Saturday, April 25, 2015

WWII Veterans Don't Want History Edited

Japan’s views of WWII history rankles some US veterans 
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MATTHEW PENNINGTON
April 25, 2015
(AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi)(Credit: AP)
Lester Tenney talks about the more than three years he spent in a Japanese prisoner of war camp Monday, April 20, 2015 in Carlsbad, Calif. Tenney endured three hellish years as a Japanese prisoner during World War II, but with the passing of decades and repeated visits, he’s made peace with his former enemy. Yet as Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe prepares to address Congress next week, in the 70th anniversary year of the war’s end, something rankles the U.S. military veteran about Japan’s attitude toward its past. "They don’t want the young people to know what really happened,"says Tenney.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Lester Tenney endured three hellish years as a Japanese prisoner during World War II, but with the passing of decades and repeated visits, he’s made peace with his former enemy. Yet as Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe prepares to address Congress next week, in the 70th anniversary year of the war’s end, something rankles the U.S. military veteran about Japan’s attitude toward its past.

“They don’t want the young people to know what really happened,” complains Tenney, now 94.

The Associated Press spoke to three U.S. war veterans about their surrender in the Philippines in 1942 and their exploitation as slave laborers in Japan. It’s an episode of history most notorious for the Bataan Death March, when tens of thousands of Filipino and American prisoners of war were forced 65 miles on foot to prison camps. Thousands are believed to have perished.

The AP also asked the veterans for opinions about Japan today. The U.S.-allied nation issued a formal apology to American POWs in 2009 and again in 2010, and has paid for some veterans to travel to Japan, leaving them with a more positive view of the Japanese people.

All three veterans, however, remain adamant that their wartime experiences, and those of the POWs who didn’t make it, should not be forgotten.
read more here

Veterans Treated to Skydiving in DeLand

Veterans gather at Skydive DeLand for Wounded Warrior Weekend
Veterans gather at Skydive DeLand to find thrills, friendship
Daytona Beach News Journal
By Jim Haug
Published: Friday, April 24, 2015
News-Journal/PETER BAUER Carlos Negran, at right, a U.S. Army veteran who served in Iraq, is honored during opening ceremonies during Defending Warrior Weekend at Skydive DeLand, in DeLand, on Friday, April 24, 2015.
Cole Wildey works as a bouncer in downtown DeLand, but bouncing mid-air from an airplane had been an experience that eluded him until Friday at Skydive DeLand.

Wildey, who called himself an “adrenaline junkie,” said he was grateful because to never sky-dive in a training center like DeLand is like “living next to the ocean and never going to the beach.”
read more here

Friday, April 24, 2015

Shard Needs to Hit Dark Crystal of Congress

Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
April 24, 2015

The headline being carried from the Washington Times to other sites screams "Palm to the head: VA manager forced underlings to pay his wife $30 for fortune telling" as if that was suppose to be the worst part of this latest hearing, but as bad as that may sound the rest of the article shows the crystal ball of the Congress is in such dire need of cleaning it has become the Dark Crystal.

"Then with the shard restored the three suns stood above the glowing crystal and flooded it with light." The Dark Crystal
Read this part and get a good laugh at what is "tragic" to a politician.
The hearing focused on problems with delivering veterans’ benefits and other services in Philadelphia and Oakland — two of the VA’s largest regional offices.

Rep. Ralph Abraham, Louisiana Republican, said the revelations made him “filled with anger.”

“How tragic is it in today’s VA system that the same veteran we trust our national security to and even our lives to, that same veteran can’t trust our VA system to take care of them?” Mr. Abraham said. “What I’m hearing today is a mismanagement of lives from our VA system. It goes to the very core of what this nation is supposed to be about.”

But Allison Hickey, VA undersecretary for benefits, said the agency’s problems are not “systemic.” Another VA official said many of the agency’s problems stem from a yearslong effort to convert paperwork for millions of veterans into digital files.

Here is another part from the same article
Mrs. Brown, a former employee in the VA’s Oakland office, was assigned one day in 2012 to a special team given the job of reviewing more than 13,000 veterans’ claims dating back to the mid-1990s that had never been addressed. As they sorted through the mounds of papers, she said, they often discovered that the veterans had long since died without receiving the requested benefits.

