Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Stimulus falls short for vets, lawmakers say

As if Buyer would have a clue what is needed by veterans when he had control over what made it all worse for veterans. While Filner and Buyer are correct that this spending bill does not do enough for veterans, the fact remains that there are eight years worth of catching up on. Eight years of Bush and his friends controlling the VA and even more years of the GOP with control over the committees.

Read this and then read about what Buyer had to say,,,,

Fact Sheet: VA Benefits for Filipino Veterans April 2008 Word PDF


Citizens of the Republic of the Philippines who serve today in the U.S. Armed Forces are eligible for VA benefits under the same criteria as other U.S. military veterans. However, eligibility for VA benefits for Filipino veterans who served in recognized units of the Philippine Armed Forces – especially during World War II – is not so clear-cut.



The Philippine Islands gained their independence from the United States in 1946 following a transition period that was interrupted by World War II. During World War II, Filipinos served in a variety of units, some coming under direct U.S. military control, others having no ties to the U.S. military, and still others falling somewhere in the middle. Federal law, international treaties and court cases have taken up the question of which VA benefits should be given to various groups of World War II Filipino veterans.



The United States recognizes service in four groups as qualifying for some VA benefits:

Regular, or “Old,” Philippine Scouts. Regular Philippine Scouts, or "old scouts," were members of a small, regular component of the U.S. Army that was considered to be in regular active service. Originally formed in 1901, long before any formal plan for Philippine independence, the Regular Philippine Scouts were part of the U.S. Army throughout their existence.
Commonwealth Army of the Philippines. Also known as the Philippine Commonwealth Army, these veterans were called into the service of the United States Armed Forces of the Far East (USAFFE), its members serving between July 26, 1941, and June 30, 1946.
Guerrilla Service. People in this group served as guerrillas in USAFFE in resistance units recognized by and cooperating with U.S. forces between April 20, 1942, and June 30, 1946.
New Philippine Scouts. New Philippine Scouts were Philippine citizens who served with the U.S. Armed Forces with the consent of the Philippine government between Oct. 6, 1945, and June 30, 1947.
Entitlement to VA Benefits

Filipino veterans who served with U.S. forces in the Regular Philippine Scouts before October 6, 1945, are entitled to all VA benefits under the same criteria as apply to any veteran of U.S. military service. Those benefits are paid at the full-dollar rate, and their dependents and survivors are entitled to benefits under the eligibility rules common to survivors of U.S. veterans.



Veterans of the Commonwealth Army of the Philippines, recognized guerrilla forces, and the New Philippine Scouts are entitled to compensation for service-connected disabilities. They are not entitled to disability pension for non-service-connected disabilities, nor are their survivors entitled to death pension.



Benefits for veterans of the Commonwealth Army, recognized guerrilla forces, and the New Philippine Scouts who live outside of the United States are paid at the rate of 50 cents for each dollar. However, these veterans who reside in the United States receive full-dollar rate compensation payments if they are either U.S. citizens or lawfully admitted permanent resident aliens.



VA pays burial benefits to the survivors of certain veterans at the full-dollar rate for veterans who were residing in the U.S. on the date of death. Those veterans must also have been either United States citizens or lawfully admitted permanent resident aliens. This covers only Commonwealth Army and recognized guerrilla service. Eligibility applies to deaths on or after Nov. 1, 2000, as this is based on legislation enacted in 2000. Burial benefits for these veterans also include interment in any national cemetery with available space, a burial flag, and a grave marker or headstone.



VA pays burial benefits to the survivors of New Philippine Scouts as well, at the full-dollar rate, if the veterans were lawfully residing in the United States on the date of death, and were United States citizens or lawfully admitted permanent resident aliens. Eligibility applies to death on or after Dec. 16, 2003, based on legislation enacted in 2003.



The survivors of Commonwealth Army, recognized guerrilla forces, and New Philippine Scouts veterans who are entitled to Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (for example, if the veteran died during military service) are paid at a rate of 50 cents for each dollar when residing in the Philippines. Survivors residing in the United States and who are either U.S. citizens or lawfully admitted permanent resident aliens are entitled to full-dollar payment.



Health Care Benefits

Filipino Commonwealth Army Veterans, including those who were recognized by authority of the U.S. Army as belonging to organized Filipino guerilla forces, and new Philippine Scouts are eligible for VA health care in the United States on the same basis as U.S. veterans if they reside in the United States and are citizens or lawfully admitted for permanent residence. Old Philippine Scouts are eligible for VA health care benefits based upon their status as U.S. veterans.



