Many Wyoming veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan go without care they've earned
The Trib.com
By CHRISTINE PETERSON and BENJAMIN STORROW
Star-Tribune staff writers
1 hour ago
The week before Halloween, Adrian Najera had a flashback. He opened the doors of Liesinger Hall, but instead of finding himself on the Casper College campus, he was back in Kunar Province.
Back picking through the rubble of a bombed-out building. Back searching for any bit of intelligence: A body to photograph, a finger to scan, anything that might prove a top-level target had been hit in an airstrike.
“That’s how it happens to me. One minute I’m there and then I take a step and it’s like, boom.”
He snapped his fingers.
“As soon as I stepped outside those doors it hit. There were bodies, man.”
The challenges Najera faces are not unique among the soldiers returning home from more than a decade of war in Afghanistan and Iraq. Many former soldiers are going without the care they are entitled to, veterans advocates say.
Nationally, only a third of veterans who fought in recent conflicts participate in U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs programs. The figure is similar in the Cowboy State, where approximately two-thirds of veterans are either seeking care on their own or going without.
Experts blame a range of possibilities for low enrollment, including a social stigma associated with seeking help or the general feeling that help is not needed. But the stakes of solving the enrollment quandary are high.
read more here
No comments:
Post a Comment
If it is not helpful, do not be hurtful. Spam removed so do not try putting up free ad.