Mid 90's! Catch that part? I am sure you did however members of congress think we're stupid. They forget that the veterans community pays attention no matter which party is in control as if our lives depended on what they do, or fail to do, simply because that is the reality for us.

This has been going on for decades! My Dad was 100% and he had problems getting his claim approved when I was just a kid. So politicians still get to say this is "tragic today" as if they gave a crap before they got the power to fix it once and for all veterans.

The first official date my husband and I had was going to see The Dark Crystal.


It was a story about good and evil being separated while both sides were trying to take over. In the process, innocents suffered, trapped between the Mystics and the Skeksis.

They existed waiting for a legend to turn into reality for them. Much like veterans have been waiting for the legend of members of Congress to actually do something to fix the VA. Wow what a twisted story this is and how real it is for veterans.

In 82 PTSD was still being called "shell shock" by older veterans. Reading the history of it, it is more in line with what we call traumatic brain injury today. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder is different. Development of the PTSD diagnosis
In 1952, the American Psychiatric Association (APA) produced the first Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-I), which included "gross stress reaction." This diagnosis was proposed for people who were relatively normal, but had symptoms from traumatic events such as disaster or combat. A problem was that this diagnosis assumed that reactions to trauma would resolve relatively quickly. If symptoms were still present after six months, another diagnosis had to be made.

Despite growing evidence that trauma exposure was associated with psychiatric problems, this diagnosis was eliminated in the second edition of DSM (1968). DSM-II included "adjustment reaction to adult life" which was clearly insufficient to capture a PTSD-like condition. This diagnosis was limited to three examples of trauma: unwanted pregnancy with suicidal thoughts, fear linked to military combat, and Ganser syndrome (marked by incorrect answers to questions) in prisoners who face a death sentence.

In 1980, APA added PTSD to DSM-III, which stemmed from research involving returning Vietnam War Veterans, Holocaust survivors, sexual trauma victims, and others. Links between the trauma of war and post-military civilian life were established.

The trouble is as long as we've known what war can do to those we send, Congress ended up getting off the hook on actually getting the best minds to come up with plans, evidence based programs and the resources to take care of these veterans. Yep, all this time they had to do it, they pretended over and over again, it was something they had no way of seeing or fixing.

Same story with the trouble veterans are caused by the VA while it is still the job of Congress to fund the VA and hold hearings and pass the rules instead of passing the blame. So when does the Great Conjunction happen and the shard hits where it belongs to make us whole again?

VA Special Medical Advisory Group Includes DAV Director

VA News Release
Group of Respected Medical Experts to Advise VA on Health Care for 9 Million Veterans
04/24/2015 02:04 PM EDT

Special Medical Advisory Group Led by Dr. Jonathan Perlin of Hospital Corporation of America

WASHINGTON – The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) today announced a new 11-member Special Medical Advisory Group (SMAG) composed of leading medical experts to assist the Department in delivering health care to the 9 million Veterans enrolled in the Veterans Health Administration.

The SMAG is a reconstituted federally-chartered committee that advises the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, through the Under Secretary for Health, on matters related to health care delivery, research, education, training of health care staff and planning on shared care issues facing VA and the Department of Defense.

“We want the best of the best to work on behalf of our nation’s Veterans,” said VA Secretary Robert A. McDonald. “We are honored these respected leaders from the private, non-profit and government sectors have agreed to join in our mission improve how we provide the quality health care our nation’s Veterans need and deserve.”

The appointment of the new members of the SMAG comes at a time when VA is experiencing increased demand for its health care services. Nationally, VA completed more than 51 million appointments between May 1, 2014, and March 31, 2015. This represents an increase of 2.4 million more completed appointments than during the same time period in 2013-2014. In March 2015, VA completed 97 percent of appointments within 30 days of the Veteran’s preferred date.

Serving as SMAG Committee Chair is Dr. Jonathan Perlin, who previously served as VA Under Secretary for Health from 2004-2006. Dr. Perlin is currently Chief Medical Officer and President of Clinical Services for the Nashville, Tennessee-based Hospital Corporation of America (HCA). In this capacity, Dr. Perlin provides leadership for clinical services and improving performance for HCA’s 166 hospitals and more than 800 outpatient centers and physician practices. Recognized perennially as one of the most influential physician executives in the United States by Modern Healthcare, Dr. Perlin is a recipient of numerous awards.

