Showing posts with label heroin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heroin. Show all posts

Friday, November 4, 2016

Veterans Hooked on Heroin After VA Pain Pills

Veterans hooked on heroin struggle to find help
KRDO ABC 13 News
By: Bart Bedsole
Posted: Nov 03, 2016
A top VA pain management expert, Dr. Julie Franklin, recently testified to the House Committee On Veterans Affairs that almost 60% of veterans returning from the Middle East have some form of chronic pain requiring treatment.

A KRDO Newschannel 13 investigation found that 63,880 veterans were treated in 2015 for an opioid use disorder.
A KRDO Newschannel 13 investigation revealed that a large number of heroin addicts in America are veterans.

Not only has the VA health care system struggled to help them, but it may also be responsible for inadvertently creating the addictions in the first place.

Ross Armentor is recovering heroin addict who has been sober for three years this month.

Shortly after serving in Iraq in 2003, he was prescribed the powerful painkiller Percocet, which contains the opioid oxycontin.

He was suffering from a torm hamstring at the time.

Within a few months, he was addicted.
read more here

Saturday, April 30, 2016

Mom Says "Marines Broke My Son" and Gets Him Help

Get Marty: Veteran’s Mother Pleads For Help For Her Son
CBS Pittsburg
By Marty Griffin
April 28, 2016
“The Marines broke my son. Now I’d like them to fix him,” says Maureen Valenzi.

SEWICKLEY (KDKA) — The mother of a U.S. Marine Corps veteran in an emergency situation reached out to KDKA’s Get Marty.

“The Marines broke my son. Now I’d like them to fix him,” says Maureen Valenzi.

Ian Valenzi served two tours of combat duty in Afghanistan. The Sewickley native returned home with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and a heroin addiction.

“I was in trouble. I was in a bad place. I could have hurt myself,” says Ian.

Ian tried to get help at the VA and became extremely frustrated. He sat in the waiting area for 14 hours.

“I had enough,” Ian said.
KDKA’S Marty Griffin reached out to the director of the VA who got Ian immediate help.

In fact, Ian is now in a specialized treatment program at the VA. He will be there four and a half months.

“They saved my life. If I didn’t come here, I may have been dead,” says Ian.
read more here

Sunday, January 31, 2016

Heroin Robs Family of Army Veteran

Heroin robs another family: Young Army veteran from Hudson remembered
Telegram.com
By Brad Avery
MetroWest Daily News Staff
Posted Jan. 30, 2016
After a relapse, he was able to get clean again and had been living in Veterans Administration transitional housing. He had been clean up until the night he died, his parents said.

Matthew Holmes with his sister Rachel at her Hudson High School graduation.
Submitted Photo/MetroWest Daily News
HUDSON - A soldier, a sports fan, a son and a brother - Matthew Holmes was the kind of person who always wanted to help others. He was the kind of person who would give the shirt off his back - literally. He once tried to use his shirt to put out a brush fire, his parents said.

Holmes died last week at age 22, losing a years-long battle to heroin addiction.
"He was in the top 2 percent on aptitude tests," said his father. "He could have had any job he wanted and written his own script. He wanted to be the boots on the ground, to be an infantryman."

Holmes lived at Fort Hood and trained as a sniper, but never saw combat. By the time he reached the military, troops were being pulled out of Iraq and the wars in the Middle East were winding down for a period. That's when he started running into problems.

He told his parents that his whole sniper team was getting into a depressive mode, doing busywork during work hours and partying heavily in the downtime. Although he started abusing prescription drugs at 16 at high school parties, his problems grew in the military where he had access to hard drugs. Eventually, as the problem worsened he sought help and was able to receive an honorable discharge.
read more here

Monday, January 18, 2016

Veterans Opioid Painkillers Leading to Heroin?

This story is painful to read for several reasons. It happened to a two tour veteran in this decade. It also happened to my husband's nephew in the previous decade.

My husband's nephew was a Vietnam veteran, just like my husband. They served the same year but while both came home with PTSD, his nephew was also wounded. The physical wounds were easier for him to live with than PTSD. He was also addicted to heroin.

Fast forward years later, he got straight and got help from the VA to heal. He needed more help, but wouldn't listen. He committed suicide in a motel room with enough heroin to kill ten men. My husband is still here and living a better life. As for his nephew, his suicide haunts me. I blame myself most of the time because as much as I knew about PTSD and what he needed, I never found the way to get him to hear me.

So I work a bit harder, pray harder to find the words, tell the stories of others hoping to save as many as possible.

