Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Fort Hood Solider Found Dead Identified

Fort Hood: Soldier found dead in off-post residence identified

KWTC News
Staff
October 24, 2017

FORT HOOD, Texas (KWTX) Fort Hood Tuesday identified a soldier who was found dead in his off-post residence on Oct. 18 in Copperas Cove as Spc. Luke Hampton Toomey, 21, of Lakeland, Tenn.
Copperas Cove police and the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command are investigating the circumstances of the death, Fort Hood said.

Penn State Gets New Mental Health Center?

It isn't just the VA spending money for "research" on PTSD but also the National Institute of Mental Health. Take a look at how long Cognitive therapy has been around.

Penn receives $6.4 million from NIMH for new mental health center

WHYY
Anne Hoffman
October 25, 2017

A $6.4 million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health will fund a new research center at the University of Pennsylvania to study how evidence-based treatment can better circulate to more therapists and mental health care providers.

University of Pennsylvania (Ashley Hahn/PlanPhilly
Researchers want to try to reduce the “research to practice gap” in mental health.
Rinad Beidas, an assistant professor of psychiatry and director of implementation research at Penn, said it takes 17 years for a small percentage of research to make its way into community settings.
“That means that if an innovation today was developed to treat a particular condition, it’s likely that a patient with that condition today may never get that innovation,” she said. “And if they do get it, it will be many years in the future … there is a growing sense and understanding in the literature that that’s not acceptable.”
Take cognitive behavioral therapy, for example. It was developed in the 1960s, and though it’s been proved to work, lots of providers still don’t use it.

Honor Flight Brought Veterans of Military and Law Enforcement to DC

Veterans who also served in law enforcement get a warm welcome home at CVG

WCPO News
Ashley Zilka
October 24, 2017

HEBRON, Ky. -- The country's first-ever law enforcement "honor flight" returned home Tuesday night to a waiting crowd of 1,000 well-wishers at Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky Airport. 

Honor Flight Network organizers said they had never seen such a large turnout to welcome passengers home.

"We need more of this in America," Chief Jim Gilbert, who accompanied his Vietnam veteran father Harry and brother Officer Eric Gilbert on the trip, said.

"(It was) overwhelming," Harry Gilbert added. "I never dreamed something like this. … I am at a loss for words."

The Honor Flight Network recognizes veterans by flying them to Washington, D.C., to visit memorials dedicated to the wars in which they fought. Tuesday night's was special in that, like Harry Gilbert, every passenger honored by the trip was a veteran who entered law enforcement when they left the military.
read more here

Homeless Army Veteran and Wife Have New Home

U.S. Army veteran and wife look to keep homelessness behind them

KTBS News
Sierra Pizarro
October 24, 2017

Rhonda and her husband work at Overton Brooks VA Medical Center.

The two bedroom one bathroom home sits on the 600 block of Yarbrough Street in Bossier City, La.
(Bossier City, La.) -- From homeless to homeowners: a U.S. Army veteran and his wife are handed the keys to their first home - a freshly built, bright blue house.

It is the Fuller Center's 57th home, dedicated to Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Combs, in honor of Melissa Rose Maggio and Molly Reed - two young women, both killed in car accidents.
To give back, Mrs. Combs tells KTBS-3 News the first thing she wants to do after moving in is create a garden in Molly's name.

Heroic Homeless Navy Veteran Gets Help

Homeless Navy veteran who helped crash victim gets second chance
Local 10 ABC News
By Carlos Suarez - Anchor/Reporter
October 24, 2017

PEMBROKE PINES, Fla. - Navy veteran Travis Wilson's journey to this moment in life hasn't been easy one, but it sure is inspiring.
"It’s been surreal and it's really been like a dream. I'm having to check myself to see if this is really going on," he said.

A homeless veteran who made some mistakes but never forgot the Navy creed: always courageous.

Last week, Wilson came to the rescue of a man involved in a car crash in Pembroke Pines and held up the driver's neck until help arrived.

"I've had a speckled past that I brought on myself and it's not like people are always in line wanting to say 'Hey, we want you. We recognize that you're a good person,'" Wilson said.

The act caught the eye of city leaders who on Tuesday met with Wilson and the folks at Operation Sacred Trust in hopes of finding him a home and a job.
read more here


Read first report here