Showing posts with label VA mental health care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VA mental health care. Show all posts

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Norma Perez to PTSD veterans: No time for you!

VA e-mail reflects indifference to mentally-ill troops, Akaka says
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By Dennis Camire
Advertiser Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The Veterans Affairs Department seems to have a widespread indifference toward veterans with mental illness, U.S. Sen. Daniel K. Akaka and other Senate Democrats said yesterday.


Their comments came after the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, which Akaka chairs, heard a VA psychologist deny she was trying to save money when she suggested in an e-mail to her staff that they use other mental illness diagnoses for veterans who may have post-traumatic stress disorder.

"This incident was both disturbing and disappointing," Akaka said. "It reinforced fears among many veterans that the VA's mental health system is not meeting all their needs."

The e-mail, written by Norma Perez, a former PTSD program coordinator for the VA medical center in Temple, Texas, followed another problem where VA officials tried to suppress data on veteran suicides, Akaka said.

"Together, these incidents suggest a possible trend — widespread indifference to the invisible wounds of war," Akaka said. "We are concerned about systemwide problems within VA's mental health system."

Akaka has asked the VA to review and revise its PTSD treatment and compensation guidelines and provide complete data on veterans' suicides. He also has requested a VA inspector general's investigation of the Temple VA medical center.

Perez told the committee that her e-mail was meant to remind her staff that war stress could also cause adjustment disorder, which is a diagnosis less serious than PTSD.

"I sent an e-mail to my staff on March 20 to stress the importance of an accurate diagnosis," she said.

In her e-mail, Perez cited a growing number of veterans seeking compensation when she suggested her staff "refrain from giving a diagnosis of PTSD straight out" and consider a lesser diagnosis of adjustment disorder. "Additionally, we really don't ... have time to do the extensive testing that should be done to determine PTSD," Perez wrote.
go here for more
http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080605/NEWS08/806050348/1001/LOCALNEWSFRONT


This is a quote from the Critical Incident Stress Management (CISM) manual, Assisting Individuals in Crisis George Everly Jr. Ph.D. F.A.P.M. John Hopkins University and Loyola College

"Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD): a pathognomonic variation of post-traumatic stress. It is characterized by 3 symptom clusters: intrusive memories of the event, stress arousal symptoms, numbing, and avoidance reactions. Symptoms must persist for a minimum of 30 days and must cause significant distress and/or dysfunction. Psychosomatic symptoms may develop as a result of PTSD."


In other words, if symptoms last more than 30 days, it's PTSD. If people who train for CISM can understand this with just two days of training, how can a "professional" not know this and find no time to diagnose the veterans correctly?

Just hearing the view that Perez thought it was ok to tell staff that they don't have time for the veterans sent shutters down the spine of every veteran in this country!

Licensed Mental Health Counselors Turned Away From VA?

Article published Saturday, June 7, 2008
Some being shut out of aiding vets


In the past few days there have been several stories in The Blade about the U.S. military's high suicide rate, high occurrences of post-traumatic stress disorder, and lack of qualified mental health professionals within the Veterans Administration to help with the ever-increasing number of veterans needing mental- health care.

I find it quite ironic that, given these reports, licensed mental- health counselors such as myself are being virtually shut out of the VA health-care system. The majority of "counseling" positions within the VA are open only to social workers. Indeed, I am not even allowed to apply for "counseling" jobs because I am not a social worker. Recently I offered my services to the VA on a volunteer basis and I was denied the ability to even volunteer to help my fellow veterans.

While we hear that the VA is doing all it can for our veterans, it is in reality actively and purposely keeping well-qualified mental-health counselors from providing desperately needed services to our brave veterans. How, I ask, is this doing everything they can for our veterans?

This has to stop, and the VA needs to be forced to open up its recruiting and hiring practices equally to all qualified mental-health professionals. If you want to do something for our troops, call your congressman and senator and demand that our troops be given the best care possible by allowing all appropriately trained mental-health professionals equal access to VA employment. Our service members deserve the best mental-health care they can get and by all accounts they are not getting it.

Fred Lockard
http://toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080607/OPINION03/806070327


I hope this is not yet another mindless practice the VA is doing. Please tell me it's not. Please tell me that all this time after reports began to surface they VA has finally learned their lesson and this is not being done. Why is it that I totally believe the person who wrote this as a comment in the Toledo Blade? What's next?

Friday, June 6, 2008

VA's Systemic Indifference to Invisible Wounds

Senator Akaka Holds Hearing on VA's Systemic Indifference to Invisible Wounds

U.S. Senator Daniel K. Akaka (D - HI)


US Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs

Jun 05, 2008

June 4, 2008, Washington, DC – U.S. Senator Daniel K. Akaka (D-HI), Chairman of the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, held a hearing today on the state of mental health care within the Department of Veterans Affairs. Today’s hearing follows recent findings that VA’s top mental health official attempted to suppress suicide data, while a psychologist at the Temple Veterans Affairs Medical Center suggested that her coworkers avoid diagnosing veterans with PTSD, in order to save time and resources. Akaka called both individuals, along with other high-ranking VA officials, to testify before Congress.

“Recent incidents indicate a possible trend of system-wide or systemic indifference to the invisible wounds of war. It is shameful, because veterans deserve better, and because it tarnishes the good work of the many VA mental health professionals who help veterans battle PTSD, depression, and other psychological wounds,” said Akaka. “Whatever the reasoning behind the mistakes that were made, VA must work to regain the confidence of veterans who now question whether VA is a friend or enemy.”

In their testimony, witnesses denied any systemic or deliberate efforts within VA to deny veterans care or compensation for psychological wounds. While Dr. Norma Perez, the psychologist from Texas, argued that there is little difference between adjustment disorder and PTSD, VA’s chief mental health official Dr. Ira Katz respectfully disagreed.