When you read the following story, consider how long all of this has been going on, then wonder what it will take for those in charge to come to the conclusion they need to find a way to be heard before it is too late for even more.

This veteran had been redeployed even after being diagnosed with PTSD. This is not an unusual story, since it happened more times than you may be aware of. It is a painful reminder of so much more that needs to be done to make being home after combat less dangerous than combat itself.
Rising use of opioid painkillers and efforts to curb them may lead soldiers, vets to heroin
FayObserver
By Amanda Dolasinski Staff writer
Jan 16, 2016
When he returned from deployment, Terry Nowiski said, her son was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. He was relieved with that diagnosis because he was able to grasp what was wrong and form a game plan to control it, she said.

During his second deployment in 2009, she said, he again fell into depression, which was noted in his medical records.

He returned from that deployment in July 2010.
Photo by Andrew Craft
Aaron Nowiski was a veteran of the 82nd Airborne Division
Twenty-four year-old Aaron Nowiski died alone, on his bed next to two bags of heroin.

The Army veteran, who served two tours in Iraq, had secretly been using the powerfully addictive drug, even fooling his family into the understanding that he had quit, before it claimed his life in 2011.

"I only found out because he had been arrested for drug paraphernalia," said his mother, Terry Nowiski. "He was able to hide that part of his life from us. I know he was ashamed."

While heroin overdoses and deaths continue to rise in Fayetteville and across the country, there is little evidence to suggest that veterans in this city are becoming addicted to the drug at a higher rate than civilians.

But the risk is there.

Studies show that soldiers and veterans use opioid painkillers - essentially the chemical equivalent of heroin - far more frequently than civilians because their military training and combat lead to far more injuries.
The concern is that the harder it becomes to legally obtain opioid painkillers, the more likely it is that veterans addicted to them will turn to heroin. That could be especially true in Fayetteville, where painkiller use is so common.
read more here

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

They lost their will to live

They lost their will to live
Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
January 21, 2014

In 2010 the Army spent $17 million on Suicide Research. Sounded good at the time. At least it did if you did not read the rest of the report or track the outcome. Why? Because the article points out that this money was not for researching suicides but to figure out what programs were working. You know, the programs they had already funded in the first place.

They spent this money right after spending "$50 million study of suicide and mental health involving about 500,000 service members and four other research institutions." Just with these two "studies" $67 million dollars topped off with more suicides.

Wise investment? Hardly but this money was only a fraction of the funds wasted. Change that. Not just wasted. It is much more disgusting than that. They basically buried the money when they buried all the men and women suddenly discovering that while they were willing to risk their lives for someone else in combat, they were not given what they needed to heal because of it. They lost their will to live.

Or be willing to lay down their lives.


The Gazette out of Colorado had an article about two professors new book claiming that "more U.S. combat veterans are diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder in the U.S. than anywhere else because the condition has become a "cultural phenomena."

"Sarah Hautzinger, a Colorado College associate professor of anthropology, and Jean Scandlyn, a University of Colorado at Denver research associate professor of health and behavioral sciences and anthropology" you can find the title to on the link. Nothing against anthropology professors (My favorite TV show is Bones) but the issue is not just in the US. We've already read about what is happening in Canada, the UK and Australia. We have more veterans with PTSD because we have more veterans.

This morning I opened my email discovering a link to an article on TIME about Vietnam veterans addicted to heroin. I cried. I cried for my husband's nephew who was the same young age of 19 when both of them were in Vietnam. My husband came home with PTSD and so did his nephew. While my husband and I have been married for almost 30 years, his nephew came home addicted to heroin. In and out of trouble, he finally cleaned up his life. We were all hopeful he'd finally be happy enough that life was not worse than combat. We were wrong. He checked himself into a motel room after buying enough heroin to kill ten men. It only had to kill one.
The War Within: Portraits of Vietnam Veterans Fighting Heroin Addiction
LIFE
Tara Thean

Sonny Martin was just 23 when he returned home from Vietnam with a grim souvenir of his stint in uniform: a heroin addiction. Martin turned to the drug to help stave off the memory of his time in Southeast Asia, where he had bribed villagers for information that would help him identify and “eliminate” Viet Cong collaborators. Back in the States, he found few people willing to help heal the invisible wounds that remained from his time in that brutal war.

“I had to keep it all inside,” Martin said in a July 1971 LIFE magazine story that illuminated the struggles — and addictions — short-circuiting so many veterans’ return to civilian life. According to the LIFE article, “the number of addicts is still not confirmed. Congressman Robert Steele (R-Conn.) and many returning veterans estimate that 15 percent of the men in Vietnam are hooked on heroin. The military claims the figure is 2 percent.” Whatever the actual numbers, it didn’t help that the drug was so easy to find: just two bucks would secure a fix of high-grade smack — a high that, for a while, blunted the anxiety, shock, and loneliness that defined so many veterans’ post-war lives.

