Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Will Vietnam Vet Sgt. Garry Lee Price be honored or victim

I've seen too many die without being honored for their service and for what they were sent into. Sgt. Price didn't get to decide if Agent Orange went with him or not, was sprayed where he would walk or fall into water he would drink. He didn't get to decide that so many years after he was willing to risk his life for the sake of this nation, doing what this nation asked him to do, would end up being yet another request from the same nation that he simply die because of it. After all, it's that what this all boils down to?

What did Sgt. Price ask of us in return for risking his life? That if he should die, his family would be taken care of. That if he should be wounded, his wounds would be taken care of and if he couldn't work, he and his family would be taken care of by compensation set at a level according to his wounds or illnesses caused by serving this country. He lived up to his end of the deal but we didn't come close to doing what we needed to do for him in return.

On March 11th 2008, I lost my friend Capt. Agnes Irish Bresnahan in Washington DC. She went to have yet another hearing on the VA claim that had never been honored fully. Years of suffering physically because of Agent Orange and emotionally because of PTSD, she held onto hope that one day the VA would honor her service and prove it by honoring her claim. She kept telling other veterans to seek justice and that this nation would finally honor their service as well. She kept believing this nation she served and all the years of helping other veterans would be justified in the end. But it wasn't. She died in Washington DC after a bleeding ulcer caused by a change in her medication from a drug that worked into a cheap generic drug, ended up taking her life when her heart failed. Yet another Vietnam veteran passing away without justice and without her service being honored.

We do an awful lot of talking of how grateful we are to the men and women serving this nation don't we? Seems that it's just all so easy to say the words and then get back to watching crap on TV, reading a good steamy novel or going to a game. Making sure we enjoy our free time since, after all, our life is just so tough with the economy and losing our jobs. Still we never, ever want to face the aftermath of what we asked of the men and women we sent into combat. Who wants to hear more heartbreaking stories? Who wants to know that veterans live in poverty because their claims have not been approved even though they are legitimate? What do they want from us? Isn't it enough we have a parade once a year? Show up for a Memorial Day event or stick a flag pole in the ground at a long lost relatives grave we never paid attention to in life anyway?

So few in this country actually care about them and when you think we all pay to have them in the military with our tax dollars the least we could do was to have some interest in what our money is paying for or in the case of our veterans, not paying for. Ever wonder what would be going thru your head if you were forced to go on suffering for having served your country? Ever wonder how you would feel knowing you ended up where you are because you said this nation was worth fighting for and did it but ended up having to fight the government because you did it all?

Well here's the story of Sgt. Price. When you read it wonder what you would be thinking if you were him.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

Los Angeles, CA - June 17, 2009 - Garry Lee Price is dying of cancer in a hospice in Sacramento while the Veterans Administration stalls on his service-related disability claim. His doctors give him two weeks to live. When he dies, the claim dies. And that’s the point.

The Veterans Administration, the health services side of the organization, has already determined that the cancer was caused by Garry’s exposure to Agent Orange while serving in Vietnam. Garry was diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma, a soft tissue sarcoma, in April 2008 by VA physicians. He has a tumor the size of a softball growing out of the side of his neck. According to the Veterans Administration’s policy on Agent Orange related disability, this soft tissue sarcoma is one of eight medical conditions where Vietnam Veterans “do not have to show that their illness is related to their military service to get disability compensation. VA presumes that their condition is service-connected.” This should, by all rights, make Garry eligible for full disability benefits immediately.

But Garry’s terminal status, and presumed service-connected disability, instead of spurring the administration to expedite his claim, has given them an extra reason to stall. And they have. For years, “deny, deny, until they die,” has been an common refrain among the Veteran community to describe what they see as the Veterans Administration’s unspoken policy of dragging their feet on claims processing until the Veteran applying dies. Then, the claim doesn’t have to be paid. Garry and his wife Bonnie are the latest victims of this policy.

The Veterans Administration’s website states that Agent Orange related claims take an average of 204 days, or about 7 months to process. It also states that their goal is to speed the processing of these claims to 74 days. Garry first visited the VA with completed disability claim forms in June 2008, after two heart attacks and his cancer had kept him from earning income for almost a year. He was told that day by a VA claims representative that, since he was terminal, he should not bother applying, because the processing time would take longer than he had to live. Discouraged, Garry left with the forms still in his hand.

Garry sought help from the National Veterans Foundation who helped him file his claim, and in October 2008, mailed in the paperwork to the VA. In December 2008 he received a form letter stating that his claim had been received. He is still waiting, one year after he first walked his claim into the VA offices.

