The Senate Armed Forces Committee questioned military health officials on Wednesday about the growing psychiatric drug use among active-duty soldiers. The military has not produced consistent numbers: Last month, the Army’s top psychiatrist told Congress that about 17 percent of active duty soldiers take psychiatric medication. The Army backed off the figure, putting the total at closer to 4 percent. The Army’s surgeon general later put the number at about 8 percent of the total force.
Senators at Wednesday’s hearing pressed the military to produce detailed totals and to determine why the use of psychiatric medications among military personnel has increased about 76 percent between 2001 and 2009. Among the side effects for some of the pills prescribed is a doubled risk of suicide.
An Army Times investigation found that the Defense Department has spent $16 million on antipsychotic medications since 2001, and that soldiers routinely carry the medications to war zones and often take untested combinations of drugs for ailments like insomnia, depression and headaches.