Other Committee members:

Karen S. Guice, MD, M.P.P.
Dr. Guice serves as Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs and Principal Deputy Director, TRICARE Management Activity. In these two roles, Dr. Guice assists in the development of strategies and priorities to achieve the health mission of the Military Health System (MHS), and participates fully in formulating, developing, overseeing and advocating the policies of the Secretary of Defense. The Office of Health Affairs is responsible for providing a cost effective, quality health benefit to 9.6 million active duty uniformed Service Members, retirees, survivors and their families. The MHS has a $50 billion annual budget and consists of a worldwide network of 59 military hospitals, 360 health clinics, private-sector health business partners, and the Uniformed Services University.

Joy Ilem, Deputy National Legislative Director, DAV
Ms. Ilem, a U.S. Army service-connected disabled Veteran, was named Deputy National Legislative Director of the of the 1.2 million-member Disabled American Veterans (DAV), in June 2009. In this capacity, Ms. Ilem directs the advancement of DAV’s public policy objectives.

Thomas Lee, MD
Dr. Lee serves as Chief Medical Officer for Press Ganey, which advises and consults with healthcare businesses to help identify the best practices for the organization and the patient. Dr. Lee joined Press Ganey in 2013, bringing more than three decades of experience in health care performance improvement as a practicing physician, a leader in provider organizations, researcher and health policy expert. As Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Lee is responsible for developing clinical and operational strategies to help providers across the nation measure and improve the patient experience, with an overarching goal of reducing the suffering of patients as they undergo care and improving the value of that care. In addition to his role with Press Ganey, Dr. Lee is an internist and cardiologist, and continues to practice primary care at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

Ralph Snyderman, MD
Dr. Snyderman is former president and CEO of the Duke University Health System and director of Duke’s Center for Research on Personalized Health Care. He currently serves as Chancellor Emeritus for the Duke University Department of Medicine. He is former Chair of the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC).

Jennifer Daley, MD
Dr. Daley is a Senior Adviser for the consulting firm, Cambridge Management Group. She is nationally recognized for her expertise in operational improvement, patient safety, quality and service excellence. Dr. Daley is a past recipient of a U.S. Naval Academy-Harvard Business Review Ethical Leadership Award in July 2007.

James Henry Martin, MD
Dr. Martin has been practicing emergency medicine and primary care medicine in the Chicago area since 1978 and is currently on the medical staffs of Captain James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center, North Chicago; and Metro South Medical Center, Blue Island, IL. He has extensive clinical research experience in the area of nasal insulin studies. Dr. Martin is currently developing a nasal mupirocin spray foam to eradicate nasal MRSA, and a nasal foam medication formulation. He has had 14 US patents issued and over 40 foreign patents issued, including a patent in 2014 covering the formulation above.

Melvin Shipp, OD, MPH, DrPH
Dr. Shipp serves as Dean Emeritus, College of Optometry for The Ohio State University. He has served as a consultant, panelist and reviewer for several federal institutions –notably, the Food and Drug Administration, the Health Resources and Services Administration and in several capacities with the National Eye Institute (NEI) of the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Shipp also has assumed leadership and membership roles within a variety of non-federal, national health-related organizations. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Optometry, and a Diplomate and former Chair of the Public Health and Environmental Optometry Section. Dr. Shipp is only the second optometrist to receive the DrPH degree; he is the first to do so through the highly competitive Pew Health Policy Doctoral Fellowship Program at the University of Michigan.

James Weinstein, DO, MD
Dr. Weinstein serves as Chief Executive Officer and President of Dartmouth Hitchcock, a nonprofit academic health system that serves a patient population of 1.2 million in New England. Anchored by Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, NH, the system includes the Norris Cotton Cancer Center; the Children's Hospital at Dartmouth-Hitchcock; affiliate hospitals in New London, NH, and Windsor, VT; and 24 Dartmouth-Hitchcock clinics that provide ambulatory services across New Hampshire and Vermont. Under Dr. Weinstein’s leadership, Dartmouth-Hitchcock is working to create a “sustainable health system” for patients, providers, payers and communities. Dr. Weinstein also is a member of the Institute of Medicine (IOM) of the National Academy of Sciences. He serves on the IOM Committee on advising the Social Security Administration on Disability. Most recently, Dr. Weinstein was one of four members appointed to the IOM Board on Population Health and Public Health Practice.