When Garry dies, the claim dies. Then, Bonnie Price has to start the process all over again. She’s not sure she can emotionally handle that. In the meantime, Garry and his wife have had to sell most of their belongings on craigslist to live.

Garry Lee Price volunteered for the U.S. Army in November 1966 and served 2 years 7 months and 4 days in the military, most of that time in Vietnam. He worked transporting sensitive documents through areas with heavy Agent Orange spraying.

He received an honorable discharge with the rank of Sergeant on June 17, 1969. During his service, he was awarded the National Defense Service Medal, Vietnam Campaign Medal, Good Conduct Medal, Vietnam Service Medal and Army Commendation Medal.

The frustrating irony is that the medical side of the Veterans Administration has already determined Garry’s terminal cancer is service-connected, and that the benefits side is still not convinced enough to approve Garry’s claim. This is something that the National Veterans Foundation has seen many times before in their work assisting Veterans in crisis. “It’s like the left hand doesn’t know, or really care, what the right hand is doing,” says National Veterans Foundation President and Founder Shad Meshad. “The issue here is that, if the VA paid all the claims that are rightfully due, they’d go broke. So, they stall on cases like Garry’s until the Veteran dies, counting on the fact that the family will be too overwhelmed to pursue it after he or she is gone.”

Garry Lee Price served his country. He served overseas during war and, there, he was exposed to dangerous chemicals by his own people, chemicals that will prematurely take his life, possibly in the next few days. But the Veterans Administration, following a policy of “deny, deny, until they die,” doesn’t seem to care enough to expedite his claim.

How many more Garry Price type tragedies have to happen before the VA serves the needs of those heroes who have guaranteed our freedom with their blood?

# # #

CONTACT:
Shad Meshad, President and Founder
National Veterans Foundation
PHONE: 888-777-4443
FAX: 310-642-0258
shad@nvf.org
www.nvf.org

Asbestos 'emergency' declared in Montana

Asbestos 'emergency' declared in Montana
A Montana town where asbestos contamination has been blamed for more than 200 deaths will get new cleanup and medical assistance from the Obama administration under a "public health emergency" declared today. The declaration is the first ever issued by the Environmental Protection Agency, which has overseen the cleanup of Libby, Montana, for 10 years. full story

This is the wondeful part to all of this,,,,,,,
The Libby operation began producing vermiculite -- a mineral often used in insulation -- in 1919. Dust from the plant covered patches of grass, dusted the tops of cars and drifted through the air in a hazy smoke that became a part of residents' daily lives.

But the product was contaminated with tremolite asbestos, a particularly toxic substance that has been linked to mesothelioma, a cancer that can attack the lining of the lungs, abdomen, or heart.

Vermiculite was used in a lot of houses and everyone was told it was safe,.,,,

Spc. Jonathan C. O’Neill succumbs to wounds suffered in Afghanistan

DoD Identifies Army Casualty


The Department of Defense announced today the death of a soldier who was supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.



Spc. Jonathan C. O’Neill, 22, of Zephyrhills, Fla., died June 15 at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas, of wounds suffered June 2 in Paktya, Afghanistan, when an improvised explosive device detonated near his vehicle. He was assigned to the 549th Military Police Company, 385th Military Police Battalion, 16th Military Police Brigade (Airborne) at Fort Stewart, Ga.
http://icasualties.org/oef/

Army suicide numbers? Real people at Fort Carson

Army releases suicide statistics
Story By: Jeannette Hynes
Source: KOAA

Published Tue Jun 16, 2009, 07:33 PM MDT
Updated Wed Jun 17, 2009, 03:57 AM MDT

The U.S. Army releases the latest suicide data for 2009. So far this year, there are 45 confirmed suicides with 37 reported suicides under investigation. Of those confirmed, two suicides were from Fort Carson.

Private First Class Roy Mason committed suicide in May 2009. He served two tours of duty in Iraq. When he returned, he was assigned to the warrior transition unit to recover from injuries. He was 28 years old.

Specialist Larry Applegate also served two tours in Iraq. He was awarded the Purple Heart and Army Commendation Medal. He committed suicide in January 2009, after using an assault rifle to shoot up his home in Widefield.
go here for more
Army releases suicide statistics KOAA - Pueblo,CO,USA

Robert Hugee, Vietnam vet, PTSD and table tennis

For Hugee, table tennis more than just a game
Competition, camaraderie provide therapeutic boost for Vietnam War vet

By JEFF NATIONS/Journal sports editor

MARTINSBURG - Robert Hugee didn't bring home a gold medal following his latest trip to compete in the National Veterans Golden Age Games.

