Financial costs to the U.S. Army for suicides by newly enlisted Soldiers

Autor: Katherine C. L. Schaughency, Rachana Sikka, Jacob D. Smith, Phyon K. Christopher, Kenneth L. Cox, Lanna J Forrest, Eren Youmans Watkins, Stephen R. Barnes, Kirsten M. Anke, Joseph A Pecko
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Zdroj: Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior. 51:907-915
ISSN: 1943-278X
0363-0234
DOI: 10.1111/sltb.12771
Popis: OBJECTIVE To estimate the financial burden to the U.S. Army of suicide by enlisted Soldiers during their first year of service. METHODS This analysis included new Army enlisted Soldiers who started initial entry training from October 2012 through September 2016 and subsequently died by suicide within their first year of service. Outpatient and inpatient direct medical, direct nonmedical, recruiting, and training costs to the Army were calculated. RESULTS During the 48-month observational study period, 29 Soldiers died by suicide within their respective first year of service. The described financial costs accrued by the Army as a result of these deaths were $152,271-with an average of $6,091 per healthcare utilizer. Recruiting and training costs were $1,115,860 for all suicide cases. CONCLUSION Average direct cost per healthcare utilizer increased during a Soldier's first year of service. This may be associated with the transition through different phases of training and to the first operational duty station. PUBLIC HEALTH IMPLICATIONS Results obtained through this cost-of-illness analysis may serve as baseline metrics to inform future cost-effectiveness studies.
Databáze: OpenAIRE