Science Update • March 22, 2011

Army STARRS Preliminary Data Reveal Some Potential Predictive Factors for Suicide

Early examination of data from the U.S. Army's Total Army Injury and Health Outcomes Database (TAIHOD)External Link: Please review our disclaimer. has revealed potential predictors of risk for suicide among soldiers. Preliminary results were provided by researchers leading the ongoing Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers (Army STARRS)External Link: Please review our disclaimer.. Army STARRS, a partnership between NIMH and the U.S. Army, is the largest study of mental health risk and resilience ever conducted among military personnel.

The TAIHOD database includes information from Regular Army soldiers (not Guard or Reserve Component soldiers) and covers the period between 2004 and 2008. Army STARRS researchers compared data on all suicides, accidental deaths, and combat deaths in an effort to identify patterns and predictors among the three types of deaths.

The following findings are preliminary. They involve relatively few descriptive predictors and do not account for complex events or interactions. Researchers plan to do additional work with a much larger historical dataset and with survey data from the All Army Study and the New Soldier Study (two Army STARRS components) to test these initial findings.

The main preliminary findings include the following:

Further analyses of the TAIHOD are now underway to better understand and validate the variables that may predict risk for suicide. In addition, Army STARRS researchers are expanding on these initial analyses by examining data from a wide variety of other Army and Department of Defense databases that include information beyond that available from the TAIHOD. Investigators will focus on periods thought to be high-risk in the course of a military career, such as during deployment, and the periods immediately before and after deployment. As the project continues, Army STARRS will collect richer and broader information that will describe soldiers' characteristics, experiences and exposures.

Contact(s)

Colleen Labbe
NIMH Press Office
301-443-4536

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Suicide Prevention Resources

24-hour National Suicide Prevention Lifeline:
1-800-273-TALK
(8255)
Veterans can call the Lifeline and press "1" to be routed to the Veterans' Suicide Prevention Hotline
En Espanol: 1-888-628-9454


External Link: Please review our disclaimer.

Military OneSource: 1-800-342-9647
24-hour resource for military personnel and their families on a variety of topics including health, legal and family concerns

National Suicide Prevention LifelineExternal Link: Please review our disclaimer.

Suicide Warning Signs (downloadable wallet card)External Link: Please review our disclaimer.

SAMHSA’s Mental Health Services LocatorExternal Link: Please review our disclaimer.