Here, on the heels of recent reports about the enormous difficulties (joblessness, horrific suicide rates and more) facing American veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, LIFE.com recalls that long-ago magazine article, and the all-too-familiar stories of young men struggling to put their lives back together after serving their country in a divisive, seemingly endless conflict.

In 1971, addicted veterans who wanted to kick their heroin habit could check into places like Ward 4B2 of the Palo Alto Veterans Administration Hospital in California. There, doctors and nurses used the synthetic opiate methadone to “buy them time” while experimenting with one-on-one and small-group therapy sessions, urging the men to turn their problems inside out and tackle them head on. But veterans couldn’t just walk into Palo Alto and hope for a cure: they had to demonstrate a genuine commitment to their own recovery. That meant tough times for men like 22-year-old Dan Patterson (see gallery above), who snorted heroin on a trip to town after he’d been admitted to the Palo Alto program. The doctors and nurses voted: he was out. He could come back when he was serious about helping himself.

Hoping to see more places like Ward 4B2, in 1971 the Nixon administration set aside $14 million to put 13 more programs in place before the end of the year. The new programs looked to Ward 4B2 for guidance; but 4B2 was, of course, very much still feeling its way forward. It wasn’t clear whether the drug-and-therapy combination could truly wean an addict off of both methadone — which is itself addictive — and heroin.
read more here


Did you notice the year? $14 million in 1971. Think about that for a moment. That is how long the ravages of combat have not only claimed lives but since reports started to surface about PTSD and substance abuse, 43 years ago.

People have a very strange reaction when I mention that research has been going on that long. It isn't that people didn't know about it but you'd have to be subscribing to all the magazines and newspapers from all over the country to learn since no one had computers back then. In the 80's I had to go to the library. I was just an average 23 year old when I met my husband, so I didn't have a clue when my Dad, a Korean Veteran, said the words "shell shock" after meeting him. That was what they called it before Vietnam veterans pushed for all the research into the cause as well as what could be done to save the lives of the men and women sent to Vietnam.

Nothing we see today is new. In the last 40 years billions have been spent and most of it wasted on what does not work because researchers decided they would redo what had already been done. They ignored the data in the process they also ignored what did work leaving veterans on this side of the ground instead of under it.

In 1984 Point Man International Ministries started out of Seattle Washington because a "Seattle Police Officer and Vietnam Veteran Bill Landreth noticed he was arresting the same people each night, he discovered most were Vietnam vets like himself that just never seemed to have quite made it home. He began to meet with them in coffee shops and on a regular basis for fellowship and prayer. Soon, Point Man Ministries was conceived and became a staple of the Seattle area."

Even back then it was known that small groups worked best because like in combat, it was a unit watching the backs of brothers and Point Man repeated what worked. That closeness meant the veteran mattered and was not lost in the crowd.

Healing Combat PTSD has to come in three parts. Mind-body-spirit or they do not really heal. There is no cure however if the whole of the veteran is treated, they live better lives.

Mind means psychological help and often medication but it also means substance abuse has to stop. Self medicating only makes it worse but veterans have a hard time understanding that. Often medication has to be changed until the right kind is found for the individual veteran. If they do not tell their psychiatrist they are having problems with the medication so it can be changed, they just stop taking it and most of the time give up on therapy.

They need to take care of their bodies to relearn how to calm down again. Usually this is done with meditation, yoga, martial arts, sports and something as simple as just taking a walk.

They also have to take care of their spirit because if they do not, they do not heal properly. They do not make peace with what some yahoo scientist is trying to remove from their brain taking everything else with those memories including the painful moment they lost a friend of took a life. Spiritual healing helps them forgive themselves if they have survivor guilt and forgive others including the other humans that tried to kill them. It helps them see that even in the horrific moments of combat, God was there all along. He does not mess with freewill and does not take sides other than the side of the individual. Whenever they cared, weeped, held out a hand or put an arm around one of the men they were with, God was there. The fact they had so much goodness inside of them to grieve afterwards came from the very part of them that hurts the most.

So I'll sit here for a while, think of all the wasted years as the number of suicides goes up and still wonder what it will take for this country to fully understand that when a man or woman survives combat but not survive being back home, too many "experts" really suck at their jobs.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Camp Lejeune sixth grade teacher arrested on heroin charges

Camp Lejeune teacher, boyfriend arrested on heroin charges
WCTI 12 News
By Alison Parker
Sep 23 2013

CAMP LEJEUNE, ONSLOW COUNTY
A sixth-grade teacher at Camp Lejeune and her boyfriend have been arrested on heroin charges.

