"
 to reduce suicide.
At any given time, troops on active-duty rolls
 include not only full-time soldiers, sailors, Marines and Airmen; but 
National Guard or reservists who are temporarily called up to full duty 
status.
But the military chose only to estimate those additional 
Guard and reserve troops on active status. They estimated that 11% of 
National Guard and reservists are on full-time active duty at any given 
time, a figure that was believed to be largely accurate, Linnington 
says.
That practice has now ended and the Pentagon relies only on 
actual numbers to determine suicide rates, producing separate ratios for
 full-time military members, those in the National Guard and those in 
the reserves.
Garrick said that part of the reason for  a delay in
 correcting the arithmetic was that the Pentagon's office for suicide 
prevention was not established until 2011 and began reviewing the 
suicide rate calculation the next year.
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