Chairman Akaka held today’s hearing as a part of the Committee’s broader effort to investigate the veterans’ mental health system, especially care for PTSD and suicide prevention. Last month, Akaka requested additional data on veteran suicide and quality control at VA health care facilities. Following the disclosure of the Temple VA email, Akaka and other Committee members requested an Inspector General investigation of the incident and facility.

http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/ArticleID/10297

Even Dr. Katz thinks Norma Perez is wrong

June 5 VA E-Mail Scandal Update:
Top VA Mental Health Official Contradicts VA Manager at Senate Hearing,
Says VA Facility is Using Improper Diagnoses for Metnal Health


Senator Patty Murray

Jun 05, 2008

June 4, 2008, Washington, DC – Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) questioned top Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) officials over a recent e-mail that discouraged VA employees from diagnosing veterans with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). The e-mail, which was written by VA manager Dr. Norma Perez, directed VA staff at a facility in Temple, Texas to diagnose "compensation-seeking veterans" with adjustment disorder, a diagnosis that has a lower disability payout than Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Dr. Perez appeared at the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee hearing and was joined by Dr. Ira Katz, the VA's top mental health official.

During questioning, Dr. Ira Katz said that he did not agree with diagnosing veterans with adjustment disorder in the way that Dr. Perez described - often more than a year after a veteran had returned home. Diagnostic guidelines for adjustment disorder say that it should not be diagnosed more than six months after the traumatic event.

"Unfortunately, today's hearing raises more questions than it answered," Murray said after the hearing. "Instead of getting to the bottom of this damaging e-mail, we learned that there may be deeper, systematic problems with how facilities are diagnosing mental health disorders."
go here for more
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/ArticleID/10298

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Norma Perez, there is no excuse for her to hide behind

June 6, VCS in the News:
Judge Orders VA into Court to Explain VA E-Mail Discouraging PTSD Diagnoses

Paul Elias


San Jose Mercury News / Associated Press

Jun 05, 2008

Judge to consider newly-surfaced e-mail in vet care trial

June 5, 2008, San Francisco, CA — A federal judge considering a lawsuit that alleges inadequate veterans medical care ordered government lawyers on Thursday to explain an e-mail by a Veterans Administration psychologist suggesting that counselors diagnose fewer post-traumatic stress disorder cases in soldiers.

The hearing ordered by U.S. District Court Judge Samuel Conti follows a two-week trial that ended last month. Veterans groups had sued the VA, saying it inadequately addressed a "rising tide" of mental health problems, especially post-traumatic stress disorder and suicides.

The plaintiffs asked Conti to reopen the case in light of the e-mail discovered after the trial ended.

The judge agreed, saying "the e-mail raises potentially serious questions that may warrant further attention." He ordered lawyers for both sides to appear in court Tuesday to discuss whether the e-mail has any bearing on the case.

The document in question is a March 20 memo written by Norma Perez, who helps coordinate a post-traumatic stress disorder clinical team in central Texas.

"Given that we are having more and more compensation-seeking veterans, I'd like to suggest that you refrain from giving a diagnosis of PTSD straight out," Perez wrote to VA counselors. "We really don't or have time to do the extensive testing that should be done to determine PTSD."

Perez told senators Wednesday at a Senate Veterans Affairs Committee hearing called to investigate the e-mail that her message was poorly written and she meant to remind counselors that they could initially diagnose patients with a less severe stress condition known as "adjustment disorder."


go here for more
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/articleid/10312


I have posted about this before along with far too many other reports to indicated the few people in the VA with this kind of attitude are not only casting a dark, hideous image of truly caring people working for the VA, they have also cost lives. Shall I list them here? Too late, they've been listed for years on this blog, on my other blog and all over the net. Shall we re-read the stories from the families who lost husbands, sons, wives, daughters, mothers, fathers when their lives could have been saved? Again, not really necessary considering the reports have come out all over the nation from grieving families who trusted the Veterans Administration to live up to what they claim by taking care of our veterans. Will one more post about any of them do any good?

Will it do any good at all to people like Perez? Will it bring them back to life? Restore a family torn apart? Undo a parent's unspeakable grief of having to bury a child of their's they thought had returned from combat safely and put into trusting care of the VA? Will it replace a wife's heartache as she lays in bed at night clutching her husband's pillow as she had done so many nights before while he was deployed only to have to face the rest of her life without him because the VA let him die? While it stop a child's tears or blot out memories of the stranger who came home looking like their parent but acting like someone they know longer knew only to find they had to go to their grandparent's house for a few days because "something happened" to their Dad or their Mom, then faced with having to get dressed up to go and stand by a coffin in a cemetery with a neatly folded flag to hold in place of their parent?

No, for Norma Perez, there is no excuse for what she did. There is no excuse for misdiagnosing any veteran when their lives could have been saved with the proper care and some human kindness. There is no excuse to abandon them to whatever may come their way when they could have been saved.

I've been up against too many people like Perez who callously dismiss and deny the suffering of these men and women, so worthy of so much more. I've spent more than half my life trying to undo the stigma people like Perez perpetrated against our veterans to advance their career, get a bonus for cutting costs when they could have been saving lives. Her "poorly written" email was further damage to men and women serving this country who brought home a terror inside of them. That terror made them reach out for help and she took that away from them. She took it away by telling them they are not really as wounded as they were and did not require the help they really needed to begin to heal. It was a betrayal against them.

What she also managed to do was to put up a wall against other veterans who may have sought help if they found other veterans were treated with the care and consideration a truly grateful nation and really dedicated VA employee would have provided if she gave a shit!

These are men and women, humans, who risked their lives for this country! They were willing to die for this nation doing what this nation asked of them. By the Grace of God they made it home only to find the enemy was not back where they thought they left them, but right here in their own country, in their own state in their own government! What Perez manage to tell them was that they were not worthy of the disability compensation that truly reflected their wound and they were turned away from the help they needed to treat their wound properly.

Whatever qualified her for the position she obtained in the VA should have come with the requirement she first prove she was a grateful citizen and dedicated to the veterans before she was even hired!

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

VA officials answer criticisms in Congress

VA officials answer criticisms in Congress
By Leo Shane III, Stars and Stripes
Pacific edition, Friday, June 06, 2008



WASHINGTON — For the second time in a month, Department of Veterans Affairs leaders testified before Congress about an embarrassing e-mail which implied a cover-up of serious health problems among servicemembers.

This time, Democratic senators and veterans advocates called for an independent investigation of the department, saying they believe leaders have created a toxic culture for veterans seeking care.

"There is a sense, whether it’s perception or reality, that [VA officials] make decisions based on money and not on whether veterans are getting the best health care they need," said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash. "It’s disconcerting when we see things like this."

Jon Soltz, chairman of VoteVets.org, said a VA bonus program to reward clinics that process the most cases has only exacerbated the problem, unintentionally encouraging managers to cut corners and opt for less-costly treatments.