Deborah Trautman, PhD, RN
Ms. Trautman is Chief Executive Officer for the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN), a role she assumed in 2014. At AACN, she oversees strategic initiatives, signature programming and advocacy efforts led by the organization known as the national voice for baccalaureate and graduate nursing education. She has authored and coauthored publications on health policy, intimate partner violence, pain management, clinical competency, change management, cardiopulmonary bypass, the use of music in the emergency department and consolidating emergency services.

Bruce Siegel, MD, MPH, President and CEO, America’s Essential Hospitals
Dr. Siegel serves as President and Chief Executive Officer of America’s Essential Hospitals (formerly the National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems). Dr. Siegel has an extensive background in health care management, policy and public health. Before joining NAPH, he served as Director of the Center for Health Care Quality and Professor of Health Policy at the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services. He also previously served as President and CEO of two NAPH members: Tampa General Healthcare and the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation. In addition, Dr. Siegel has served as Commissioner of Health of the State of New Jersey. Among many accomplishments, Dr. Siegel has led groundbreaking work on quality and equity for the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, as well as projects for the Commonwealth Fund, the California Endowment and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. He also was ranked as one of the “50 Most Influential Physician Executives” and one of the "100 Most Influential People in Healthcare" in 2011 by Modern Healthcare. Currently, he chairs the National Advisory Council for Healthcare Research and Quality.

The announcement of the Special Medical Advisory Group follows the introduction of the Veterans Health Administration’s “Blueprint for Excellence,” which lays out strategies for transformation to improve the performance of VA health care now —making it more Veteran-centric by putting Veterans in control of their VA experience.

The SMAG Committee is scheduled to conduct its first meeting on May 13, 2015. More information about SMAG may be found at www.va.gov/ADVISORY/SMAG.asp.

Panama City College Students Sickening Behavior

UPDATE
Univ. of Florida suspends frat over abuse of wounded vets
GAINESVILLE, Fla. – The University of Florida suspended one of its fraternities on Friday after allegations that its members hurled drunken insults and spat at a group of disabled military veterans at a Panama City Beach resort.

The school said on Friday that it is charging the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity with obscene behavior, public intoxication, theft, causing physical or other harm, and damage to property.

The suspension came after the fraternity had already suspended operations itself and expelled three of its members after finding they had behaved inappropriately.

"I am personally offended and disappointed by the behavior that has been described to me," Dave Kratzer, the school's student affairs vice president and retired U.S. Army major general, said in a statement.

Back to original post
While this was reported to be committed by a small group of college students disrespecting veterans it shows the stark difference between members of the same generation.

The students are so self-absorbed they thought it was all about them. You know the type. "Look at me! I'm so tough I can piss on a piece of cloth in public." Ya, right they're so tough they went after disabled veterans, a service dog and wives. All that proved was they are not really worth all the attention. After all, bullies always want the spotlight as if they just won something and deserved the attention.

Again, it was a small group of pathetic students and too bad the college their parents are paying for never educated them on what that flag they pissed on actually means any more than they informed them of how attacking unselfish members of their own generation proved the disgrace belongs to them.

The other side risked their lives to retain the freedom these bogus knowledge seekers enjoy.

The right to decide for themselves what they want to become is protected by the troops even though these fools decided they wanted to be lowlife bullies.

The right to piss on and even burn the flag, again, protected by the troops even though they know they may end up in a flag draped casket at any time.

The right to say whatever they want, yet again, protected by the troops even though they have to give up their own rights while wearing the uniform to say and do whatever they want.

Had it not been for the men and women standing ready to meet any nation or threat to freedom, these students would have no right to prove to the entire nation they are complete, total idiots.

The really good part of this story in the simple fact the community is not ready to stand for any of this and stood up for the veterans.
College Students Disrespect Veterans at the Warrior Beach Retreat
WJGH News 7
By: Kelly Baumgarten
Apr 23, 2015

PANAMA CITY BEACH
Emory University released this statement Thursday morning by email:

"Emory University was appalled to learn of acts of disrespect and harassment that were directed at attendees of the Warrior Beach Retreat in Florida this past weekend.

Our brave veterans who have sacrificed much for our country deserve the utmost respect and appreciation for their service.

The disrespectful behavior exhibited by students toward our veterans is not acceptable and will not be tolerated by members of the Emory community.

