War stresses military kids
WASHINGTON -- After nearly eight years of war, soldiers are not the only ones experiencing mental anguish. Their children are, too.
Last year, children of U.S. troops sought outpatient mental health care 2 million times, double the number at the start of the Iraq war. There was also an alarming spike in the number of military kids actually hospitalized for mental health reasons.
Internal Pentagon documents show the increases, which come as the services struggle with wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and a shortage of therapists.
From 2007 to 2008, some 20 percent more children of active duty troops were hospitalized for mental health services, the documents show. Since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, inpatient visits among military children have increased 50 percent.
The total number of outpatient mental health visits for children of men and women on active duty doubled from 1 million in 2003 to 2 million in 2008. During the same period, the yearly bed days for military children 14 and under increased from 35,000 to 55,000, the documents show.
Overall, the number of children and spouses of active duty personnel and Guard and Reserve troops seeking mental health care has been steadily increasing. Last year's increase in child hospitalizations coincided with the "surge" of tens of thousands of additional U.S. troops into Iraq to stabilize the country.
However, reasons for the treatment increases are not clear from the documents. Besides the impact of service members' repeated tours in overseas war zones -- and the severe economic recession that has affected all American families -- the military has been encouraging troops' family members to seek mental health help when needed.
The military plans additional research.
Still, the statistics seem to reinforce the concerns of military leaders and private family organizations about the strains of the wars. Along with issues of separation, some families must deal with injuries or the deaths of loved ones.
Military families move, on average, nearly every three years, which increases stress.
"Army families are stretched, and they are stressed," Sheila Casey, wife of Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the U.S. Army chief of staff, told a congressional panel last month. "And I have often referred to them as the most brittle part of the force."
Evidence of domestic violence and child neglect among military families, as well as an increase in suicide, alcohol abuse and cases of post-traumatic stress, are all troubling signs, Mrs. Casey told a Senate Armed Services subcommittee. She and other military spouses testified that gaining access to mental health care is a problem.
At summer camps organized by the National Military Family Association for about 10,000 children, most of them kids of deployed soldiers, there have been more anecdotal reports this year of young people taking medication and showing signs of severe homesickness, anxiety, or depression, said Patricia Barron, who runs the association's youth initiatives.
Barron, a military spouse, said her organization is participating in a study on deployments and families. She said much is still unknown about the effects.
"If it continues to happen, you have to wonder how this is affecting them," Barron said. "In the long run, you have to wonder if there isn't going to be detrimental effects that might hang on for a long period of time."
The shortage of mental health professionals isn't just isolated to the military. But the problem is more pronounced because of the increase in demand, both on the home front and in the war zones.
About 20 percent to 30 percent of service members returning from war report some form of psychological distress.
There are efforts under way to encourage the military, the Veterans Affairs Department and state and local agencies to share mental health resources. Also, there have been incentives offered to encourage military spouses to enter easily transferrable fields such as health care.
In recent years, there's been an increase in funding in areas such as education, housing and child care devoted to improving the quality of life for military families. First lady Michelle Obama has said helping military families is a priority.
PROGRAMS IN PLACE AT NELLIS
Nellis Air Force Base is no exception to the stress the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have put on military families, but programs are in place to help them cope with overseas deployments, a Nellis official said Wednesday.
“We’ve noticed the stress buildup on everybody, and we’re not finding it gets easier,” said Susan Robinson, director of the Airman and Family Readiness Center at Nellis.
The center also facilitates families of airmen from Creech Air Force Base at Indian Springs, 45 miles northwest of Las Vegas, and has offices at both locations.
Though officials at the bases don’t track statistics on mental health care provided to airmen’s children, Robinson said there hasn’t been a noticeable spike in such cases in recent years.
“We’ve seen parents coming in and talking about issues with their children but we’re not seeing an alarming increase,” she said. “I’m not saying it’s not happening but we’re not seeing it.”
On average, there are between 800 and 1,000 airmen deployed overseas among the 10,000 assigned to the bases.
Robinson said the Defense Department has devoted significant funding to family programs with seven specialists assigned to offer counseling in three areas: personal financial matters, child behavior, and social issues including marriage.
Child and youth behaviorists work in after school programs and the child development center.
“That’s been a good stress reducer and an option for families that we didn’t have two years ago,” she said.
Robinson said some children have been hospitalized for mental health issues “but not necessarily because of deployment. It may have been exacerbated by deployment or surfaced by deployment,” she said.
One Pentagon contractor, MHN Government Services, provides a variety of behavioral health programs to the armed forces and reserve components including nonmedical counseling, psycho-education and family support.
At Nellis, contracted consultants and counselors rotate to the base from other military installations every six weeks.
Robinson said every airman who returns from a war zone must go through a reintegration program to discuss family matters.
“We work with the kids but we do it through the parents,” she said, adding that airmen are forewarned not to be disappointed if their children are shy around them or have been disappointed by their absence.
While airmen are deployed, Nellis holds family events that focus on children such as Operation Pillowcase, family picnics and Halloween parties.
“We try to make sure the families are socially connected with other children in the same boat,” Robinson said.
KEITH ROGERS/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
