There is a huge problem with suicides in the military. Since 2002, the suicide rate in the U.S. military has almost doubled. From 2009 to 2012, more U.S. soldiers died by suicide than from traffic accidents, heart disease, cancer and homicide. The U.S. Secretary of Defense called it an "epidemic." Though there can be many reasons for killing oneself other than the side effects of psychiatric drugs, the fact is that of all U.S. military suicides, 20% involved antidepressants and 41% had undergone recent patient output behavioral care. Psychiatrists claim their drugs save lives. But do they?