When Emory received complaints that students from one of our fraternities might be involved, Campus Life administrators immediately began an investigation.

To date, no evidence has been found to implicate Emory students in these reported incidents. If any members of our community are identified as being responsible, they will be held accountable for their actions by the university.
read more here

If you are not aware of how Vietnam veterans were treated, listen to what happened to MOH Sammy Davis when he came home. As you listen to how he was treated after saving lives and being wounded, his citation is being read.

Veteran Committed Suicide After Zoloft

Grieving Father: VA Isn’t Doing Enough To Prevent Vet Suicides
CBS Pittsburgh
Andy Sheehan
KDKA-TV Investigator
April 23, 2015

(Photo Credit: KDKA) 
PITTSBURGH

(KDKA) — His son survived the war, but lost the battle at home.

“Everything seemed to be well with David, going his way and then all of a sudden this drops out of the sky, like an anvil hits you on the top of the head,” said Bob Cranmer.

Just last month Iraq war veteran David Cranmer joined the growing ranks of US veterans who have committed suicide. His father is former Allegheny County Commissioner Bob Cranmer.

“Twenty-two suicides a day,” said Cranmer, “that’s a crisis.”

He thinks vets suffering from PTSD — post-traumatic stress disorder — are not getting the treatment they need and deserve from the US Department of Veteran’s Affairs.

“It’s gone beyond, with me anyway, the tragedy of my own son,” said Cranmer, “to many, many other veterans that are out there, like him who are just being given medication by the VA and pushed out the door.”

David Cranmer enlisted in the marines and served in a forward area of Iraq. He returned home to meet and marry a young woman, they bought a house and had a daughter who is now 5 years old.

But recent stresses led him to a VA therapist — who after one session prescribed the psychotropic drug Zoloft. 

It carries an FDA warning that it can sometimes lead to suicidal thoughts and actions. A month later — David Cranmer hung himself.

“He had some marital issues,” said Cranmer. “Nothing that I think rose to the level of committing suicide, but when you add to that mix this, what I feel is a very dangerous drug.” “We don’t have a proven medication or a proven therapy that we know will prevent suicide, but we’re trying,” said David Macpherson.
read more here


Seriously? They don't have enough information? After all these years?
Nearly 40% of Army suicide victims in 2006 and 2007 were on Prozac or Zoloft Nearly 40% of Army suicide victims in 2006 and 2007 took psychotropic drugs like Prozac and Zoloft.

The military’s invisible wounds
by David Isenberg
August 4th, 2008

Yesterday I was a panelist on a television program talking about the rising number of suicides and suicide attempts in the American military.

Being a veteran myself, and having acted as a veteran’s advocate in my undergraduate days vets issues have always been of special interest to me. So let me summarize some of the facts that you may be unfamiliar with.

Currently, many veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan are suffering from invisible wounds. As in previous wars, service members can leave a war zone, but the war often follows them in their minds.

Numbers are always iffy but according to a RAND study released in April, nearly one in five Iraq and Afghanistan veterans report symptoms of post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or major depression. It estimated that 830,000 veterans - 300,000 of whom served in Iraq or Afghanistan - suffer from depression or PTSD symptoms.


I checked the link to the story and it is still active. You can read more of Military's Invisible Wounds here
There are a lot more reports on this and what the VA should have known. By the way Congress knew.

Thursday, April 23, 2015

What Has Been Achieved By Raising Awareness?

Right now I would like to raise awareness of a very simple fact. We are all suffering from stupefaction!
Stupefaction verb (used with object), stupefied, stupefying.
1.to put into a state of little or no sensibility; benumb the faculties of; put into a stupor.
2.to stun, as with a narcotic, a shock, or a strong emotion.
3.to overwhelm with amazement; astound; astonish.

If you are sensing a rant coming on, you know me all too well by now.



Before technology changed the way we discover information, there were town criers
(formerly) a person employed by a town to make public announcements or proclamations, usually by shouting in the streets.
There was a time when someone wanted to know something they'd read a newspaper,
The New-England Courant (also spelled New England Courant), one of the first American newspapers, was founded in Boston on August 7, 1721, by James Franklin.
Then they could go to a library,
On July 1, 1731, Franklin and a group of members from the Junto, a philosophical association, drew up "Articles of Agreement" to form a library. The Junto was interested in a wide range of ideas, from economics to solving social woes to politics to science. But they could not turn to books to increase their knowledge or settle disputes, as between them they owned few tomes. But they recognized that via the Junto's combined purchasing power, books could be made available to all members.