But VA officials denied those charges. Dr. Michael Kussman, undersecretary for health at the department, said recent controversy surrounding the department is the result of poor publicity from a few missteps, but not a lack of effort by employees treating veterans.
go here for more
http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=55337

Thursday, May 29, 2008

VA retaliated against employees who did not comply with denials

CREW and VoteVets to VA Inspector General: Investigate PTSD Misdiagnoses; "This practice is widespread and systemic."
Submitted by crew on 28 May 2008 - 11:42am. PTSD Veterans Affairs
CREW and VoteVets.org requested that the Inspector General for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) open an investigation into the process and manner by which the VA makes a diagnosis of post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in veterans. The letter to the VA, which we sent today, can be found here.

In the wake of the disclosure by CREW and VoteVets.org of an internal VA e-mail advising VA mental health staff in Texas to consider a diagnosis of adjustment disorder in place of a PTSD diagnosis as a cost-cutting measure, both organizations have received new information from VA employees and veterans attesting to the fact that this practice is widespread and systemic. VA Secretary James Peake has repudiated the email as not reflecting VA policy.

The VA has adopted incentive programs that, by rewarding those employees and hospitals that distribute lower levels of compensation to veterans, encourage adjustment disorder diagnoses rather than the most appropriate but also more costly diagnosis of PTSD.

In addition, the VA's internal computer system permits medical files to be changed by health professionals who did not conduct the initial examinations, a practice that appears to have resulted in changed diagnoses from PTSD to adjustment disorder, even where there is no additional medical evidence to support the downgraded diagnoses.

CREW and VoteVets.org also heard from VA employees who suffered retaliation for their failure to support these practices.

Melanie Sloan, executive director of CREW, said:

It is unconscionable that the VA would actively encourage its staff, through monetary incentives, to misdiagnose our veterans’ mental health. Add to that the mind-boggling disclosure that medical files can be altered to downgrade service members’ conditions, and we have a VA that is betraying those it is supposed to serve. The VA Inspector General must spearhead an investigation into these abhorrent practices immediately.



Jon Soltz, Iraq War vet and Chair of VoteVets.org, added this statement:

Despite what Secretary Peake said, the misdiagnoses being encouraged at the Temple, TX VA Center were not an isolated incident. The only question now is: How widespread is this, and how high up does the problem go? Those of us who served this nation in war deserve to have full confidence in the programs set up to help transition us back to civilian life. These new revelations personally give me zero confidence in the mental health screening and care system the VA oversees.



On May 14th, CREW also sent a Freedom of Information Act request to the VA asking for all records pertaining to any guidance given regarding the diagnosis of PTSD.
http://www.citizensforethics.org/node/31847



While it sickens me greatly reading this from CREW and Vote Vets, I have to admit it does not shock me. How could it? Given the fact the DOD is still using Battlemind, which has been proven to be of little good if at all, along with everything else going on, it appears to have been lip service in support of the wound and then sharpening the knife to stab them in the back.

According to the BBC report, the new arrivals in Iraq and Afghanistan are shown Battlemind for "11 1/2 minutes to learn about the psychological impact" as if that is supposed to prepare them for anything. Why is this not working? Simply because it is no good. The rate of suicides has gone up since they began to use it, not only while actively deployed, but the suicide rate has gone up back home as well. What they are doing is not working. If it was, then the rates would drop, not go higher.

Now we learn from the investigations like this one from CREW and Vote Vets, the law suit filed by Veterans For Common Sense, this has all be a fraudulent claim of care. How dare they not only deceive the American people, but further damage the troops as well?

Female veterans are told they will not receive the treatment they need because "they cannot afford the money" when the senate said they would have funded even more if they had known there was a problem.





Dominic DiNatale did the report for the BBC from Afghanistan. He interviewed Sgt. Bruce Cantral, a medic on his 4th deployment between Iraq and Afghanistan, at Bagram Air Base. The Sgt. has already been diagnosed with PTSD and is on a mix of medication and therapy.

Back to Battlemind, again, while only in country a few hours, the new arrivals have to spend two days worth of briefings, which include a lousy 11 1/2 minutes of Battlemind, to prepare them for the psychological impact of war. A very lame attempt to prepare them for the fact 1 in 5 will develop PTSD in theater and later half of those deployed will develop it later.

There are now combat stress teams being airlifted in to try to face this crisis. Yet there are not enough of them. A case in point comes from Fort Warrior.

At a chapel in Afghanistan's Fort Warrior, Chaplain Hill recounts a unit that had been through a terrible fight and arrived at the chapel still covered in blood.

While many will have to live with PTSD, there is also combat stress that is immediate and happens under extreme stress. How is 11 1/2 minute going to prepare them for any of this?

Physical and psychological conditions do not seem to matter as long as they can get them back into combat. This again will only harm them further. The "relentless deployments" and stop loss add to the development of PTSD. This the Army knew years ago, yet the warning fell on deaf ears.

DiNatale tried to interviews at FOB Warrior, but the commander told him that he thought it would harm the careers of anyone he interviewed. Imagine that a commander still thinks it will harm the careers of his men if they talked about being human. Yes, this still exists and give the above report from CREW, it is alive and well no matter how much reassurance the public is given that this attitude no longer lives in the minds of those in charge.

One last thing came in the last few minutes of this report. Congressman Filner was interviewed. He stated that 1/3 of the already diagnosed have committed felonies and there have been 200 homicides, mostly committed against family members.

Go here and watch the interview for yourself and see how seriously this all needs to be taken.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/newsnight/7422853.stm


Now you can see that the troops are not getting what they need while deployed and then are greeted with more of the same from the VA afterward. Yet they seem so surprised there is such a huge problem. The right-wing bloggers are attacking the media and Peake is telling them that the problems reported are overblown!


Senior Chaplain Kathie Costos
Namguardianangel@aol.com
www.Namguardianangel.org
www.Woundedtimes.blogspot.com

"The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive veterans of early wars were treated and appreciated by our nation."

- George Washington

Thursday, May 22, 2008

VA message to older vets "If you flip out call 911" not them

VA Capacity Crisis Hits California - Older Veterans Feel Forced Out of Counseling by Newer Veterans

Mark Muckenfuss


Press - Enterprise (California)

May 21, 2008
May 20, 2008 - A group of older military veterans in the Inland region says the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is pushing it out of counseling programs to make room for an expected influx of Afghanistan and Iraq war veterans.

