For Some Troops, Powerful Drug Cocktails Have Deadly Results

Airman [Anthony] Mena died instead in his Albuquerque apartment, on July 21, 2009, five months after leaving the Air Force on a medical discharge. A toxicologist found eight prescription medications in his blood, including three antidepressants, a sedative, a sleeping pill and two potent painkillers.

Yet his death was no suicide, the medical examiner concluded. What killed Airman Mena was not an overdose of any one drug, but the interaction of many. He was 23.

After a decade of treating thousands of wounded troops, the military’s medical system is awash in prescription drugs ”” and the results have sometimes been deadly.

By some estimates, well over 300,000 troops have returned from Iraq or Afghanistan with P.T.S.D., depression, traumatic brain injury or some combination of those. The Pentagon has looked to pharmacology to treat those complex problems, following the lead of civilian medicine. As a result, psychiatric drugs have been used more widely across the military than in any previous war.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, Defense, National Security, Military, Drugs/Drug Addiction, Health & Medicine, Iraq War, Military / Armed Forces, Psychology, War in Afghanistan

2 comments on “For Some Troops, Powerful Drug Cocktails Have Deadly Results

  1. St. Nikao says:

    May the Lord have mercy on the souls and spirits of these wounded men and women and bless and multiply the ministries that help them (deal with PTSD and the spiritual and psychological wounds of war with the grace and power and love of God) like the Welcome Home Initiative in NY State:
    http://www.ctkcenter.org/welcomehome

  2. Billy says:

    May I put in a plug for an organization to which I belong, which has grown out of our parish’s Brotherhood of St Andrew, called CarefortheTroops. It has a magnificent website: careforthetroops.com