President Trump creating new task force to prevent veteran suicides
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images(WASHINGTON) — President Donald Trump was set to sign an executive order Tuesday establishing a new task force aimed at combatting the suicide epidemic among U.S. veterans.
The order, titled the ‘President’s Roadmap to Empower Veterans and End a National Tragedy of Suicide’ (PREVENTS) will require top officials from multiple government agencies to coordinate a strategy to tackle the issue of veterans suicide and release recommendations to the president within the next 365 days.
The group will be led by Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie, who in an interview with ‘Fox and Friends’ Tuesday said his agency estimates that 20 veterans take their lives every day in the U.S.
“The sad thing is that 14 of those 20 are outside of our veteran system,” he said. “We will bring the best medicine, the best social science in addition to going to the Congress and asking for grants and money to give to our states and localities so they can help us in this fight.”
According to a senior administration official, the White House has yet to put a price tag on the grants that will be doled out to state and local governments in coordination with veterans advocacy groups.
The official said the order will also task agencies with developing a national research strategy in coordination with public and private stakeholders in order to have a more complete picture of the challenges facing veterans once they exit the service.
The order follows comments from President Trump last November about Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and veterans that sparked a major backlash.
Ian David Long, a former Marine, killed 12 people and himself in a rampage in California. Officials suggested that PTSD may have played a role. Long had been flagged to law enforcement in the past.
When Trump weighed in on the shooting, he focused on Long’s mental health.
“He is a very sick puppy … He served time. He saw some pretty bad things,” the president said. “They come back, they’re never the same.”
Statistics show that when veterans with mental health issues do hurt someone, it’s most likely themselves.
According to government data, around 2.7 million service members served in Iraq and Afghanistan since 2001. 15.7% of those veterans screened positive for PTSD.
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