Hugee's hardware for taking second in table tennis at this year's Games (June 1-June 5) came in a silver shade, not exactly the accustomed finish for a player described as "the man with the Midas touch." But for Hugee, a seven-time gold medalist in the sport, the reward for competing comes much earlier and lasts much longer than the awards ceremony. The 62-year-old Falling Waters resident and Vietnam War veteran finds a refuge in the game, and a sense of camaraderie in the Golden Age Games that helps him maintain a fulfilling, active life despite the long-term lingering effects of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

"I found the sport late," said Hugee, a Brooklyn, N.Y., native who moved to the Eastern Panhandle in 1994 to participate in the Martinsburg Veteran Administration Hospital's PTSD program. "A lot of people remember playing table tennis as a basement game. I found the sport when I was recovering from my addiction to cocaine and crack cocaine. So I found it late, but I loved it."

An Army infantry sergeant and squad leader in Vietnam from 1967-1968, Hugee returned to the United States determined to resume his civilian life. Despite receiving no treatment for his PTSD - which wasn't diagnosed until years after his military service ended - Hugee maintained a "normal" life.

"The VA had no way of dealing with PTSD at that point," Hugee said. "So they misdiagnosed a lot of people at that time. I had relatives who were on Thorazine and really got wacked out on that stuff."

But in the early 1980s, he began a substance abuse-fueled downward spiral that haunted Hugee for most of a decade.
go here for more
http://www.journal-news.net/page/content.detail/id/521042.html?nav=5009

$800 million approved for Fort Bliss growth

$800 million approved for Fort Bliss growth




FROM A NEWS RELEASE SENT TO THE KDBC 4 NEWSROOM:

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Early this morning, the U.S. House Armed Services Committee passed the fiscal year 2010 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 2647), which authorizes $779.4 million to support Fort Bliss growth. Congressman Silvestre Reyes, a senior Member of the House Armed Services Committee, worked to secure funding for El Paso as the bill moved through the Committee and voted in favor of the bill. The bill is scheduled for debate by the full House of Representatives next week.

The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) sets policies and funding levels for U.S. national defense programs for the upcoming year. The legislation authorizes $550.4 billion for the Department of Defense (DoD) and for national security programs under the Department of Energy (DoE).

"This year's Defense Authorization Bill includes substantial investments for Fort Bliss that will further the installation's status as one of America's finest national defense assets," Congressman Reyes said. "Most importantly, this legislation includes funding that will allow Fort Bliss to break ground for the first phase of the new state-of-art William Beaumont Hospital that will serve thousands of troops, veterans, and dependents in the El Paso community."

"The Armed Services Committee underscored its commitment to the men and women of the Armed Forces and their families with the passage of this critical legislation," Reyes added.

"Under this bill, our troops will receive a 3.9 percent pay raise and it also enhances mental health screening and medical care to more effectively detect and treat cases of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)."

$176 MILLION FOR A NEW STATE-OF-THE-ART WILLIAM BEAUMONT - PHASE I

The legislation provides $176 million for the first phase of the new William Beaumont Army Medical Center (WBAMC). The National Defense Authorization Act includes language authorizing $966 million for the construction of a new WBAMC complex. The inclusion of the full authorization for this facility in the NDAA sends a strong message of support to the Army and the Department of Defense for the new medical facility at Fort Bliss.





$32 MILLION FOR NEW FORT BLISS HELICOPTERS FOR COUNTERNARCOTICS PILOT TRAINING

The bill also includes $32 million to procure four helicopters for use in pilot training for counternarcotics operations at Fort Bliss. The aircraft replace helicopters which were deployed to support the US mission in Pakistan.

go here for more

http://www.kdbc.com/Global/story.asp?S=10549915&nav=menu608_2



US Mission in Pakistan?

PTSD:The War Within from NAMI Front Line

You've heard the song All You Need Is Love by the Beatles, and while that is something you really do need when you are living with PTSD in your life, what you really need more is information to begin to heal, start over again with this new kind of normal and live a happier life. I can assure you that if I didn't know what I did, my marriage would have ended years ago, or my reaction to what my husband was going thru would have made it worse. We're going on 25 years married in September. Believe me, if love is there, knowledge added to it, then you can do it too. Otherwise, no amount of love is enough to take you thru the darkest days of PTSD.

A look at the War Within from NAMI Kern County Front Line. If you want to know more about PTSD, this is a great way of hearing about it first hand from the troops and their families.


The Award winning Kurt Rivera Produced video from Bakersfield, CA that will not be shown at our NAMI National Convention in San Francisco due to time constraints.

Kurt Rivera will be part of our Veterans FRONT LINE Presentation at the NAMI California Conference in Torrance, CA on August 21st.

