Showing posts with label The Guardian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Guardian. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

US military veterans face inadequate care after returning from war

Take a look at the bold part. That is what I have been saying since 2008!
US military veterans face inadequate care after returning from war – report
Study for Congress has 'serious misgivings' about government's treatment of US troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan
The Guardian
Karen McVeigh in New York

Almost half of the 2.2 million troops deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan report difficulties on their return home, but many receive inadequate care from the US Department of Defense and Veterans Affairs, according to a new study published on Tuesday.

The Institute of Medicine report, requested by Congress and funded by the Pentagon, expressed "serious misgivings" about methods used to treat the "significant numbers" of returning veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression and substance use disorder. It cited tools and treatments used by the DOD which had "no clear scientific evidence base" and said more needed to be done to evaluate their effectiveness.

The study, aimed at examining lingering problems of veterans returning from both conflicts, also called into question a Defense Department policy which bans restricting access to private weapons "even if a service member is at risk from suicide".

It examined veteran suicides, high unemployment rates and also the ramifications of the "high rates" of military sexual assault, all issues that have attracted recent congressional attention.

George Rutherford, the report's co-author, said DOD had been slow to address the needs of returning veterans.

"Although several federal agencies are actively trying to address the support needs of current and former service members deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan as well as their families, the response has been slow and has not matched the magnitude of this population's requirements as many cope with a complex set of health, economic, and other challenges" said Rutherfold, chair of the IOM's committee on the assessment of readjustment needs of military personnel, veterans, and their families.
read more here
They are repeating the same mistakes, claiming it is new and improved.
Congress Hears Military Suicide Testimony

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Teaching them to kill but forgetting to teach them how to heal

'You can teach a man to kill but not to see dying'
Ex-soldier wins award for speaking frankly and forcefully on the mental distress of war veterans.
Hear him talk about combat stress in this audio clip.
Mark Gould
Wednesday October 10, 2007
The Guardian

The air is blue with cigarette smoke and swearing as Chris Duggan recalls the smell of his injured comrades: "If you imagine burnt pork and plastic; I can still taste it." Flashbacks are common symptoms of post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but Duggan, a Falklands war veteran, wasn't diagnosed until 1990, eight years after the conflict. By then his mood swings and aggression had destroyed his marriage and nearly killed him.

Tonight, his courage in talking about his illness in Combat Stress, a BBC Radio Wales programme, and his calls for more support for ex-forces' personnel, is being recognised when he receives the Speaking Out award at the annual Mental Health Media Awards.

Duggan joined the Welsh Guards when he was 16 and served in Northern Ireland and Cyprus before the Falklands. Sitting in his house on a Swansea council estate, he takes alternate pulls on his asthma inhaler and a roll-up cigarette as he tells how he lost 48 friends and colleagues when the landing ship Sir Galahad, packed with troops and ammunition, was bombed and caught fire in San Carlos Water.

"On the 8th of June, 1982, me and a couple of others were on a 'foraging' expedition, scrounging some fags and booze for our boys," he recalls. "We heard 'all hands' and we went up to the field hospital. These helicopters were coming in and we were asked to help get the boys off. We didn't know who they were or what had happened, but when they opened the doors the stench was horrendous."
click post title for the rest

PTSD does not know one nation from another. It does not know one combat mission from another. It does not know one century from another. It is the aftermath of trauma on the human brain. Some scar. Some are cut so deeply by it they need help to heal. Why is there still a stigma stuck to this wound?