Thersea Catherine Fedor, 53, of Hubert, is a sixth-grade teacher at Brewster Middle School, according to Camp Lejeune Public Affairs Director Nat Fahy. The Naval Criminal Investigative Service took Fedor into custody at the district superintendent's office Friday morning, Fahy said.

Fedor has been placed on administrative leave pending results of the investigation, said Camp Lejeune District Superintendent Aldridge Boone.

"The welfare of the students is our primary consideration at this particular time," Boone said. "We will definitely have a qualified substitute teacher to come in and take over classes until this is resolved."
read more here

Sunday, April 22, 2012

More soldiers in the Army overall are testing positive for heroin

Opiates killed 8 Americans in Afghanistan, Army records show
By Michael Martinez,
CNN
Sat April 21, 2012

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Eight soldiers died of overdoses involving heroin, morphine or other opiates in 2010-11
56 soldiers, including the eight, were investigated for using, possessing or selling the drugs
More soldiers in the Army overall are testing positive for heroin use
The Taliban are believed to be stockpiling opium to finance their activities, U.N. reported

(CNN) -- Eight American soldiers died of overdoses involving heroin, morphine or other opiates during deployments in Afghanistan in 2010 and 2011, according to U.S. Army investigative reports.

The overdoses were revealed in documents detailing how the Army investigated a total of 56 soldiers, including the eight who fell victim to overdoses, on suspicion of possessing, using or distributing heroin and other opiates.

At the same time, heroin use apparently is on the rise in the Army overall, as military statistics show that the number of soldiers testing positive for heroin has grown from 10 instances in fiscal year 2002 to 116 in fiscal year 2010.

Army officials didn't respond to repeated requests for comment on Saturday. But records from the service's Criminal Investigation Command, obtained by the conservative legal group Judicial Watch, provided glimpses into how soldiers bought drugs from Afghan juveniles, an Afghan interpreter and in one case, an employee of a Defense Department contractor, who was eventually fired.
read more here

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Army Staff Sgt. on leave stops bank robber in Sarasota FL

Soldier thwarts bank robbery, disarms suspect
By The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday Jun 2, 2011 7:54:00 EDT
SARASOTA, Fla. — A 34-year-old Army staff sergeant home on leave chased a suspected bank robber into the parking lot and held him until sheriff's deputies arrived.

Officials say Eddie Peoples was inside a Bank of America branch in Sarasota with his two young sons Tuesday when a man walked in with a handgun and demanded cash from the tellers.
read more here
Soldier thwarts bank robbery, disarms suspect

UPDATE

Soldier who stopped bank robber in national spotlight


By Todd Ruger

Published: Thursday, June 2, 2011 at 5:42 p.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, June 2, 2011 at 5:42 p.m.
SARASOTA - For the soldier who stopped a bank robbery this week, a low-key trip home to help his in-laws around the house is now a whirlwind tour through the national media spotlight.

Army Staff Sgt. Eddie Peoples spent Thursday retelling news reporters how he single-handedly detained a robber in a Bank of America branch parking lot as his 4- and 6-year-old sons huddled behind furniture in the lobby.
Soldier who stopped bank robber in national spotlight

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Soldiers at risk of getting hooked on heroin

Soldiers at risk of getting hooked on heroin
By Michael Edwards
The revelation that an Australian soldier serving in Afghanistan may have overdosed on drugs comes as no surprise to addiction experts.

One even says a risk of sending soldiers to Afghanistan is that some of them are going to become heroin dependent.

A senior lawyer is set to conduct an official inquiry into how the experienced Australian commando suffered a suspected overdose nearly a week ago.


A bottle of pills and white powder were found in the soldier's room.

He was found unconscious and unresponsive in his room in Tarin Kowt in Uruzgan province last Friday and remains in a serious condition in a military hospital in Germany.

Australian soldiers already face random drug testing, but now there will be testing of the entire Special Operations Task Force in Afghanistan.

"Life is unbearable," he said. "You don't know whether you're going to be alive in 10 minutes' time or not.

"Life has very few pleasures; you're very uncomfortable, it's either very hot or very cold, the food's pretty awful, the ever-present smell of death and you see some of your closest buddies die before your eyes.

"So life is really unbearable and heroin's cheap."

Afghanistan produces 93 per cent of the world's opium, the key ingredient of heroin.

read more here

Soldiers at risk of getting hooked on heroin