Albert Cruz, 59, of Hesperia, said officials at the Victorville Veterans Center told him and other members of a post-traumatic stress disorder therapy group that "they have to bring (the group) to an end."

Cruz, a veteran of Vietnam and Desert Storm, and his colleagues are convinced that their government is abandoning them.

"It's like a slap in the face," he said.

When he asked the veterans officials what he should do about treatment, he said, "They said, 'Well, if you flip out again, call 911.' "

Lois Krawczik, a psychologist who oversees post-traumatic stress programs for the VA Medical Center in Loma Linda, said Cruz is mistaken. She said the VA has no plans to eliminate programs at the Victorville clinic. In fact, the clinic is expanding, she said.

"There may be some changes," Krawczik said, but "we're not discontinuing or cutting back services."

Budget figures provided by the Loma Linda medical center show that funding earmarked for mental health has increased dramatically in recent years, from $70,000 in 2004 to $3.1 million in 2007. During the same period, the number of patients seen each month for mental health went from 6,700 to 9,600.

Cruz, and others, insist they have been told they'll have to go. Whether it is a misunderstanding or not, there seems to be a pervasive suspicion among older veterans, particularly those with post-traumatic stress disorder, both locally and in other parts of the country, that the VA is interested in pushing them out.
go here for more
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/ArticleID/10180

If this shocks you, you have not been paying attention. The new veterans, well the media is focused on them so the older veterans can just fend for themselves, like they always did before. No one ever paid attention to them while they were being denied claims, turned away from the VA, ignored when they were becoming homeless and committing suicide. Had it not been for them fighting for what little they received, none of the newer veterans would stand a chance in hell of being treated for PTSD or any of the other conditions they managed to get put into law that they should be treated for as a price of war. They fought for the benefits and treatment for PTSD and too many paid the price with their own lives. They fought for the illnesses attached to Agent Orange, yet again, too many paid for with their lives. The older veterans, well, maybe the VA's attitude is their time has come and gone and it's the media's fault for not paying attention to any of them. After all, what's an older veteran's life worth these days? There are too many of them getting in the way of the new veterans the media has been winning awards for reporting about.

Monday, May 19, 2008

VA Busted Again, as reported by a Marine

Tim King is a former U.S. Marine with twenty years of experience on the west coast as a television news producer, photojournalist, reporter and assignment editor. Today, in addition to his role as a war correspondent in Afghanistan where he spent the winter of 2006/07, this Los Angeles native serves as Salem-News.com's Executive News Editor. Salem-News.com is the nation's only truly independent high traffic news Website, affiliated only with Google News. Tim's coverage from Iraq that was set to begin in April has been delayed and may not take place until August, 2008. You can send Tim an email at this address: newsroom@salem-news.com



VA Busted Again Over Poor Diagnosis and Mistreatment of PTSD Vets
Tim King Salem-News.com
There are good people working for the VA, but its leadership keeps trying to cut wounded veterans off at the knees.

(SALEM, Ore.) - Maybe it was fate, perhaps it is what many refer to as "Murphy's Law"; either way the spirit of the Veteran's Administration reared its ugly head last week when an email in a few simple words, nearly sized up what many believe is their general policy in its treatment of combat veterans with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

That policy in layman's terms begins with the agency's position to do anything possible to avoid paying veterans what they deserve, and results in them pumping veterans full of hard drugs to essentially make them vegetables. They can't complain after all, when they are no longer themselves. The VA creates this scenario in tens of thousands of Americans who deserve something better.

It all came to a head last week over a simple email. That electronic message contained a VA psychologist’s direction to staff at a Texas veterans facility to withhold diagnoses of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder from soldiers returning from Afghanistan and Iraq.

The author of the email, Norma J. Perez, is the PTSD program coordinator at the Olin E. Teague Veterans’ Center in Temple, Texas. The email instructs staff to not provide the right medical diagnosis: "given that we are having more and more compensation seeking veterans, I’d like to suggest that you refrain from giving a diagnosis of PTSD straight out."

This caretaker of America's injured combat veterans suggested to her staff that they "consider a diagnosis of Adjustment Disorder."

Then as if to underscore the revelation, never intended for public eyes to see, the VA's Perez wrote that the staff at the VA "really don’t ... have the time to do the extensive testing that should be done to determine PTSD."
go here for the rest

http://salem-news.com/articles/may192008/va_caught_again-5-19-08.php

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Politico gives W.P credit day later after Army Times reported story

Obama Demands VA Investigation Into PTSD Diagnoses
By Daniel W. Reilly

May 16, 2008
(The Politico) Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) is demanding an investigation into reports that a supervisor at a Texas Veterans' Affairs facility told staff members to refrain from diagnosing returning war veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder in order to reduce costs.

On Friday, Obama sent a letter to Veterans Affairs Secretary James Peake expressing his "serious concerns" over the reports and demanding an investigation.

The Washington Post broke the story on Friday, which included emails from Dr. Norma Perez suggesting to her staff members that they "refrain from giving a diagnosis of PTSD straight out," because of the increasing costs of treating the disorder.

"Simply put, Ms. Perez's email is outrageous," Obama wrote in the letter. "As you well know, PTSD is the most prevalent mental disorder afflicting our returning...veterans."

"In order to receive their deserved benefits, these brave men and women must endure a long and arduous process. To hear that a VA official is promoting misdiagnoses of soldiers to save money is unacceptable and is tantamount to fraud. "

Peake issued a statement on the matter, saying that Perez's email was "inappropriate" and did not reflect VA policy.

"Too many veterans see the VA as a bureaucracy with the singular goal of denying services and benefits to veterans," said Obama. "This recent incident merely serves to promote that impression."

The Democratic presidential hopeful gave Peake a deadline of May 23 to inform him if the department will open an investigation.

Obama, who is a member of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, also wrote a letter to committee chairman Sen. Daniel Akaka (D-Hawaii) asking him to look into the matter.


http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/05/16/politics/
politico/thecrypt/main4103492.shtml



If the Washington Post broke the story on Friday, then how did I post it Thursday and Army Times was where I got it from?

Thursday, May 15, 2008

PTSD in troops dismissed to save money! Was it worth it?
I am posting this is very large type so that no one misses a single word of this.
Four who committed suicide so that the government could save money! Many more each week did the same thing. Over 12,000 a year tried to.
VA Secretary James Peake acknowledged in a statement that the e-mail did come from a VA facility, but said it’s not official policy.

