A growing concern in the
A country should certainly take care of its warriors. They are people, after all, with families, lives, and human needs. They cannot be iron-men and -women all the time as they are when they are fighting for us half a world away. However, the fact presents itself that addiction to drugs and alcohol by soldiers is more than just a health concern. Many soldiers that have substance abuse problems are in between tours or, worse, in the middle of tours. If the problem is not reduced it could lead to a decrease in the reputation of the
As demonstrated in the casual loop diagram shown below, soldiers look to drugs and alcohol to alleviate the physical and psychological problems that come with fighting in wars. The temporary relief they feel makes them less likely to seek true, fundamental help, such as they would get with professional counseling or a doctor-prescribed medicinal routine. The trouble is that this behavior does not get to the root of the problem, eventually increasing the size of the depression, pain, and terror and making the soldier more likely to abuse substances because it brings fast relief (loop R1). Alcohol and drug use only increases the problem (B1), but soldiers could break their addiction by utilizing more fundamental fixes that decrease the magnitude of the problem and encourage more efforts at a more fundamental fix (B2).
The situation seems as though it will continue to increase over the next few years. A 2002 study of 2,500 men stated what may seem obvious – men who are exposed to combat are more likely to “become dependent on alcohol and other drugs than civilians” (jointogether.org). Dr. Ian McFarling, Acting Director of the Army Center for Substance Abuse Programs, asserted in 2007 that the Army did not have a drug and alcohol problem, and that “less than one half of one percent of soldiers in Iraq have tested positive for illegal drugs” (military.com). Many soldiers, like Specialist Alan Hartmann of
Whatever the true statistics are, helping soldiers fight off addictions is a battle worth having – it makes them healthier and happier, proves the
Sources:
CBCNews.ca. “Rising number of soliders treated for addictions”. CBCNews.ca. September 28, 2007. Available online http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2007/09/28/soldiers-addictions.html.
JoinTogether.org. “Soldiers at Risk for Alcohol, Other Drug Addiction”. JoinTogether.org. January 9, 2002. Available online http://www.jointogether.org/news/research/summaries/2002/soldiers-at-risk-for-alcohol.html.
Lewis, McCarthy. “War Vets Fighting Addiction”. Military.com. November 26, 2007. Available online http://www.military.com/features/0,15240,156956,00.html.
I think you did an excellent job describing the problem and I think it is a very good example of the shifting the burden archetype. You state that in relation to the behavior over time it seems that this problem has grown. I am curious as to what effect the length of the tour has on the magnitude of the depression, terror, and pain. Overall this was a very concise and well laid out CLD and description. You used appropriate variables and I do not think that you need to add anything else to make your diagram any more useful.
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