In the Philippines, the Republic of the Philippines government provides medical care to eligible Filipino veterans. Filipino veterans are ineligible for VA health care treatment services in the Philippines although the VA does provide them examinations in connection with determining their eligibility for VA compensation and pension benefits. U.S. veterans with service-connected conditions are eligible for medical care for both service-connected and non-service-connected disabilities at the VA outpatient clinic in Manila. U.S. veterans there also are eligible for hospital care for service-connected disabilities, which is provided under VA contract.



Background
The origins of the Commonwealth Army of the Philippines are in the early 1900s when the United States assumed formal sovereignty over the Philippines. At that time, the United States was preparing for the Philippines to become a sovereign nation. Public Law 73-127, enacted in 1934, required the Commonwealth Army to respond to the call of the President of the United States under certain conditions. In fact, President Franklin Roosevelt ordered the Commonwealth Army to service on July 26, 1941, and it served with the USAFFE command throughout World War II.



Public Law 79-190, enacted in October 1945, authorized recruiting 50,000 “new” Philippine Scouts in anticipation of needing local occupational forces. President Truman acknowledged the contributions of the Philippine people who fought under the umbrella of the USAFFE command to defend the Philippine Islands against occupation by the Japanese. He called for a study to determine the level of benefits appropriate to conditions in the Philippines. The reduced rate of benefits to veterans living there was based on the different economic conditions in the Philippines and the United States.



Current laws affecting these benefits date to congressional actions in 1946 that specified that the service of groups other than the Old Scouts would not be considered U.S. military service. VA officials considered that Filipino military service met the statutory definition of a U.S. veteran until Congress passed Public Laws 79-301 and 79-391 in 1946. Public Law 79-301, the First Supplemental Surplus Appropriation Rescission Act, authorized a $200 million appropriation to the Commonwealth Army of the Philippines, with the provision that service in the Commonwealth Army of the Philippines should not be deemed to have been service in the military or naval forces of the United States. Public Law 79-391, the Second Supplemental Surplus Appropriation Rescission Act enacted in 1946, provided that service in the New Philippine Scouts was not deemed U.S. military service.



The U.S. government also gave the Philippine government grants of at least $500,000 per year for more than 30 years, starting in the 1960s, to help the Veterans Memorial Medical Center (VMMC) in Quezon City upgrade its equipment and physical plant. In addition, VA provided a total of $3 million in equipment funds to VMMC during the period from 2002 to 2005.



A VA contract with the VMMC was expanded by legislation in 1963 permitting the center to care for non-service-connected conditions of Filipino and U.S. veterans.



Legislation in 1973 permitted VA itself to provide medical treatment of service-connected conditions (and non-service-connected illnesses in certain conditions) for Philippine Army and New Philippine Scout veterans. The half rates of compensation to most Filipino veterans living in the Philippines were intended to reflect that the Philippines had a lower cost of living than the United States. Since World War II, however, many Filipino veterans and their dependents have immigrated to this country.



Legislation enacted in 2000 provided the full-dollar rate compensation payments to veterans of the Commonwealth Army or recognized guerrilla forces residing in the U.S. if they are either U.S. citizens or lawfully admitted permanent resident aliens. Another 2000 law authorized payment of burial benefits on behalf of veterans in these groups where they had been U.S. citizens or lawfully admitted permanent resident aliens.



In 2003, Congress passed legislation that expanded compensation benefit payments to the full-dollar rate for New Philippine Scouts residing in the U.S. if they are either U.S. citizens or lawfully admitted permanent resident aliens. This legislation also expanded burial benefit payments to the full-dollar rate for New Philippine Scouts who at the time of death were residing in the U.S. and were U.S. citizens or lawfully admitted permanent resident aliens. It also expanded Dependency and Indemnity Compensation benefits to the full-dollar rate for survivors of veterans who served in the New Philippine Scouts, Philippine Commonwealth Army or recognized guerrilla forces, if the survivor is residing in the U.S. and is either a U.S. citizen or a legally admitted resident alien.

http://www1.va.gov/opa/fact/filipvet.asp






Stimulus falls short for vets, lawmakers say

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Monday Feb 16, 2009 16:46:52 EST

The Democratic chairman and the ranking Republican on the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee usually don’t agree on much — but both say the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, set to be signed into law Tuesday, doesn’t do enough for veterans.

The chairman, Bob Filner, D-Calif., said the bill, HR 1, includes $1.4 billion for veterans programs and includes provisions intended to help stabilize the economy, result in job creation and provide economic development in local communities.

Filner, who voted for the bill, said he is sorry it doesn’t do more for veterans.

“I am disappointed that we could not provide more of an investment in this bill, and I will continue to work to draw attention to the growing and unmet needs of our veterans,” he said.