View this outstanding video in it's entirety right here on our NAMI FRONTLINE website thanks to our FRONT LINE Partners at Trilogy:

The War Within: Eyewitness News Investigates PTSD

VFW takes on PTSD and suicide

Helping Veterans Fight A Hidden?Enemy



by Glen Gardner

VFW Commander-in-Chief


(NAPSI)-America's veterans are helping past and present service members fight a subtle enemy that's devastating in the field and at home. That enemy is stress.

Despite the best of programs offered by the Department of Defense and the Veterans Administration, since 9/11, more service members have committed suicide than the total U.S. dead from Iraq and Afghanistan wars. This tragedy is occurring partly because the need has overwhelmed the capacity of government and civilian mental health centers and partly because some people simply refuse to admit they need help.

More needs to be done to overcome the stigma that's unfortunately attached to seeking help, which Army Secretary Pete Geren called a significant challenge to the culture of the Army that places "a premium on strength: physically, mentally, emotionally."

Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen asked his military leaders to set an example. "You can't expect a private or a specialist to be willing to seek counseling when his or her captain or colonel or general won't do it," he said.

Our government cannot battle this enemy alone, nor should a troubled young veteran. Every combat veteran has one thing in common that's very relevant to a new generation of warriors: We've walked in their shoes.
go here for more
http://www.napsnet.com/articles/61658.html

First Responders Face Brutality Of Trauma

First Responders Face Brutality Of Trauma
By FireFightingNews.com

Written by David Hench
Maine - At 6:35 p.m. on Memorial Day, a passer-by reported smoke coming from a third-floor apartment at 463 Cumberland Ave. Firefighters from the Bramhall and Central stations rolled up within minutes and set about their duties, dousing the flames and searching for survivors. As fire calls go, it was not unusual.

Then one of the firefighters inside the apartment came across the remains of 18-year-old Zoe Sarnacki, her body savagely desecrated.

The fire scene became a crime scene, crawling with detectives and evidence technicians, methodically searching for clues and recovering evidence.

Set aside for the moment was the intense psychological impact on the public safety responders of viewing such a disturbing scene. But it's hard for such images not to leave a mark, to come back in dreams or when the fire bell next rings.

Left unresolved, they can lead to substance abuse, domestic conflict and even eating disorders. Sometimes emergency responders cope by becoming emotionally detached, which is itself a high price to pay.

"Because it's their job, they adjust to it. It doesn't mean it doesn't take a toll," says Thomas Marino, a Portland psychologist who has worked extensively with first responders and military personnel on dealing with the stress of particularly disturbing experiences. "Anything that's pretty dehumanizing and horrific, I think there's no way we can't be affected by it."

Public safety supervisors say they keep watch for signs that an employee is having difficulties coping with a particular incident or sequence of incidents.

"You don't look at a crime scene and say, 'I can't believe one person would do this,' because you're working nose to the grindstone," Malloch said. "You shift gears and turn off your emotions so you can do your job effectively.

"It's when you're done working your shift that it starts to bother you," he said.

The diagnostic definition of post-traumatic stress disorder is when a traumatic event, with death or serious injury accompanied by intense fear, helplessness or horror, causes recurrent and distressing recollections of the event, Marino said.

Treating the condition early, in its acute phase, is important so that it does not become chronic or manifest as major depression, he said.click link for more


This is the part that always gets to me. Police officers and firefighters know enough to bring someway for their people to talk about what they just went thru so they don't just stuff it and move on. So why is it the military still has not gotten the message that this is being done all across this country? Is it because they consider the troops all so well trained they stop being human? Is it because they think that police officers and firefighters are less "mentally tough" than the troops?

Stop and think of the so called "programs" the military has been coming out with to strengthen the minds of the troops. As if this would ever, ever work. Battlemind begins with telling the troops they can toughen their minds to prevent PTSD, thus telling them if they do end up with PTSD, it's their fault because they were not tough enough. The detrimental consequences of programs like this have lead to a lot of knocks on the door in the middle of the night to inform families their soldier is not coming home. Not killed by an enemy bullet or roadside bomb blast. But a non-combat fatality. Cause of death, suicide instead of the wound they carried inside of them. Suicides up, attempted suicides increased and most of us are left scratching our heads wondering when the military will get any of this right.

Good Lord! Even regular citizens get more attention from Chaplains and mental health professionals after one traumatic incident than the troops do after countless times. How many times do you have to read about a school incident and then the steps they've taken to bring in people to address the psychological outcomes? Will the military ever, ever get any of this right? The troops are only human with human emotions no matter how well they are trained and no matter how much the military tries to ignore this.

UPDATE
This came out today,,,,need I say more?
Early treatment is beneficial for patients with PTSD
June 17, 2009
Clinical question Is early treatment after a traumatic stress event beneficial?