“A single staff member, out of VA’s 230,000 employees, in a single medical facility sent a single e-mail with suggestions that are inappropriate and have been repudiated at the highest level of our health-care organization,” he said. “The employee has been counseled and is extremely apologetic.”

VoteVets.org and Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington filed a Freedom of Information Act request May 14 asking VA for all documents relating to PTSD, said Naomi Seligman Steiner, spokeswoman for the latter group.

“We’re not head-hunting,” Friedman said. “There are a lot of great people who work at VA who have helped me and my friends. We had to file the FOIA to get to the bottom of this. Is it from the head of the VA? The presidential administration? Or individual hospitals? I would like to know where this directive is coming from.”

Peake said his staff “works hard” to make sure mental health issues are accurately diagnosed.

“VA’s leadership will strongly remind all medical staff that trust, accuracy and transparency is paramount to maintaining our relationships with our veteran patients,” he said. “We are committed to absolute accuracy in a diagnosis and unwavering in providing any and all earned benefits. PTSD and the mental health arena is no exception.” http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/05/military_va_adjustmentdisorder_051508w/

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Detox program for vets would cost $374M

Before you judge them or assume anything keep one thing in mind as you read this. The vast majority of the veterans turning to drugs and alcohol are doing it to kill off feelings they don't want to have and are self-medicating in order to get relief. Yes there are some drug addicts and alcoholics just like everyone else but unlike everyone else, they have been wounded by what they saw and did.

Detox program for vets would cost $374M

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday May 14, 2008 11:24:59 EDT

An expanded substance abuse program for veterans passed two weeks ago by a House committee would cost $374 million over five years and require the hiring of 153 nurses to provide detoxification services, according to a cost estimate prepared by the Congressional Budget Office.

Called the Justin Bailey Veterans Substance Use Disorders Prevention and Treatment Act of 2008, the bill requires the Department of Veterans Affairs to provide treatment for substance abuse at every medical center, either through in-house programs or contracts.

Some substance abuse services already are provided by VA hospitals and clinics. Most of the additional cost would come from providing expanded detoxification and stabilization programs, residential care and intensive outpatient care, according to a cost estimate from the nonpartisan budget office responsible for determining the price tag of pending legislation.

The 153 advanced practice nurses, one for every VA medical center, would cost VA an average of $135,000 each in salary and benefits, according to the estimate.

Rep. Michael Michaud, D-Maine, chairman of the House Veterans’ Affairs subcommittee on health, is the chief sponsor of the bill that is named for an Iraq war veteran who died in 2007 at the West Los Angeles Medical Center of an apparent drug overdose. One day before his death, Bailey had filled five prescriptions for medication at the VA hospital, including one for methadone, used to wean addicts off narcotics.

The bill, HR 5554, was approved by the House Veterans’ Committee on April 30 by voice vote. It has not been scheduled for a vote by the full House of Representatives while lawmakers determine the cost and how to pay for it. A similar Senate bill has a slightly higher price tag because of a difference in the effective date of the substance abuse programs. http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/05/military_substanceabuse_051408w/


My husband was in a rehab with the VA before he started to get help from the VA for PTSD. So please, don't judge them unless you know them.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

VA official:' suicides not reflection of agency negligence"

VA official says veterans' suicides not reflection of agency negligence

By Bob Brewin May 5, 2008 Suicides among veterans of wars overseas occur "just like cancer occurs," and are not an indication of negligence by Veterans Affairs Department mental health care providers, a top VA official has argued in a lawsuit filed by two veterans groups. The official said he does not know how well VA hospitals are complying with a directive to provide 24-hour referrals to veterans with mental health problems.

Last year, two groups, Veterans for Common Sense and Veterans United for Truth, filed suit in U.S. District Court in San Francisco, charging that VA had failed to make mental health services immediately and widely available to returning veterans. Testimony in the non-jury trial ended last week.

Documents filed in the case revealed that the Justice Department tried to have the lawsuit thrown out on the grounds that language in the department's appropriations bills and prior case law "specifically and substantially limits VA's obligation to provide care ... [and] creates no such expectation [that veterans are entitled to care] (emphasis and brackets added by Justice)."

Internal VA memos released at the trial in April disclosed that in February, the department knew it was facing 1,000 suicide attempts per month, which the veterans groups argued could have been avoided if VA had adhered to its 2004 Veterans Health Administration Mental Health Strategic Plan, which called for development of a "national, systemic program for suicide prevention."

A deposition by a VA medical center psychiatrist caring for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan backed up the veterans groups' assertion that the department had not done enough to provide adequate mental health care for all veterans.

Dr. Marcus Nemuth, medical director of Psychiatry Emergency Service for VA's Puget Sound Health Care System in Seattle, which operates three hospitals, said in his deposition on March 25 that he expected a high volume of post-traumatic stress disorder cases among veterans returning from Afghanistan and Iraq. He said he was concerned with both with the quantity and quality of care provided to those veterans.

Nemuth said during the past year he had seen such a growth in the caseload of Afghanistan and Iraq veterans seeking psychiatric emergency help at the Seattle VA hospital that he concluded the department faced a "tsunami of medical need."
go here for more if you want to read more of the denial.
http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0508/050508bb1.htm

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Senator: Focus on mental-health costs of war

Senator: Focus on mental-health costs of war

By Karen Jowers - Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday Apr 30, 2008 17:16:39 EDT

Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., is calling on President Bush to issue a directive making it clear that veterans’ mental-health issues will be fully addressed.

“The buck stops at the president’s desk. The president needs to issue a directive that the costs of the war, particularly of mental health, is an issue we’re all going to deal with,” Murray said following an April 30 press conference at which senators called on the Department of Veterans Affairs to be honest and forthcoming with their data, and to start an extensive outreach program to encourage veterans to get help.

Murray and Sen. Daniel Akaka, D-Hawaii, said they’re concerned that VA is withholding information about rates of suicide and attempted suicide among veterans, which they said hinders lawmakers’ efforts to give VA the funding needed to help those with mental health issues.

Murray called this one more sign of “a lot of downward pressure from the administration to downplay the costs of the war.”

At a Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee hearing April 23, where senators learned that 17 veterans a month commit suicide while under VA care, Murray and other senators demanded the removal of VA’s mental-health chief, Dr. Ira Katz.

