Thursday, December 27, 2012

New York crew are lifesavers for troops in Afghanistan, too

FEARLESS FOUR FDNY: New York crew are lifesavers for troops in Afghanistan, too
Firefighters from 101st Rescue Squadron of Air National Guard 'will fight our way in and fight our way out' to get injured soldiers in the war zone
BY JOE KEMP
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
PUBLISHED: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 25, 2012

AIR FORCE MASTER SGT. JAMES MARTIN
Smoke-eaters (from far left) Shaun Cullen, Tripp Zanetis, James Denniston and Erick Pound have saved nearly 100 lives as crew flies into combat zones to aid troops in Afghanistan.

They were the Bravest of rescue operations overseas — a team of four FDNY firefighters flying into combat to tend to wounded troops in Afghanistan.

The smoke-eaters of the 101st Rescue Squadron of the New York Air National Guard were deployed to more than 50 missions and saved nearly 100 lives between September and November while stationed at Camp Bastion in the southern part of the war-torn country.

“Those guys knew that if they were hurt, we were going to come get them no matter what,” said Shaun Cullen, 33, the crew’s captain and pilot of the HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopter. “They knew we will fight our way in and fight our way out. We will come get you.”

Cullen, a nine-year veteran firefighter from Engine Co. 54 in Manhattan, and his crew began responding to emergencies in combat zones in less than eight minutes — about half the Air Force’s 15-minute average.

“We’re all bringing the same way we operate back home and applying it here,” Cullen said. “That brings the level up a notch.”

About five other FDNY firefighters make up the entire 20-man unit of the 26th Expeditionary Rescue Squadron, but Cullen had the only team made entirely of New York’s Bravest.
read more here

Wounded Times Book of Revelations on PTSD

Wounded Times Book of Revelations on PTSD
by Kathie Costos
Wounded Times Blog
December 27, 2012

This morning I read a comment from a member of Point Man Ministries about my blog on Facebook. I responded with this.
"Thank you very much! I appreciate your support. Sometimes it feels as if I am like John of Patmos, alone out here in the wilderness with much to say but few know."


I kept reading my emails when I read how the VA has admitted they have underreported the number of veterans being treated for PTSD.

VA UNDERCOUNTED AFGHANISTAN AND IRAQ WAR VETERAN PTSD CASES
Nextgov.com
By Bob Brewin
December 26, 2012

The Veterans Affairs Department has undercounted the number of Afghanistan and Iraq war veterans seeking care over the past decade for post-traumatic stress disorder by 10,299 cases or roughly 4 percent, the VA acknowledged in a revised June 2012 report. The department posted the revised report Dec. 12 on a public health website not linked to its main website.

The revised report said the department relied on an improperly constructed patient data file that omitted three months of data in the original report.

The new report shows 256,820 Afghanistan and Iraq veterans sought care for PTSD at VA hospitals and veterans centers from 2002 through 2012 based on an underlying, revised report of 834,467 Afghanistan and Iraq veterans who obtained health care from the VA for a variety of conditions over the past 10 years.

This puts the number of veterans of the Afghanistan and Iraq wars seeking care for PTSD at roughly 30 percent of the total number who sought health care. The overall, revised health care report shows 444,451 or 53.3 percent of the total sought mental health care, which includes treatment for PTSD, depression, psychoses, alcohol and drug abuse, over the past 10 years.
read more here


While that may seem like huge news to many people, it hasn't been to readers of Wounded Times Blog. I am sure the bloggers out there will end up just copying the article and posting on it. They do it all the time no matter if the report is a good one or not and this revelation will be treated as if it is shocking news. It is not to me.
Revelation 1 19 “Write, therefore, what you have seen, what is now and what will take place later.
I posted Battlemind should be surrendered on February 10, 2008 because I knew it would not work. It didn't. What followed this failure was Resilience Training, sold as a program to prevent PTSD. It tells service members they can "train their brains to be mentally tough" and in the process leaves the false impression they won't end up with PTSD unless they are mentally weak and didn't train right.

The number of suicides and attempted suicides increasing support my position. The number of veterans being diagnosed with PTSD support my position. The problem is, I've been screaming from Patmos and few heard my voice. Among the over 17,000 on this blog, there is this revelation.
Expect 800,000 PTSD veterans out of Iraq and Afghanistan
October 14, 2007
Iraq veterans deserve more than post-combat negligence
By Stacy Bannerman
Special to The Times

WHEN the appalling conditions at Walter Reed Army Medical Center were made public, accompanied by grim photos of moldy walls, crumbling ceilings and dirty, bug-infested rooms, it sparked a national outcry and immediate action. Unfortunately, it has been comparatively quiet about the nearly 300 Iraq war veterans who have committed suicide, and thousands more who have attempted it.