Bottom line Identification of a traumatic stress event within 3 months and treatment using trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is beneficial for patients who meet DSM-IV criteria for the diagnosis of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). It is uncertain whether individuals would benefit if they are symptomatic but do not meet diagnostic criteria for PTSD.
go here for more
Early treatment is beneficial for patients with PTSD

'Charlie Med' Soldiers Take Care of Camp Taji, Look Out for Each Other

'Charlie Med' Soldiers Take Care of Camp Taji, Look Out for Each Other
Multi-National Division Baghdad
Story by Sgt. Doug Roles
Date: 06.15.2009
Posted: 06.15.2009 11:10

TAJI, Iraq – Pennsylvania Army National Guard Soldiers staffing Camp Taji's main medical clinic are prepared to treat the worst of battlefield injuries but hope the bulk of their cases continues to be sprained ankles and upset stomachs. Soldiers of Company C "Charlie Med," 328th Brigade Support Battalion, 56th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, operate the facility which provides basic healthcare to the thousands of Soldiers and civilians on the post which is located north of Baghdad.

"All walks of life come in here, said Sgt. 1st Class Jeremy Strathmeyer of Lititz, Pa., the clinic's non-commissioned officer in charge. "We treat anything from a Hesco barrier getting dropped on someone's foot to gunshot wounds. We've got the only Guard [facility] and we're the highest level of care on the FOB [forward operating base]."

The clinic's lab workers can do urine analysis and blood counts. Tests that can't be performed at the clinic are sent to a combat support hospital in Baghdad. The medical clinic supports about 10,000 Soldiers and up to another 12,000 civilians at Taji.

Strathmeyer, a medic who has been with Co. C for 10 years, said there are "a lot of different working pieces" to the facility. He explained that the level-two care clinic operates out of three buildings and provides dental care, radiology, pharmacy and physical therapy. Level one care is medical attention provided in the field and at battalion aid stations. The level two clinic here can be thought of as the step between field care and the Combat Support Hospital.

"We run a full pharmacy. We've written over 9,000 prescriptions since February," Strathmeyer said.
Strathmeyer, a York, Pa. police officer who deployed to Ramadi, Iraq in 2004 with the Pennsylvania Guard's 2nd Brigade, 28th Infantry Division, said this tour marks the first time Co. C has deployed as an entire unit.
go here for more
http://www.dvidshub.net/?script=news/news_show.php&id=35078

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Navy funded study can't find link between Lejeune and disease? That's a shocker!

Study: No clear link between Lejeune water, disease
Monday, June 15, 2009


JACKSONVILLE, NC — A new National Research Council report has concluded that although evidence exists that people who lived or worked at Camp Lejeune Marine Base in North Carolina between the 1950s and 1985 were exposed to industrial solvents in their water supply, “strong scientific evidence is not available to determine whether health problems among those exposed are due to the contaminants.”



A National Research Council committee, headed by David A. Savitz of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York City, wrote the 341-page report, Contaminated Water Supplies at Camp Lejeune — Assessing Potential Health Effects. The report, sponsored by the US Department of the Navy, was presented during a June 13 briefing at the USO of North Carolina in Jacksonville. The National Research Council operates under the auspices of The National Academies.



The report also states that further research is unlikely to provide “definitive information on whether exposure resulted in adverse health effects in most cases.” As a result, the committee recommended the Navy and Marine Corps pursue policy changes or administrative actions to address and resolve the concerns associated with the exposures.
go here for more
http://www.watertechonline.com/news.asp?N_ID=72074

Veteran rated 70% for PTSD, can't get money?

Veteran Says He Can't Get Benefits

Posted: June 15, 2009 06:36 PM EDT

Soldier Struggling Without Benefits
1:41

By Stephanie Wurtz
s.wurtz@krdo.com

COLORADO SPRINGS - A six-year Army veteran says he's missing out on thousands of dollars in benefits and says now he's at risk of losing his home. Sgt. Clayton Wingfield completed three tours of duty and applied for his disability benefits at the end of 2008.

He's been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain injury (TBI) and is still waiting on his benefits. "No answers on anything," Wingfield says, "just a big run around."

For about eight months, Wingfield has been trying to track down his $1,300 a month in disability benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs. "I'm just waiting to get my money," Wingfield says, "they've already rated me 70% disabled, but there's a competency issue and they say I'm not competent enough to control my own funds."
go here for more
http://www.krdo.com/Global/story.asp?S=10536987

Don't even get me started on this one! What good will it do him to have his claim approved if he ends up homeless? Do they think of this kind of stress on a veteran with PTSD when he's already proven his claim?