Earlier that week, a lawsuit against VA brought to light a series of e-mails from Katz about high suicide numbers.

Murray quoted one Katz e-mail in that hearing: “Shh! Our suicide prevention coordinators are identifying about 1,000 suicide attempts per month among veterans in our medical facilities.”

VA officials declined to comment on Katz’s status, citing the ongoing court case and upcoming congressional hearings.

But spokesman Phil Budahn noted that the number of mental-health care professionals in VA has risen to 9,000 in the past three years, a 50 percent increase.

Mental-health services are provided at all 150 VA medical centers and at most of the 720 outpatient clinics, he said.
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/04/military_mentalhealth_vasuicides_043008w/

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Vet Says Dallas VA Medical Center "Worse Than Hell"

Vet: VA Psych Ward 'Worse Than Hell'
April 16, 2008
Dallas Morning News
The voices in Jack Edenburn's head began soon after he returned from Vietnam. They told him to end it all.

He ignored them for almost 40 years, until the day he stood at the railroad tracks near his Lancaster home, fantasizing about stepping in front of a train. That's the day he went to Dallas VA Medical Center. And some days, he says, he regrets that decision.

"Imagine hell," he said of his five days in the psychiatric unit, "then think worse."

Patients soiled with feces and soaked in urine wandered aimlessly, screaming, rolling delirious on the floor. One woman, he said, removed ceiling tiles and crawled into the space above the day room.

"I was more traumatized after five days in the VA than I was when I was admitted," said Edenburn, who works in the mail room of an insurance office. "And remember, I was suicidal when I went there."

Officials for the VA North Texas Health Care System say more than $250,000 has been spent in the last six months to improve safety on the ward, part of the VA hospital on South Lancaster Road.

But after four patient suicides in four months -- including those of two men who hanged themselves during treatment in the 51-bed psychiatric unit -- hospital officials effectively closed the ward two weekends ago.

Investigators from the Department of Veterans Affairs ordered patient records and other material after the latest suicide on April 4. They are expected to tour the hospital and begin assessing its safety next week.

VA officials in Washington declined to comment Tuesday.

U.S. Sen. John Cornyn and U.S. Rep. Michael Burgess, both Texas Republicans, called on Secretary of Veterans Affairs James Peak to investigate the deaths.

"Our nation's veterans have made tremendous sacrifices to ensure our safety and defend the freedoms we hold dear," Cornyn wrote. "These men and women deserve the best medical care America has to offer. As you would agree, we must not tolerate anything less."

Chris Demopoulos, a 58-year-old Marine Corps and Vietnam veteran, was released from the Dallas VA on Jan. 22. The next day he hanged himself from the second story of a La Quinta Inn in Plano.

His body was discovered by Pat Ahrens, a friend he had met in the veterans hospital. Two nights later, Ahrens, a 50-year-old landscaper and Air Force veteran, backed his silver Lincoln Navigator into an oversized storage unit on 14th Street in McKinney.

Family members said he swallowed handfuls of pills and washed them down with Bacardi and Coke. He died later that day.

Larry Johnson, a 55-year-old Air Force veteran, hanged himself using a modified wheelchair while he was a patient in the psychiatric ward on Feb. 5.

Two months later, another patient committed suicide at the hospital by attaching a sheet to a door frame and tossing a noose over the other side of the door.

A local psychiatrist who finished his residency at the Dallas VA said it's difficult to predict what mentally ill patients like Demopoulos and Ahrens will do once discharged from a hospital.

"But when you have suicides on the unit, where people should be checked every 15 minutes, that's well within the control of the VA," said the physician, who requested anonymity out of fear of professional retribution. "When that happens once, that's really a problem. And then it happens again, that's really unconscionable."

He said the psychiatric unit does not meet the safety standards of other hospitals because of its age.

As recently as a few months ago, he said, most patients were cared for by resident physicians, the least experienced psychiatrists on the unit. The attending physicians, he said, only meet with patients at admission -- never during their treatment, and they do not personally make the decisions about when patients are ready for discharge.

Dr. Catherine Orsak, head of mental health for the VA's North Texas health system, said attending physicians see patients at least three times during their stay, including at discharge.

She said the age of the 68-year-old facility presents risks to suicidal patients. Door knobs, shower curtains and power cords can be used in hanging deaths. Windows can be broken, and even pencils can be instruments of self-destruction.

"It's a challenge in an older facility and in older units to maintain the highest level of care," Dr. Orsak said. "And yet we've put a lot of money and energy into it."

She pointed to the more than $250,000 spent in the last six months.

"We thought we had completed everything we had identified," she said. "The point is to identify risks and then determine how significant that risk is. It seems there is always something else to do."

Dr. Orsak has said she does not know when the psychiatric ward would begin admitting patients again. So far, she said, about 50 veterans have been moved to government hospitals in Waco and Temple, as well as Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas and private treatment centers such as Green Oaks and Timberlawn.

Ray Daniel, a 35-year-old veteran of the Persian Gulf War, said he has been going to the Dallas VA psychiatric unit since he was discharged from the Army in 1998. He estimates he has been admitted to the ward 20 times.

He said care has improved over those 10 years.

Nurses are more respectful, he said, and doctors seem less rushed and more focused. He said his psychiatrist called him last week.

"He told me they were getting real concerned about me and they were thinking about coming and getting me and putting me back in," he said. "They've been calling a lot and checking on me and making sure I'm all right, and I appreciate it."

Daniel said if someone wants to end their life, there's not much doctors can do. He said the beguiling voices are always in the back of his mind.

"There are times I want to give up, man, and end it all," he said. "I have those thoughts and I understand how those vets feel -- no one cares, I served my country, and sometimes they feel worthless. I feel that way sometimes, too; I feel used."

When the depression comes, Daniel said, he takes medicine and fixes his eyes on his children.

"I'm not saying I'm better than these guys," he said. "All I'm saying is there's a reason to live and they need to hang in there."
http://www.military.com/news/article/vet-va-psych-ward-worse-than-hell.html?wh=wh

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Lack of mental health workers worries senator

Lack of mental health workers worries senator

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday Apr 15, 2008 18:10:41 EDT

One of the chief architects of last year’s Wounded Warrior Act will press the service surgeons general about why the Defense Department doesn’t have enough psychologists, psychiatrists and mental health counselors to deal with the flood of combat veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder and other mental health issues.

Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., will have the opportunity to question the surgeons general at a Wednesday hearing before the Senate Appropriations defense subcommittee.

Murray expressed concern that the Defense Department has not hired enough specialists to deal with mental health issues created by extended deployments, the stress of combat and other issues.

“The fact that we aren’t meeting the demand for our troops’ psychological health needs with qualified professionals is a great concern of mine,” she said in a telephone interview. “The Pentagon needs to tell us what they are doing to fill the gaps in the system, particularly when troops are being sent back into the field for their third and fourth tours.”

The answers are important, Murray said, because “all Americans need to know that the Pentagon is making this a top health priority and that innovative solutions are on the horizon.”
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/04/military_mentalhealth_surgeonsgeneral_041508w/

How long is this going to go on and when are they planing on getting any of this right? When will they do what they know works until they can hire enough people at the VA to treat them? What are all these veterans supposed to do while they "try to hire" more and make room for the wounded they keep adding to the system on a daily basis? This is disgusting, frustrating and reprehensible! There are long term fixes that have to be done because we are looking at probably 800,000 or more than likely more now that Vietnam Veterans and Korean Veterans as well as WWII veterans are finally understanding what has been wrong with them is a wound, but no one planned on any of them either. Do they plan for anything?

Monday, March 3, 2008

Veterans returning from wars find VA under strain still


Iraq War veteran Christopher M. Kreiger — at home since Thursday with wife, Melissa, and sons C.J., 6, left, and Cole, 4 — suffers from seizures and hallucinations and has been in and out of VA hospital seven times. (photo: Bill Wippert / Buffalo News)



‘Flood’ coming as soldiers return home needing care

Veterans returning from wars find VA under strain

By Lou Michel NEWS STAFF REPORTER



Another surge is putting pressure on the nation’s military.

It is the surge of veterans from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan returning home with physical and psychological wounds, and the question is: Are the nation’s veterans hospitals equipped and staffed to handle it?

“The flood is coming,” said Patrick W. Welch, director of veterans services for Erie County. “Within the next three to five years, the flood of vets seeking help is probably going to overwhelm the VA.”

It started with a trickle. Just 61 of these newest war veterans sought help at the local VA hospital in 2003.

But in the years after, nearly 1,800 vets returning from Iraq and Afghanistan went to the Buffalo VA and its seven community clinics.

Local VA officials acknowledge the growing demand, and they say they are keeping up with it and will hire 150 more people to continue what, they insist, is success in providing prompt and comprehensive health care.

The VA’s optimism is not shared by everyone.

Jeremy Lepsch, a Marine who served with an anti-terrorist unit in east Africa, says his most recent admission to the Veterans Affairs Medical Center’s psychiatric unit exposed him to staff shortages and overworked psychiatrists.

Dana Cushing, who served twice in Iraq and once in east Africa, says she has to make a 300-mile round-trip drive to the Syracuse VA because she can’t get timely appointments here with a women’s doctor.

And then there’s Iraq War veteran Christopher M. Kreiger.

He has several physical and psychological problems and has been in and out of the Buffalo VA Medical Center seven times. In the last six months, his condition has worsened as he suffered from mysterious seizures and hallucinations and has been unable to sleep. Kreiger was released Thursday from the hospital and says he still does not know what is ruining his health.

go here for the rest

http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/nf08/nfMAR08/nf030408-1.htm

Saturday, March 1, 2008

Herseth Sandlin discusses mental health issues for vets

Herseth Sandlin discusses mental health issues for vets
By Peter Harriman
pharrima@argusleader.com
PUBLISHED: February 29, 2008

The U.S. faces a looming mental health crisis associated with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to comments made during a roundtable discussion with Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin today.

Herseth Sandlin says she is frustrated that Congress and high ranking veterans health officials are not doing more creative thinking to deal with it.

In a 90-minute session covering education benefits, timely payments and various other issues for recent military veterans, more than an hour was devoted to anecdotes about shortcomings in the delivery of mental health services, suggestions how to improve it, and Herseth Sandlin’s inquiries to participants.

Afterwards she said “the focus needs to be on the vet not on the system.” While a veterans health care system concentrated in VA facilities works well for things like getting veterans access to prescription drugs, “with mental health we’ve got to think outside the box and utilize the resources we’re going to make available in Washington to greatest effect,” she said.
click post title for the rest

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Battlemind should be surrendered

Battlemind should be surrendered.
by
Kathie Costos

They started to talk about Battlemind in 2005. The post I did earlier along with all the news reports of PTSD and suicides prove Battlemind does not work. They must have pulled the video to Gilgamesh . The link no longer works. Were they humiliated into removing it? The odd thing is the coding on the following links still has gilgamesh in the link. Very odd.

Clinical practice guideline has http://www.pdhealth.mil/gilgamesh/training_briefs/1.Introduction.wmv and so on. The cartoon itself seems to be gone.




DoD/VA Post-Deployment Health Clinical Practice Guideline (PDH-CPG)
Training Table of Contents
PDH-CPG Training Briefs are seven condensed (7-12 minute) training modules produced by the DoD Deployment Health Clinical Center. These modules were designed to provide clinicians with guidance on implementation of the DoD/VA Post-Deployment Health Clinical Practice Guideline (PDH-CPG).(Produced by DoD Deployment Health Clinical Center)
Introduction
Primary Care Screening
Primary Care Evaluation
Clinical Management and Follow-up
Clinical Health Risk Communication
Coding and Documentation
Post-Deployment Health Assessment (PDHA)
These are pretty good. The problem is that Battlemind is still being used on the troops as well as their families. The death rates related to PTSD have gone up and so have the divorce rates.


This is the attitude of most of the professionals in the DOD and the VA who actually treat the men and women who serve this nation instead of those who come up with crap to act as if they do.

"Therefore, the number-one thing we can do to help vets is to prevent avoidance," said Phipps, who admitted that she's not offering a magic bullet. "They don't need to hear 'Get over it,'" she said. "We should be saying, 'Get through it.'" Kelly Phipps, Ph.D.: http://pn.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/42/9/2



Operation Homefront ouit of Illinois did an online survey. The numbers are very telling of the hardships they go through.