So it was that 50 subscribers invested 40 shillings each to start a library. Members also promised to invest 10 shillings more every year to buy additional books and to help maintain the library. They chose as their motto a Latin phrase which roughly translates as "To support the common good is divine." Philip Syng, a silversmith who would one day create the inkstand with which the Declaration and Constitution were signed, designed the Company's seal.

Most of the time folks would have to hear about something from someone else to get their curiosity just enough to ask questions, seek answers and then, hopefully, gain enough knowledge to attempt to change the future after learning from the past.

Fast forward a few hundred years and now we have thing I spend so much time on putting access to millions of pages on a subject within fingers on a keyboard limited only by ones ability to search.

Thats where we got into trouble. The problem is not being aware of history or what is happening with our veterans. The problem is everyone seems to be aware of the same wrong information.

Someone along the way figured that if trying to find cures and treat illnesses was money maker than raising awareness should be as lucrative for them. After all, a town crier got paid, so why shouldn't they?

In the beginning it was a good idea since most people didn't have a clue what PTSD was or how many veterans were committing suicide other than the veterans and their families. We knew all about it since we lived it everyday. Plus we hung out with other veterans, so what was secret in our world along with pretty much everything else, was forgotten about.

Ever wonder who did what when? Considering that by the time troops were coming home from Afghanistan and Iraq, there were PTSD programs being run. Contrary to popular belief, it was happening even though the public didn't notice. (Don't you hate that when that happens? It is almost as if no one did anything, suffered from anything or waited in the VA lines before this generation showed up and no one thought about how long it had been going on.)

This is a bit of history on PTSD from the VA
In 1980, the American Psychiatric Association (APA) added PTSD to the third edition of its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III) nosologic classification scheme (2). Although controversial when first introduced, the PTSD diagnosis has filled an important gap in psychiatric theory and practice. From an historical perspective, the significant change ushered in by the PTSD concept was the stipulation that the etiological agent was outside the individual (i.e., a traumatic event) rather than an inherent individual weakness (i.e., a traumatic neurosis). The key to understanding the scientific basis and clinical expression of PTSD is the concept of "trauma."
History of the National Center for PTSD
Congressional Mandate

The National Center for PTSD was created in 1989 within the Department of Veterans Affairs in response to a Congressional mandate (PL 98-528) to address the needs of Veterans and other trauma survivors with PTSD. The Center was developed with the ultimate purpose to improve the well-being, status, and understanding of Veterans in American society.

The mandate called for a center of excellence that would set the agenda for research and education on PTSD without direct responsibility for patient care. Convinced that no single VA site could adequately serve this unique mission, VA established the Center as a consortium of five divisions.

Organization of the Center

The Center now consists of seven VA academic centers of excellence across the U.S., with headquarters in White River Junction, VT. Other divisions are located in Boston, MA; West Haven, CT; Palo Alto, CA; and Honolulu, HI, and each contributes to the overall Center mission through specific areas of focus.

The National Center for PTSD is an integral and valued component of the VA's Mental Health Services (MHS), which itself is within the Veterans Health Administration. MHS and the National Center for PTSD receive important budget support from VA, although the National Center also leverages this support through successful competition for extramural research funding.

Impact of Scientific and Clinical Interest in PTSD

Scientific and clinical interest in PTSD has grown exponentially in the past 25 years. PTSD is recognized as a major public health problem and a behavioral health problem for military Veterans and Active Duty personnel subject to the traumatic stress of war, dangerous peacekeeping operations, and interpersonal violence.

Moreover, due to the surprisingly high prevalence of assault, rape, child abuse, disaster, and severe accidental and violent trauma in the civilian arena, PTSD is a serious public health problem in the general population. It is estimated that PTSD affects more than ten million American children or adults at some point in their lives.

The Center has emerged as the leading center of excellence in research and education on PTSD. We will continue to uphold our mission to advance the clinical care and social welfare of America's Veterans and others who have experienced trauma, or who suffer from PTSD.

Now we can pretend all this is new, but it isn't. We can pretend that veterans have not been committing suicide until this generation but then we'd have to ignore the simple fact that older veterans have been committing suicide, not of just decades but for generations.