5 more burn-pit lawsuits filed against KBR

5 more burn-pit lawsuits filed against KBR

By Kelly Kennedy - Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday Jun 16, 2009 17:12:49 EDT

Lawyers for veterans who believe they became sick after exposure to the smoke from open-air burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan have filed five more class-action lawsuits against KBR, the contractor that operated many of the burn-pit sites for the military.

The new lawsuits — filed in Florida, Kansas, Ohio, South Carolina and Utah federal courts — accuse KBR of exposing troops to toxins from giant burn pits used to dispose of garbage on bases. At Joint Base Balad, Iraq, 250 tons of garbage were burned every day at one point, including 90,000 plastic bottles each day. Troops have also documented the burning of petroleum products, amputated limbs of Iraqis, benzene and Styrofoam, as well as other materials known to produce cancer-causing toxins when burned.

The lawsuit in Florida includes the family of Air Force Maj. Kevin Wilkins, who died of brain cancer five days after a tumor was discovered. He had served at Balad, and when his doctor asked if he had been exposed to any toxins, Wilkins immediately suggested the burn pit.
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/06/military_burnpit_lawsuits_061609w/

Deployed military couples find time together finally

Army couple's rarest asset in Iraq: time together
By HAMZA HENDAWI – 6 hours ago

BAGHDAD (AP) — They still feel like newlyweds, five years into their marriage. A lucky couple?

No, Nathan and Jennifer Williams just haven't seen much of each other.

The two young Americans, both Army captains, have each been deployed twice to Iraq on 12-month tours — but in different locations. Back home, they spent at least another year apart because of training commitments.

All told, they've been together for two of their five years of marriage.

The Williamses are among thousands of military couples whose lives have been disrupted by multiple tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. Starting a family has been put on hold. And time alone together, when it comes, is precious.

Every night since November, Nathan, 28, and Jennifer, 30, would get on the phone to pour out their thoughts about the day, decompress and chat about the kind of stuff married couples chat about.

Stationed at different outposts in Baghdad just six miles apart, they rarely had the chance to see each other in person — just once or twice a month — so the phone calls were crucial.

"I have been here long enough now that I understand his job so that he can kind of talk about his day and I understand everything he is saying," Jennifer said.

Still, the Williamses are luckier than many military couples, particularly those who have lost loved ones in battle. In both of their tours, they've served in the same brigade.

And starting this month, it's a relative honeymoon — or a reunion, perhaps. Nathan commands an infantry company that moved May 30 from an outpost in north Baghdad to Camp Victory, where his wife is stationed. So now, they will be able to see each other each day for the rest of their 12-month tour, which will end in late September or early October.
go here for more
Army couple's rarest asset in Iraq: time together The Associated Press

Getting Mental Health Care in a Combat Zone

Guest Post by
Meredith Walker

Getting Mental Health Care in a Combat Zone
With the suicide rate of active duty soldiers at an all-time high, the issues of mental health care for those in the military has never been more pertinent or more pressing. One of the major issues in mental health care in the field, however, is the stigma associated with needing psychiatric care, in a work culture that values strength, both physical and mental. Many feel that this stigma makes soldiers shy away from getting the health care they desperately need.


New figures from the conflict in Iraq suggest that as much as twenty percent of active duty soldiers and those who have recently returned home from Iraq may be suffering from some form of depression, anxiety, PTSD or emotional disturbance. This translates to nearly 340,000 individuals who could be wrestling with mental problems on their own, unable or embarrassed to ask for help.


This issue has been brought dramatically to the forefront by the May 2009 shooting of five soldiers at a counseling center by another solider, Sgt. John M. Russell, an individual whom officials had mandated get treatment from the counseling center. For this man, treatment was too late. Encouraging soldiers to get mental health help and to talk to someone about their feelings of stress or grief over lost comrades is essential to preventing future tragedies of this nature.


Even more pressing is the current realities of serving in the military. Today, many soldiers go out on three or four tours of duty, as opposed to the one or two served by most fighting in Vietnam, a conflict notorious for the war-induced trauma many soldiers who fought in it returned home with. Studies suggest that those going out for their third or fourth rotation are twice as likely to suffer mental health problems as those just coming into active duty.


Changes are being made to help soldiers get help, however. More soldiers are actively speaking to about their combat stress and the military is offering more combat stress clinics where soldiers can rest and recover. The biggest obstacle to overcome in helping soldiers get mental health care help, however, is the soldiers themselves who often feel weak or incapable of doing their duty if they seek out help. Many do not want to be regarded negatively by peers or commanders, and simply deal with the pain silently.