Military Family Survey Results
Release of results from on-line survey regarding military families and deployment.Operation Homefront Illinois conducted an on-line survey from October 1 of 2007 until January 28, 2008 on our website

www.Operationhomefront.net/Illinois.

The purpose of this survey was to assess what the families of the military need and what is needed to support them. The survey was open to all members of the military and their families. The results of the survey highlighted several problems that military families have been going through for several years.

Highlights of the Survey
Forty six percent (46%) of the families felt that they were not given proper information regarding their loved ones deployment prior to them being deployed.

Forty-seven percent (47%) of the families communicated with their Servicemember via email or instant messenger on the internet.

Forty-nine percent (49%) of those surveyed were married 4 or more years.

Twenty eight percent (28%) stated that the deployment has had a significant or major impact on the child of a deployed Servicemember.

Eleven percent (11%) of the children of deployed Servicemembers required professional counseling to deal with the deployment.

Forty-seven percent (47%) of the families communicated with their deployed Servicemember via email or instant messenger on the internet.

Fifty-seven percent (57%) of the families surveyed were not told about the symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

Ninety-two percent (92%) of the Servicemembers surveyed were not tested nor had no knowledge of being tested for PTSD.

Sixty-five percent (65%) of the Servicemembers surveyed either suffer from PTSD or are unsure if they suffer from PTSD.

Forty-one percent (41%) are not getting treatment for PTSD

Twenty-two percent (22%) were not able to find employment when coming off of Active Duty

Forty-six percent (46%) of the families surveyed find it difficult to impossible to attend a Family Assistance program.

Twenty-seven percent (27%) of the families and Servicemembers surveyed required financial assistance either during or after deployment.

Eighteen percent (18%) of deployed Servicemembers credit ratings went down as a result of being deployed.

Twenty-nine percent (29%) had issues with creditors

Comments from those who took the survey:

I believe that FRGs still exist primarily to "distract" wives and families during deployments. As such, they lose a very valuable opportunity to prepare families with knowledge and support to mitigate the effects of PTSD and other injuries. They also deny these families the valuable wisdom that a parent of a soldier may poses.

Deployment affects families very profoundly - and ways need to be found to lessen the negative impacts - and promote a positive caring environment among these groups with less emphasis on military needs and more emphasis on family needs. The military is correct in its assumption that they need to keep "strong" families behind their Servicemen and women - but they have in no way addressed what that looks like.

The "Battlemind" program dealing with PTSD and TBI is simplistic almost to the point of being insulting - dealing with two very complex issues as a simple "cause and effect" scenario. The psych care afforded to active duty military personnel is at best "sketchy" and at worst, dangerous.

Physicians are encouraged NOT to use best practices in dealing with these cases and rather than making decisions based on the best interest of a sick soldier - instead defer authority to the command making the primary interest "the mission". Unless and until these things change - I believe that our military readiness will continue to decline - as people "get out" to seek appropriate care for the seen and unseen wounds of war - that affect both our men and women in uniform and their families who love and care about them.

go here for more
http://www.polishnews.com/section,204,military-family-survey-results.html



So what good has come with programs funded with tax dollars like Gilgamesh and Battlemind produced? When will they get serious about all of this? Your guess is as good as mine and mine, is never. They know what redeployments do to the troops and the families, but they do it anyway. They know what the extended tours do to the troops and their families, but they do it anyway. They know just about everything they need to know but still have to "study" the problem instead of solving it. For all they know you'd think they would have been able to find solutions for some of this but they haven't.

Experts in their right mind know early treatment works best but as you can tell by the survey above it must be mostly lip service because it isn't being done. The press releases sound as if they are taking all of this seriously but then a few months down the road we find out that nothing has been accomplished on the kind of grand scale it was sold as. These are the reasons we are still losing more when they come back home that we do from a bullet or IED. The problem is in all likelihood we will keep burying more and more on our soil from the enemy they brought back with them then we do from the enemy in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Bush lawyer says Veterans not entitled to mental health care

Veterans not entitled to mental health care, U.S. lawyers argue
Bob Egelko, Chronicle Staff Writer

Tuesday, February 5, 2008


Veterans have no legal right to specific types of medical care, the Bush administration argues in a lawsuit accusing the government of illegally denying mental health treatment to some troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.

The arguments, filed Wednesday in federal court in San Francisco, strike at the heart of a lawsuit filed on behalf of veterans that claims the health care system for returning troops provides little recourse when the government rejects their medical claims.

The Department of Veterans Affairs is making progress in increasing its staffing and screening veterans for combat-related stress, Justice Department lawyers said. But their central argument is that Congress left decisions about who should get health care, and what type of care, to the VA and not to veterans or the courts.

A federal law providing five years of care for veterans from the date of their discharge establishes "veterans' eligibility for health care, but it does not create an entitlement to any particular medical service," government lawyers said.

They said the law entitles veterans only to "medical care which the secretary (of Veterans Affairs) determines is needed, and only to the extent funds ... are available."

The argument drew a sharp retort from a lawyer for advocacy groups that sued the government in July. The suit is a proposed class action on behalf of 320,000 to 800,000 veterans or their survivors.

"Veterans need to know in this country that the government thinks all their benefits are mere gratuities," attorney Gordon Erspamer said. "They're saying it's completely discretionary, that even if Congress appropriates money for veterans' health care, we can do anything we want with it."

The issue will be joined March 7 at a hearing before U.S. District Judge Samuel Conti, who denied the administration's request last month to dismiss the suit. While the case is pending, the plaintiffs want Conti to order the government to provide immediate mental health treatment for veterans who say they are thinking of killing themselves and to spend another $60 million on health care.

The suit accuses the VA of arbitrarily denying care and benefits to wounded veterans, of forcing them to wait months for treatment and years for benefits, and of failing to provide fair procedures for appealing decisions against them.

The plaintiffs say that the department has a backlog of more than 600,000 disability claims and that 120 veterans a week commit suicide.

In his Jan. 10 ruling that allowed the suit to proceed, Conti said federal law entitles veterans to health care for a specific period after leaving the service, rejecting the government's argument that it was required to provide only as much care as the VA's budget allowed in a given year. A law that President Bush signed last week extended the period from two to five years.
click post title for the rest

Bush must not know that PTSD is a wound and the brain is in fact part of the body. After all, give the man a break. He lost his own mind a long time ago as well as his heart when it comes to wounded veterans this nation owes a debt to. None of them would be wounded if they did not go.