Wednesday, July 1, 2009

American Legion taking Courage Carries On national

The good news is that the American Legion along with other service groups are stepping up. The bad news is that they have to. Most of what we are seeing today could have been prevented had anyone in charge been paying attention and planning for it. All of this was predicable. It didn't take some kind of clairvoyant to see it coming. All it would have taken was open eyes and caring hearts.



Now you can see what we knew and when we knew it. By 1978 the DAV had already set up Veterans Centers to focus on helping the veterans of Vietnam. In the process, they ended up helping all other generations because Vietnam veterans pushed for PTSD to be treated instead of ignored.

We knew the numbers. We knew what it did to the veterans with suicides, homelessness, incarcerations and families falling apart. We knew about self-medicating with drugs and alcohol. We knew about the long list of symptoms. Above all, we knew the men and women in the military were all still just humans facing the traumas of combat. The studies were all done in the 80's and 90's. We knew the earlier treatment began after trauma, the better the recovery because PTSD gets worse without intervention.

We also understood the need to respond to traumatic events right here at home. Read any traumatic event from natural disasters to crimes and then read how crews of mental health providers were being brought in. That came because of what we understood about humans after combat. Read about how police officers go to see someone after a shooting and again, know this came about because of the veterans of Vietnam. What you won't read is how the military has taken any of this seriously enough so that they do the same in times of war.

Could you imagine most of what we see today being just a fraction of what it is? It would have been if there were enough mental health workers and Chaplains deployed with the troops. It would have been if the military didn't come out with what could have been great programs but ended up doing more harm than good by telling the troops they could toughen their minds to prevent PTSD. The military has been really great at coming up with ways to kill but totally dysfunctional when it comes to saving lives. They wouldn't even listen to their own studies about redeployments and the increased risk of PTSD. They didn't listen to their own studies about improper dwell time between deployments either.

Well, the American Legion should be applauded with this effort because this is going to take as many people as possible to save the lives of the veterans. Using the figures from Vietnam with the studies on redeployments, it's easy to know we are looking at least a million veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan needing to heal from PTSD. All of this coming at the same time the older veterans are finally figuring out what has been the root of their problems all along. Not a good scenario at all.
North Dakota American Legion’s PTSD ad campaign to grow

Jim Deremo was tired of the calls. The department services officer for North Dakota American Legion heard too often from family of clients who attempted suicide.
By: Dave Roepke, INFORUM
Jim Deremo was tired of the calls.

The department services officer for North Dakota American Legion heard too often from family of clients who attempted suicide.

“It just really bothered me, tugged at my heart,” Deremo said.

So he started an American Legion campaign to encourage veterans to seek help for post-traumatic stress disorder. The media blitz featuring images of actual veterans, called “Courage Carries On,” kicked off this winter.

On Tuesday the Legion announced it will expand the campaign nationwide, offering it to every Legion organization in the U.S.

Carroll Quam, past state commander of the North Dakota American Legion, said heads of other state Legion groups have told him they’d like to pick up “Courage Carries On.”
click link for more

No comments:

Post a Comment

If it is not helpful, do not be hurtful. Spam removed so do not try putting up free ad.