Steve Buyer of Indiana, the ranking Republican who voted against the bill, said he also wishes it did more for some veterans — but less for others.

Buyer, who was committee chairman when Republicans controlled the House, was critical of the inclusion in the final bill of a controversial provision that provides $198 million in payments to Filipino veterans who served in World War II alongside U.S. forces.
go here for more
Stimulus falls short for vets, lawmakers say

No such thing as a memory-erasing pill

One more example of not posting everything I read. The last couple of days filled the blog world with post saying they found a memory erasing pill but when you read this, it turned out to be a lot of hype.

No such thing as a memory-erasing pill
BMJ Group, Tuesday 17 February 2009
The headlines have been full of news about a pill that can 'erase bad memories', leading to fears about mind-control. Looking at the research, it's clear that the pill doesn't wipe out bad memories. However, it may make them less upsetting, which could offer help to people suffering long-term trauma.

What do we know already?
Researchers are investigating whether propanolol, a type of drug called a beta blocker, could be used to help people avoid post-traumatic stress disorder.

Propanolol has been used for many years to slow down the heartbeat for people with high blood pressure. Beta blockers block some of the effects of adrenaline, a hormone whose function is to prepare the body for 'flight or fight' and which causes symptoms of anxiety, such as sweating and palpitations (when you can feel your heart beating faster than normal). Some doctors prescribe beta blockers for people suffering stress or anxiety.

A study in 2004 looked to see whether giving people a course of propanolol within 6 hours of a traumatic event (such as a car crash) could stop them from getting post-traumatic stress disorder. But the study was small and the results were inconclusive.

In this new study, researchers tested whether propanolol could interfere with the way the brain processed the emotions attached to memory when people were reminded of a stressful event.
go here for more
No such thing as a memory-erasing pill

Slain actress found dark side of Hollywood dream

Slain actress found dark side of Hollywood dream
Juliana Redding was an aspiring actress who had moved to southern California to chase the Hollywood dream. She wound up as the victim in a real-life murder mystery -- one few people are talking about. Police haven't made any arrests and say they have no suspects. CNN.com and Nancy Grace are working together to bring fresh eyes to cold cases. full story

Fort Lewis:Girl, 16, found dead, another taken to hospital

Girl, 16, found dead in Fort Lewis barracks
Staff report
Posted : Monday Feb 16, 2009 21:09:23 EST

A 16-year-old girl has died and another was in stable condition after they were found unresponsive Sunday in a barracks on Fort Lewis, Wash., according to a press release.

Emergency response personnel responded to a 911 call about 3:30 a.m. Sunday to a barracks on post.
click link for more

Advocates for veterans need to network for a reason

An interesting exchange of emails caused this posting. It was from another dedicated advocate for veterans. Apparently there is confusion on the fact advocates do not always agree on everything. While we all agree the troops and veterans need a lot more help than the government is providing, we do not always agree on all the services they need.
We agree they need mental health professionals and medication for the most part but some advocates push for different programs that have helped them personally. While this does not mean the treatment will work on all veterans, it works for some. That's the point we all seem to miss.
They are as different as we are. What works on you may not work for someone turning to you for help. You need to be aware of all options and not just the one you seem to favor. Have a network of services available. Listen to the veteran and find out what comes with them. Ask them questions if you are not sure. Then try to direct them to where they can get what they need.
If they are a spiritual person, then direct them to someone that is dealing with the mind-body-spirit connection. You do not want to send them to someone that has no understanding just as you do not want to send an atheist to a minister. Keep them in their comfort zone.
While I get request for help from all walks of life, I struggle with this on a daily basis. The temptation to share the spiritual beliefs I have is strong but avoided as best as I can. In the cases of veterans with no faith, I must address the need as a human so they understand that PTSD is a human wound and a normal reaction to what they've been through. Most of my videos address a general population but I have a few on the spiritual connection. While I find it more helpful to incorporate every aspect of what makes them "them" I have to listen to where they are and let them lead the way.
There have been times over the years when they have returned to a faith in God and reconnected. These veterans were from many different faiths. While I've made an effort to study different faiths, my understanding of them is limited. I try to find others doing this work within the faith the veteran has a relationship with. If the veteran is not comfortable with this then I try to find the answer they need from a network of other advocates. Other advocates refer Christians to me because I address the need of all denominations with more understanding than I have for other faiths. We all fill a need.
While treatment is not one size fits all in the medical community, advocates need to acknowledge this as well. We cannot be all to all veterans just as one medication may work on some but fail for others. Just as you wouldn't send someone without legs to a podiatrist just because they need to see a doctor, you wouldn't send someone to anyone they do not need. We need to work together for their sake.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Study finds ‘Battlemind’ is beneficial?