America cannot afford the price of failing to care for veterans with combat-related mental-health problems. The systemic breakdown in mental-health care is so profound that military families and veterans groups have filed lawsuits against the Department of Veterans Affairs. Veterans for Common Sense and Veterans United for Truth have filed a class-action suit on behalf of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who are dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The suit claims there are as many as "800,000 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans said to suffer or risk developing PTSD." The groups charge the VA with collaborating with the Pentagon to avoid paying PTSD benefits.

Last year, it was about 400,000 we were worried about. The beginning of this year, it was 700,000 we were worried about. Now add in at least 100,000 more. Why? Are you shocked? You shouldn't be and the government shouldn't be either. After all it was already predicted in 1978 when the DAV commissioned a study showing Vietnam produced 500,000 diagnosed cases, as well as acknowledging the numbers would rise as more information came out and the symptoms of PTSD grew stronger. Even back then they knew PTSD did not always show up right away. So why is it no one was ready for what was to come now? They didn't care.

It needs to be pointed out as much as possible that when the Army did their own study finding the redeployments increased the risk of developing PTSD by 50%, this should have sounded a shrieking warning bell across the country and emergency measures should have been driven in overdrive, but no one did anything about it. As a matter of fact, the Bush administration cut back funding, along with Nicholson, in 2005, with two occupations producing more wounded minds daily. To have their lives still at risk after their tours have ended is sickening, is wrong, and there is absolutely no excuse for any of this appalling lack of preparedness. You would think that a nation able to fund hundreds of billions of dollars over and over again on emergency basis, would be able to place the same sense of urgency when it comes to saving their lives, their futures and their families, but they do not. You would think that knowing what the experts have been saying all along would hold more weight than rhetoric and slogans when it comes to the seriousness of this, but it didn't. The problem is they didn't think and they didn't care enough to think about any of our troops or what would happen to them when they became veterans or wounded veterans needing care.


But this was not the first warning I gave. There were many blogs and websites I had going back years. The strongest warning I gave came in 2002 when I published my book, For the Love of Jack, His War/My Battle. I wrote it before September 11, 2001 but could not find a publisher. After 9-11, I knew I had to do all I could to warn people what was coming as much as I needed to offer hope to the veterans and their families.

So when you read how shocking the news is on our veterans and PTSD, know that none of it had to happen if people with the power had known what I knew way back then.

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Man in wheelchair stabbed to death at MacDonald's

Felon accused of fatally stabbing man at McDonald's
By Amy Pavuk
Orlando Sentinel
December 26, 2012

Orlando police said a felon who was released from prison last week — who has a history of stabbing people — killed a disabled man at a McDonald's restaurant Christmas Day.

(the attacker), 38, made his first court appearance Wednesday and was ordered to remain jailed without bond.

A report released Wednesday said (the attacker) stabbed a man in a wheelchair about 7 p.m. at the McDonald's on West Colonial Drive near John Young Parkway. Police will publicly identify the victim after his next-of-kin is notified.

A McDonald's employee told police she saw (the attacker) try to take money from the victim's hand. When the victim refused to hand over his cash, (the attacker) stabbed him several times with a "butcher's knife."
read more here along with the name of the attacker. Tired of glorifying people accused of things like this.

US military’s alcohol-soaked culture taking toll on servicemembers

US military’s alcohol-soaked culture taking toll on servicemembers
By JENNIFER HLAD
Stars and Stripes
Published: December 26, 2012

WASHINGTON — Thomas Brennan was still unloading his bags at his first duty station when he saw the other Marines drinking on the catwalks.

“In a way, I expected it,” he said. “A bunch of people partying, having a good time, getting ready to go to war.”

Brennan, now a sergeant who will be medically retired this month, said drinking and partying in the barracks isn’t quite as obvious now. Marines know they will be punished if they get caught drinking underage or drinking hard liquor in the barracks, he said. But that doesn’t mean the drinking has stopped. People just keep their doors closed, he said, and if the platoon sergeant is coming at 6:30 a.m. for inspection, “that means all the evidence is gone by 6:15.”

While some military doctors say they don’t believe troops binge drink or abuse alcohol more than their civilian counterparts, a recent report by the Institute of Medicine called drugs and alcohol abuse among troops a “public health crisis.” A report released by the Army in January reported that 43 percent of active-duty soldiers had admitted binge drinking within a month of the survey and that 67 percent of the binge drinkers were 17 to 25 years old.
read more here

President Obamas visited Marines in Hawaii on Christmas

Obamas visited Marines in Hawaii on Christmas
By David Jackson
USA Today
Posted : Wednesday Dec 26, 2012

After spending most of Christmas Day with their family, President Obama and first lady Michelle Obama observed what has become one of their holiday traditions: Visiting troops and their families at Marine Corps Base Hawaii.

“This looks like it was a nice rather than naughty crowd,” Obama joked to the crowd. “So I’m sure Santa treated you well.”

Obama is also cutting his vacation short, planning to be back at the White House on Thursday to deal with fiscal cliff issues; his family will remain in Hawaii.
read more here

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder or “Moral Injury”?