Today, many in the armed forces as well as veterans at home are advocating new awareness of stress-counseling programs and are encouraging commanding officers to set an example by seeking out treatments and showing all soldiers that it’s ok to need a shoulder to lean on, hopefully preventing future tragedies and ensuring better lives for all enlisted.

This post was contributed by Meredith Walker, who writes about the masters in public health. She welcomes your feedback at MeredithWalker1983@gmail.com


Anyone that wants to write a guest post is welcome to do so at anytime as long as it is helpful. email me at namguardianangel@aol.com with the post you want to ad in the body of the email. Due to constant crashes of my PC, I no longer open attachments.

Act Now to Prevent the Incarceration of People with Mental Illness

Trust me on this. If Fred Frese is involved with this, it is a big issue. We've read about Veterans Courts because they take into account the unique issues veterans have coming back from combat. They are not just doing this for the newer generation of veterans, but for all veterans. Mental illness is not a crime and should never be treated like one.

Act Now to Prevent the Incarceration of People with Mental Illness

June 12, 2009

The criminalization of people with mental illness is a growing problem that devastates many members of our community. A study released this month in the journal Psychiatric Services shows that the prevalence of people with serious mental illness in jails is increasing.

The study, which was presented June 1st at a Senate briefing featuring NAMI National board member Fred Frese, found that overall, 16% of jail inmates have a serious mental illness.

Even more alarming, 31% of female jail inmates have a serious mental illness. These numbers suggest that up to 2 million jail bookings every year involve an individual with serious mental illness. In light of this study, it is more important now than ever before to support programs that help people stay out of jail.

This week, the House Appropriations committee approved the FY 2010 budget for Commerce, Justice and Science programs, which includes $12 million for the Mentally Ill Offender Treatment and Crime Reduction Act (MIOTCRA). MIOTCRA grants support communities working on crisis intervention teams (CIT), mental health courts, and similar programs that are proven to help break the cycle of incarceration.

The bill also includes $100 million in funding for the Second Chance Act, which supports re-entry programs to help people get the services and support they need to successfully reintegrate into society. The full House is expected to vote on the bill the week of June 15.

Act Now!Let your Representatives in the House know that people with mental illness should not be in jail.

Write a letter today telling them to support funding for MIOTCRA and the Second Chance Act as part of the 2010 Commerce, Justice and Science Appropriations Bill.

Learn MoreVisit the Criminal Justice/Mental Health Consensus Project Web site to learn more about the study.

Visit the House Appropriations Committee Web site to read a summary of the Commerce, Justice and Science Appropriations Bill.

Read more about the briefing on the prevalence study hosted by the Senate Judiciary Committee.

PTSD:NY ex-cop suffered after 9-11 and had unloaded gun

9/11 stress cited in ex-cop's NY school melee case


By JIM FITZGERALD
The Associated Press
Tuesday, June 16, 2009; 2:02 PM

NEW CITY, N.Y. -- The former New York City policeman who stormed into a suburban middle school with a gun had to sort through body parts after 9/11 and suffers from post-traumatic stress, his attorney said Tuesday.

Defense lawyer Gerard Damiani spoke after the former officer, Peter Cocker, pleaded not guilty at his arraignment in Rockland County Court. Cocker, 37, of Tappan, is charged with kidnapping, burglary, coercion and gun crimes.

Police say Cocker stormed past a security guard at South Orangetown Middle School in Blauvelt last Tuesday, locked himself in an office with district Superintendent Ken Mitchell and threatened to shoot him in the heart. Police learned later that Cocker's revolver was unloaded.

As police were called and the school went into lockdown, Mitchell tried to talk Cocker into giving up the gun, then tackled and disarmed him, police said.
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9/11 stress cited in ex-cop's NY school melee case

OMG! Will the Army ever get it right?

I was very hopeful when I started to read this article, but then I got down to where a Chaplain, of all people, discussed that new soldiers needed to build "resiliency" and I screamed "Oh My God! " because they still don't get it. They still don't understand it and worse, they won't even open their eyes to see what is right in front of their face!

A recent Army study shows that 60 percent of suicides are carried out by first-time deployers.

Who did this "recent study" and why didn't they include all the veterans that committed suicide after multiple deployments? There is the key right there. They didn't because when they come home, they are no longer part of the military. Easy to skew numbers when they omit so many from their figures. You've read a lot of their stories right here over the last couple of years.

Apparently Col. Stice and the rest of the Army has been kept out of the loop when it comes to what is real and what they really think.