Sorry but I just choked on my coffee.

Col. Carl Castro should have known better when he developed this program. From what is said about this program and the evidence, this program does more harm than good. Not that any of these people would ever listen to me or the veterans or the BBC investigation that showed the troops arriving in Afghanistan with 11 1/2 minutes of BattleMind training crammed into two straight days of briefings. There are parts of this program that are good and should be used but they begin with telling the troops that they can "toughen" their minds, which translates to them that if they end up with PTSD, it's their fault because they didn't get their brain tough enough. Try telling that to a Marine.

They can say whatever they want, but when you see the suicide rate go up every year, see them still not wanting to seek help, still not being treated for this as if they have nothing to be ashamed of, then there is a problem. You cannot begin by telling them they can train their brain and then tell them it's ok if they failed to do it. While they may be able to prepare for combat what they cannot do is change the fact they are human, exposed to abnormal events in combat situations and have normal reactions of stress after as a normal human! No matter what the cause, people get wounded by PTSD. The difference between civilians and the troops is that the troops are exposed to it over and over and over again when they deploy into combat. Telling them they just didn't do a good enough job to toughen their minds is the wrong way to begin what could have been a really great program. Again it's just my opinion and based on 26 years of all of this. Plus add in the fact that the Montana National Guard had to come up with their own program along with a lot of other units. That should have been an alarm bell right there, but no one heard it that is in charge.
Col. Carl Castro, Ph.D. – Fort Detrick, MD
Col. Castro was most recently appointed Director of Military Operations,
Medicine Research Program, Headquarters, US Army Medical Research and
Materiel Command, Fort Detrick, Maryland. He formerly served as the chief of
military psychiatry at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, and was the
Commander of the U.S. Army Medical Research Unit-Europe in Heidelberg,
Germany. In addition to serving in multiple deployments to Bosnia, he has been
chief and program manager of several different medical research programs. He
is a graduate of Wichita State University and holds an M.A. and Ph.D. in
psychology from the University of Colorado. He is the author of over 50 scientific
publications, including a major study published in the New England Journal of
Medicine. The study, which involved 6,200 soldiers and Marines and was
conducted by a team at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, is the first
attempt to understand the psychological effects of a U.S. war while it is ongoing.
Most of the participants were screened within three or four months of returning
from battle. The result, Combat Duty in Iraq and Afghanistan, Mental Health
Problems, and Barriers to Care (Charles W. Hoge, M.D., Carl A. Castro, Ph.D.,
Stephen C. Messer, Ph.D., Dennis McGurk, Ph.D., Dave I. Cotting, Ph.D., and
Robert L. Koffman, M.D., M.P.H.) is a seminal study in the effects of combat on
mental health.
http://www.smith.edu/ssw//admin/documents/CarlCastro.pdf




Study finds ‘Battlemind’ is beneficial
Stars and Stripes - Washington,DC,USA
Training to reduce post-combat stress has made strides
By Nancy Montgomery, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Tuesday, February 17, 2009
HEIDELBERG, Germany — New training intended to reduce post-combat psychological distress provides "small but significant" improvements in soldiers’ mental health, according to a study.

Among soldiers who returned from Iraq and participated in "Battlemind Training," fewer reported sleep problems, and there were less-severe post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms, compared with soldiers who had received either no post-deployment mental health training or a briefing about stress, according to research psychologists with the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research.

"We’ve completed three groups of randomized trials which have demonstrated that Battlemind training has a positive impact on soldiers’ mental health months later," said Amy Adler, a lead researcher on the project. "The effects are not huge. We’re not curing disorders."

The study found that in soldiers who had seen extensive combat, Battlemind training resulted in a 14 percent reduction in severity of post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms.

And while 60 percent of soldiers without the training reported sleep problems, just 30 percent of those who’d had the Battlemind class said they were having trouble sleeping after returning home. click link for more

What if Jesus were with you?

Another great piece from Papa Roy

Suppose Jesus to be in your company!

SIR Isaac Newton, a seventeenth-century scientist, is renowned for having discovered the law of gravity. What some people don't know is that he was a dedicated Christian. In fact, while at the height of his career in physics and mathematics, he decided to turn his attention toward studying God's Word. When a colleague tried to lure him back to the field of science, Newton replied, "I do not want to be trifling away my time, when I should be about the King's business." Although he retained his interest in science, he made theological pursuits his top priority. (F B Meyer)

Luke 2:44 But supposing Him to have been in the company, they went a day’s journey, and sought Him among their relatives and acquaintances.