If you want to write something on PTSD, please do your homework first! Telling readers something like "moral injury" is a "new term" is a load of crap. Try reading the Bible and you'll see it all.
I found this on a site called Counter Punch.

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder or “Moral Injury”?
“Moral injury” is a relatively new term to refer to what veterans and others experience, especially those who saw combat or violence. Other words that have been used include hidden war wounds, shell shock, battle fatigue, and soldier’s heart.

The article started out with a question. "Is the worse to come?" and the answer is yes. We've had over 40 years of researching PTSD to know that. Vietnam veterans were part of a huge study in the early 70's and by the late 70's they knew for 10 years following the end of the Vietnam War, more would come. Later it was learned there would be more as veterans got older and retired. It happened. It will happen again and we are not ready for any of it.

Newtown first responders may not get enough time to heal

After Newtown Shootings, Push On To Expand Workers' Compensation For First-Responders December 21, 2012
By DAVE ALTIMARI and JON LENDER
The Hartford Courant

In light of the Newtown school massacre, a state lawmaker said Friday that he will propose legislation to expand the circumstances in which emergency responders can receive workers' compensation.

"This is something that I've already discussed," said Rep. Stephen D. Dargan, D-West Haven, the co-chairman of the legislature's public safety committee. "I'm sure right after the holiday that this is going to be one of the bills that I am going to issue" for consideration in the session that starts Jan. 9.

The idea of expanding the workers' compensation law has been discussed before, with a big concern being the potential cost, Dargan said. "But if you limit the scope of it" to the sort of dire circumstances encountered by police at Sandy Hook Elementary School, Dargan said it might be possible.

For several years, state law has provided workers' compensation benefits to pay for counseling for police officers who are mentally or emotionally impaired by "use of deadly force or subjection to deadly force in the line of duty." Earlier this year, legislators added a similar provision for firefighters who witness the death of another firefighter on duty.
read more here

Home vandalized of Marine, double amputee, home for week

Injured Marine's home vandalized one week after his return
Written by
Ashley Yarchin
Dec 25, 2012

O'Fallon, Ill. (KSDK) - An injured Marine from O'Fallon was home for just a week after losing both his legs during a explosion in Afghanistan got a rude awakening this Christmas.

NewsChannel 5 has been following the story of Lance Cpl. Chris Van Etten since that IED went off last June, and was at Lambert St. Louis International Airport last week, when the 22-year-old and his mother got off the plane from California, where he's been in rehab since the injury.

What was supposed to be and has been a very happy homecoming took quite a turn Christmas Eve morning when a neighbor knocked on the door to tell the Van Ettens about the derogatory words written on the side of their house as well as the raw eggs splattered on it in several locations.
read more here

Why are airlines being jerks to combat wounded veterans?

Wife of SD-based Marine upset over how she says American Airlines treated husband, service dog
Posted: 12/26/2012
Last Updated: 5 hours ago

SAN DIEGO - The wife of a San Diego-based Marine is upset with how she says American Airlines treated her husband and his service dog.

She posted her frustration on Facebook and the post has been "liked" by more than 170,000 people.

The post by Amy Rebecca Fite of Fallbrook was regarding how she says American Airlines treated her husband and his service dog.
read more here

American Airlines ended up doing the right thing and did not charge the Marine for his service dog. Would they have if his wife didn't post the problem on their site before that? What about the other times the way combat wounded veterans have been treated that made the news?
Paralyzed OEF Marine sues over deplorable treatment at airport involving United and Air Serv in November.

Marine double-amputee’s treatment on Delta flight angers other vets happened in December.

But this also raises another question. How do they treat other people with disabilities?

Top 10 most popular military videos of 2012

Top 10 most popular military videos of 2012
By TOSHIO SUZUKI
Stars and Stripes
Published: December 24, 2012

There’s live video of a Coast Guard rescue at sea during Hurricane Sandy, a public service announcement on homeless veterans, and of course, a ‘Gangnam Style’ spoof music video in contention, but what were the top 10 most watched U.S. military videos of 2012?

This year’s winner, published in February, garnered almost 2.4 million views. In comparison, the most watched video from Stars and Stripes in 2012—‘Heat ray demonstration’—received about 57,500 views, good enough for 11th place if in the competition.

Videos were selected from dozens of YouTube pages affiliated with the military branches, their educational systems and government institutions focusing on veterans.
go here to view all of the top 10. These are my favorites

No. 5: ‘VA Homeless Veterans ‘Success Stories’ Public Service Announcement’ from the Department of Veterans Affairs with 647,644 views. For many reasons, there are homeless veterans out there. The more who know about resources available to them, the better

No. 2: ‘Gangnam Style-West Point’ from the U.S. Military Academy West Point with 1,407,552 views. The ‘Gangnam Style’ spoof videos came from all over the Internet, including all branches of the military, but the horse stable, operating tank and choreographed moves from the West Point cadets was too much to beat