The Army will begin suicide prevention chain-teaching March 15 through June 15. The new briefing includes an interactive video, suicide prevention tip card and an "ACE" of hearts guideline on how to help a buddy who might be considering suicide. Photo credit J.D. Leipold


Army Takes New Approach to Suicide Prevention
June 2009
By Sgt. Lindsey Bradford, Multi-National Corps-Iraq Public Affairs Office




BAGHDAD, Iraq (Army News Service) - As the number of Soldiers committing suicide continues to rise, the Army's suicide prevention campaign shifts its focus to junior leaders in an effort to arm them with the tools they need to help their Soldiers before a problem reaches a tragic end.

A recent Army study shows that 60 percent of suicides are carried out by first-time deployers. That percentage may be hard to believe as news agencies continue to report on how the Army is stretched thin and Soldiers are on their second, third or fourth tours here.
"Soldiers who have deployed before have been able to build resiliency, and they are able to adapt to situations because they have been placed in similar ones before," said Chaplain (Col.) Kenneth Stice, Multi-National Corps-Iraq command chaplain. "First time deployers need to build that same resiliency, and that is hard to do."

The MNC-I Suicide Prevention Action Plan, December 2008, puts chaplains in theater at the forefront of unit-level suicide prevention training. Stice and his religious support team are ready to take the lead, providing an outlet for Soldiers to come to if they need help, as well as provide additional suicide prevention training to units.

The first step is to educate Soldiers on suicide prevention in three phases.

Phase I is the Army's "Stand Down" video, and is usually shown at a Soldier's home station prior to deploying.

Phase II, which is currently being conducted in theater, is the "Shoulder-to-Shoulder: No Soldier Stands Alone" video, followed by a discussion where Soldiers are able to share their personal experiences, discuss the causes of suicide and ways they can help their fellow Soldiers.

"The video is very transparent, very candid and the goal of it is to reduce the stigma of seeking help, because the cost of suicide hurts families and units alike," Stice said.

Phase III is annual training that reiterates lessons from the previous two phases.


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http://www.army.com/news/item/5334

Putting Chaplains in theater is a good idea as long as they are there for the soldiers to talk to and not there to proselytize. A Chaplain can be able to get them to open up and should be trained to spot the signs of a soldier in need of psychological help. The concern for me right here is that after Col. Stice said new soldiers were more at risk, are they assuming this is true, focusing on the new soldiers at the expense of soldiers on multiple tours? Is this part of the problem we've been seeing when they become veterans and commit suicide? Considering PTSD is best treated early, what kind of a difference would this have made if they were treated before discharge adequately.

The Army still does not get it. They are a lot closer to where they need to be but they are far from really helping the soldiers and preventing them from taking their own lives. If what they've been doing had been right, the numbers of suicides and attempted suicides would have gone down, not historically high. I'll try to check out these videos and will post about them after I see them.

Recovery unit set up plan for wounded soldier care at Fort Bragg

Recovery unit set up plan for wounded soldier care
Rocky Mount Telegram - Rocky Mount,NC,USA
The Associated Press

Monday, June 15, 2009

FORT BRAGG, North Carolina — The first thing Lt. Col. Terry McDowell did when he took command of a recovery unit for wounded troops at Fort Bragg was establish a transition plan for each wounded soldier to work toward leaving the unit as soon as he or she arrives.

"This isn't a permanent Army unit. It is a transition unit," McDowell said in his first interview since taking command. "We've got the structure in place, medical wise, to get a WT (warrior in transition) to what their end state goal is as rapidly as possible."

At the same time, he's making sure that staff member are better trained to distinguish medical problems from disciplinary ones.

McDowell, 42, from Bonaire, Ga., took command in April of Fort Bragg's Warrior Transition Battalion, where soldiers had complained to top officials about their treatment.

McDowell said soldiers coming to the unit now have a timeline and a set of goals. It keeps the wounded soldiers motivated and allows doctors to set a target date to transition them out of the unit. In the past, wounded soldiers have languished in the unit for months with little or no idea how they are progressing. Army-wide, the average soldier spends 366 days in a Warrior Transition unit. The average at Fort Bragg is 350.

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Group Raises Money For Veterans Despite Recession

Group Raises Money For Veterans Despite Recession
KOAT.com - Albuquerque,NM,USA
Bernalillo Will Create Position To Oversee Mesa Development
POSTED: 10:00 pm MDT June 13, 2009





ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- Despite the slow economy a grassroots effort is speeding forward.

Veterans Integration Center, a place fueled by donations, helps former service members get back on their feet.

Ron Edwards, an advocate for homeless veterans, said, "I felt totally and completely disfranchised and invisible."

After Edwards' time as a Marine, he found himself out of money and on the streets.

"They didn't see me. They saw the clothes that I had, they saw the dirt on my face, they saw the fear in my eyes," he said.

Edwards said help was hard to find.