Think of Jesus on this side of the counter along with you who sell, and on that side of the counter along with you who buy. You both need His Presence, for the buyer is generally quite as intent upon cheating as the seller! He wants the goods for less than they are worth and the seller, therefore, baits the hook for him. They are both deceivers but the blame is not all on one. When persons must have goods far below the price for which they can be produced, they must not marvel if they find that they are sold an inferior article which looks well enough but turns out to be worthless. Oh, that you Christian people would always suppose Jesus to be in your company! (C. H. Spurgeon)



Pray for our nation

Heavenly Father, we come before you today to ask your forgiveness and to seek your direction and guidance. We know Your Word says, 'Woe to those who call evil good,' but that is exactly what we have done.



In God we trust: Be still, and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth! (Psalm 46:10)

Papa Roy

One last thought: No matter what we do for a living, we must be dedicated to serving God in and through our daily occupation.

US Marine who committed suicide served in Iraq


US Marine who committed suicide served in Iraq
The Associated Press
By CHARMAINE NORONHA – 2 days ago

TORONTO (AP) — A U.S. Marine who fatally shot himself after sneaking into Canada had served two terms in Iraq, officials said Saturday.

Timothy Scott, 22, had been wanted by the military for abandoning his unit. He turned a pistol on himself Thursday outside his mother's home in Nova Scotia after police tried to talk him out of firing the gun.

A statement released by Camp Lejeune in North Carolina said Scott had been deployed to Iraq for eight months in 2007 and for seven months in 2008.

The Marine rifleman, who was assigned to headquarters and the support battalion at Camp Lejeune, had joined the Marine Corps in 2005, the statement said.
click link for more

1 dead, 1 ill with meningitis at Fort Leonard Wood

1 dead, 1 ill with meningitis at Leonard Wood
By Jim Salter - The Associated Press
Posted : Monday Feb 16, 2009 15:07:21 EST

ST. LOUIS — Meningitis cases at Fort Leonard Wood have left a soldier dead and another “very seriously ill,” according to officials at the southern Missouri Army base.

Fort Leonard Wood officials announced the meningitis cases in a news release Sunday. Few details were released, including names of either victim. Calls on Monday to a media spokesman at the base were not returned.

Meningitis is an infection of the fluid of the spinal cord and the fluid that surrounds the brain. It kills about 300 people in the U.S. each year.

At Fort Leonard Wood, both illnesses involved noncontagious forms of meningitis, authorities said. The two soldiers were members of the same unit, but no connection has been found between the cases.

“Although difficult to comprehend, all clinical data show these cases are unrelated and purely coincidental,” Lt. Col. John Lowery, deputy commander for clinical services at Fort Leonard Wood, said in a written statement.

click link for more

UPDATE

2nd soldier at Leonard Wood dies of meningitis

By Jim Salter - The Associated Press
Posted : Tuesday Feb 17, 2009 15:57:26 EST

FORT LEONARD WOOD, Mo. — A second soldier stationed at the Army’s Fort Leonard Wood has died of meningitis, officials said Tuesday.

Leonard Wood officials said Pvt. Randy Stabnick, 28, of South Bend, Ind., died Tuesday at a hospital in Springfield.

Another soldier from the base died Feb. 9. His name has not been released.

“The soldiers and their families continue to be in our prayers today,” Maj. Gen. Gregg Martin, commanding general of Maneuver Support Center and Fort Leonard Wood, said in a statement.

Base officials said both soldiers had a non-contagious form of meningitis.
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/02/ap_meningitis_leonard_wood_021709/

PTSD: ‘Not enough is being done’

PTSD: ‘Not enough is being done’
Temple Daily Telegram - Temple,TX,USA
by Bryan Kirk Killeen Writer
Published: February 15, 2009
FORT HOOD - Matthew Muff isn’t in the Army anymore. He hasn’t been since Jan. 30, when he was administratively discharged for twice going AWOL.

But a pattern of misconduct detailed by his leaders may not have been behind his departure from Fort Hood last month but a series of cries for help resulting from post traumatic stress disorder.

“The first time was right after he was diagnosed with PTSD after his return from Iraq. He was having problems with alcohol,” said Chuck Luther, a former 1st Cavalry Division soldier who now works as a caseworker for Military Spouses of America. “He just wanted to drown out all the bad things. I know what he went through.”

The command saw neither that first offense nor his PTSD as serious, Luther said.

“Muff said he needed help, and they wouldn’t give it to him,” he said.

So Muff, who lives in Gatesville, went AWOL again.

This time, however, he left the post to get treatment at Scott & White Memorial Hospital because he couldn’t get what he needed at Fort Hood, Luther said.
click link for more