We can dismiss the fact that there has never been more done on PTSD and raising awareness on suicides connected to military service achieving more of them instead of reducing them but that won't bring them back. Do you see where I'm going with this?

Raising awareness on the end result does not raise awareness on what they need to heal and live. It does not clue them in on anything they need to know but does clue them in on not being alone wanting to die instead of live.

How about we give them what they need to understand they are not alone on struggling to heal and change again? Yep, now that's a novel idea. How about we let them know that PTSD caused a change inside of them and they can actually change again?

How about we raise awareness that millions of veterans not only live with PTSD but are living a good quality of life, healing and sharing how they did it everyday?

When things get worse with knowing more, it means the wrong lessons have been learned and frankly, that is what the veterans have been crying about for decades!

National Guardsmen Face Hard Time Getting Help to Heal

National Guard Members Face Challenges In Seeking Help For PTSD 
NPR
APRIL 22, 2015
Darryl Davidson, who served in Iraq with the National Guard, started having symptoms of PTSD 18 months after he left active duty. Getting treatment took several more months. Officials acknowledge guard members have less support than active forces. Julysa Sosa for NPR
NPR — along with seven public radio stations around the country — is chronicling the lives of America's troops where they live. We're calling the project "Back at Base."

This is the last of four reports this week about the National Guard. It was December 2007 and Darryl Davidson was driving down a busy San Antonio street when something flew off the truck in front of him. He thinks it might have been a car battery, but he still isn't sure. "I was in some sort of flashback.

I was there for probably 20 or 30 minutes," he says. In that moment, Davidson imagined an IED — like the homemade bombs he saw in Iraq — and his survival instinct kicked in.

"So I swerved over four lanes of traffic and crunched my truck. Well, I didn't crunch the truck, but I busted a tire on the curb and ended up in a field."

Then he took cover. When the police arrived, he told them to take cover, too.

"You know, as far as I could tell, we were under fire. I just kept telling officers they need to get down.

They needed to take cover. You know, we're under fire. And I guess one of the officers was a vet and understood what was going on and kind of talked me down," Davidson says.
read more here

Gen. David Petraeus Gets Probation Plus Fine

Petraeus sentenced: 2 years probation; $100K fine 
CNN
By Theodore Schleifer
 April 23, 2015
That rebranding is made easier thanks to a plea deal that allowed Petraeus to escape jail time by paying $40,000 and serving two years on probation. But a federal judge on Thursday in Charlotte, North Carolina instead ordered him to pay $100,000.
Washington (CNN)
Gen. David Petraeus, once a widely celebrated military leader who oversaw operations in Afghanistan and Iraq and was touted as a potential presidential candidate, was sentenced to serve two years on probation and to pay an $100,000 fine on Thursday for sharing classified information with his biographer and lover, Paula Broadwell.

Petraeus, who resigned as director of the Central Intelligence Agency in November 2012 after the relationship became public, avoided jail time as part of a plea deal. Some of his supporters believe that he can recover his reputation -- and argue in some ways, he already has. "I don't want to wallow in 2012, and luckily neither has he," said Michael O'Hanlon, a close friend of Petraeus and a scholar at the Brookings Institution. read more here

Veterans Invade Melbourne

'Largest veterans reunion' brings tens of thousands to Melbourne
News 13
By Jerry Hume, Brevard County Reporter
April 23, 2015

MELBOURNE -- Tens of thousands of people are making their way to the Space Coast on Thursday for an event that is being billed as the largest veterans reunion in the country.

The 28th annual Vietnam and All Veterans Reunion will take place at Wickham Park in Melbourne.

The centerpiece of the reunion is the Vietnam Traveling Memorial Wall, which is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year.

The traveling wall, which was made in Brevard County, has traveled about 160,000 miles across the United States.

"It affects everybody differently — family members are moved one way, friends another," said Greg Welsh, the chairman of the event. "Just a Vietnam veteran could be moved someway else. It's an emotional experience for most people when they come out here."

Event organizers expect about 100,000 people to show up for Thursday's reunion, which will fill up local campgrounds and hotels. 

The reunion was originally designed just for Vietnam veterans, but it has expanded in its 28 years. Now, all veterans are invited to show up and remember friends and family members who were killed while fighting for the U.S.
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