Korean military service data
Ministry of National Defense / Military Manpower Administration 2022~2023:
- Korean mandatory service: 18 months (army, marines), 20 (navy), 21 (air force), alternative service (Social Service Personnel, public health, etc.)
- Annual enlistment: 250~300K
- In-service psychiatric diagnoses: 30% (depression, anxiety, adjustment disorder etc.)
- Military suicides: 60 in 2022, 80+ in 2023 (#1 in-service death cause)
- Military violence / bullying: 1,000+ reported human-rights violations / year (likely under-reported)
- Post-discharge PTSD: 5~10%
- Service exemption rate: ~15% (medical, mental, religious, etc.)
Why the military threatens mental health
① Loss of freedom: 18~21 months cut off from the outside world, restricted phone / internet, daily life controlled.
② Hierarchy / violence: Korean military hierarchy is intense. Senior-to-junior violence and verbal / personal attacks. Reforms since the 2014 "Pvt. Yun" incident but remnants persist.
③ Bullying / ostracism: small spaces, group living make bullying common.
④ Family events: deaths, parental divorce, breakups during service — short leaves, slow response.
⑤ Past trauma reactivation: the military environment re-triggers past violence / abuse trauma.
⑥ Concealing LGBTQ / mental illness: safety threats for LGBT / mentally ill in the military environment (Military Penal Code §92-6 punishes homosexuality).
⑦ Future anxiety: career, employment, relationships frozen during service.
Pre-service — preparation
1. Physical / mental-health evaluation:
- MMA physical (19~28 years)
- Mental-health screening ("Korean Military Mental Test Tool")
- Grades 1~5:
- 1~3: active duty (army, navy, air force, marines)
- 4: supplementary service (Social Service Personnel)
- 5: wartime reserves (only during war)
- 6: exempt
- 7: re-examination
- Mental illness (depression, anxiety, suicide attempts, BPD, psychosis, autism, ADHD, etc.), physical illness, and being homosexual can lead to grade 4~6
2. Exemption / alternative-service options:
- Mental illness: 6+ months of psychiatric records + diagnostic letter = possibly grade 4~5. Don't fake (criminal penalty if caught)
- Trans: post-transition (hormones / surgery) — exemption for trans women
- Gay / bi: under Military Penal Code §92-6 risk, disclosing identity may exempt — risky; proceed with care
- Religious (conscientious objection): recognized by Constitutional Court 2018, 36-month alternative service in prison
- Medical exemption: chronic illness, low vision, weight, etc.
- Specialized researchers / public-health doctors: PhD / MD-licensed individuals — partial alternatives
Apply honestly with doctor / lawyer consultation.
3. Pre-enlistment mental-health prep:
- Self-assess (PHQ-9, GAD-7)
- ≥9 = psychiatric visit (evaluate exemption, treat)
- Past trauma (school violence, family abuse, sexual abuse, self-harm) → recommend psychiatry
- Prepare family / friend support network
- Plan communication during service (letters, phone, visits)
- Wrap up work / studies
During service — manual
1. Mental-health resources:
- Barracks Life Counselor: in-unit counselor, free, confidential. Encourage use
- Military doctor / psychiatry: unit medical, or external military hospital (e.g., Armed Forces Capital Hospital)
- Green Hospital / nationwide military psychiatry: psychiatric care, prescriptions
- 1303 (military rights hotline): 24/7, report violence / bullying / human-rights abuses
- 1577-0199: general mental health (available even in military)
2. Responding to violence / bullying:
- Collect evidence (where possible — phones restricted)
- Report to Barracks Life Counselor
- 1303 report
- Tell your unit commander / personnel officer
- For severe cases, National Human Rights Commission military rights committee
- Inform family by leave / letter / phone → family files externally
- Request transfer (different unit)
- Since the 2014 Yun case, military human-rights investigations are mandatory — reporting is effective
3. Family events during service:
- Emergency leave (death, severe illness, etc.) — apply through your unit
- Psychiatry within the military
- Family events during service + military depression = high suicide risk — family should notify the unit
4. Use of leave:
- Regular, merit, petition leave
- Outpatient psychiatry / treatment during leave
- Family / friend meetups
- Outside-military mental-health check
5. Suicide risk:
- If suicidal thoughts: 1303 / 1577-0199 immediately
- Tell superiors / fellow soldiers
- If a peer shows suicide signs (final-sounding words, sorting belongings, depression), report immediately
- Military suicide = unit liability; concealment is punished
Post-service — response
1. Adjustment after discharge:
- 2~4 weeks of "discharge depression" common (burden of freedom, identity change)
- Reconnect with family / friends
- Resume work / studies gradually (3-month stabilization)
2. Military trauma — PTSD:
- PTSD symptoms can emerge 1~3 months post-discharge
- Symptoms: flashbacks, insomnia, nightmares, hyperarousal, avoidance, depression, suicidal thoughts
- Psychiatry, EMDR, CBT
- Apply for "National Merit" status via Veterans Affairs (military PTSD recognized — free treatment, pension)
3. Recovery after military violence / bullying:
- Perpetrator prosecution possible post-discharge (10~15 year statute)
- National Human Rights Commission / military rights lawyer
- Psychological counseling
- Military-violence victim groups
4. Veteran benefits:
- National Merit registration (military PTSD, physical injury)
- Discharge allowance
- Re-employment support
- Partial medical-bill support
Korean military's LGBT / mental illness — special caution
Military Penal Code §92-6 — same-sex acts punishable:
- Korean Military Penal Code §92-6: same-sex acts in military = up to 2 years imprisonment
- 2017 "Gender Equality" investigation arrested gay soldiers; Constitutional Court ruled "constitutional"
- ↑ LGBT suicide risk in military
- Do not come out — concealment is safer
- Consider medical / mental exemption pre-service
Mental illness / self-harm history:
- Korean military's principle: don't enlist mentally ill (grades 4~5)
- But don't fake — honest diagnosis
- Mental illness arising during service is the military's responsibility (medical bills, treatment)
- With past trauma, get 6+ months of psychiatry + diagnostic letter pre-service
Families — for parents of service members
Parents of serving children:
- 1~2 letters / calls / week (where possible)
- 1~2 visits / month
- Monitor child's mental health (letter / call tone, during leave)
- If child shows suicide signs ("final" expressions, sorting belongings, goodbye), call 1303 / unit commander immediately
- Family events (grandparent's death, divorce, etc.) — notify the child through the unit commander
- Report military human-rights violations — external family reports are more effective
Emergency signs — care
- Suicidal thoughts / attempts
- 2+ weeks daily depression
- Military violence / bullying
- Alcohol / drugs
- Post-discharge daily-life paralysis
- Flashbacks / nightmares / hyperarousal (PTSD)
1577-0199 / 1303 (military 24/7) / 1388 (youth — service usually ends youth status). Korean military suicide is 60~80/year — never face it alone. Your safety > military duty. Reporting mental-health issues is not punished — it protects you.