Sunday, November 8, 2009

For troubled service members, military therapists are at their sides

The problem is not just there are not enough to take care of the need, nor is it that they are burning out. The biggest problem is that too many of "healers" are clueless when it comes to PTSD. Sounds harsh? Yes, but it is heartbreakingly true.

Ever since the campaign in Afghanistan, there was a great need to play catchup to the veterans we already had needing help. How did they expect to be prepared for any of the troops they knew would need help? Didn't anyone think of stocking the military and the VA with qualified PTSD experts? What did they think would happen when more troops were sent into Iraq on top of the veterans already waiting for care? Remember this was at the same time we were finally getting thru to Vietnam veterans about taking care of their own combat related wound of PTSD.

The people advising the military about mental health were telling them that either they had a tsunami coming or the soldiers claiming PTSD were looking for a lifetime free ride. Commanders were still dealing with their own dismissal of the realities of combat trauma, just as some were using personality disorders as a quick campaign against the soldiers to get them off the books instead of providing them with a lifetime of care for their wounds. Remember, there were over 22,000 dishonorably or "less than honorably" discharged, leaving them absolutely nothing available to them. Service organizations would not help them. They were not able to get any care at all from the government and as for jobs, even if they could work, employers would toss out their applications without consideration. Given the fact the unemployment pool was growing, there was no need at all to even think of what could have been behind the "less than honorable" discharge.

When the kicking out began it also sent a message to the brains of the commanders that PTSD was not really a wound and they were just not tough enough.

As the years went on, it changed to the troops just needed "train their brains" to become "resilient" so they pushed Battlemind telling them that they could just get tough and suck it up, and oh, by the way, PTSD is real but if you get it, it's your fault. Check out the Battlemind program and the way it began. Whatever message they were supposed to get after the first couple of minutes was lost.

The biggest problem is that while most working with the troops may be really bright when it comes to mental health, they are clueless about PTSD, the one thing going on in the minds of the troops they should have been experts on.

The psychologist and psychiatrists along with chaplains, trained by the military, later entering into the VA, never got the real scoop on PTSD but they were expected to treat it. This was happening at the same time colleges were turning out mental health providers with a full range of knowledge regarding PTSD to treat it. One more reason why depending on where a veteran lives, their care can be anywhere from wonderful to abysmal. We tend to assume that if someone has a degree and is on the job, they are experts on what they treat but this was not the case.

It was training them the usual way other psychology students were trained, looking for the usual mental health illnesses instead of Post Traumatic Stress. This was made crystal clear when the misdiagnoses began and the troops were being discharged under every illness other than PTSD. One thing you have to understand about PTSD is if they are looking for any other illness, they will find it even though they may be looking at PTSD. PTSD comes only after trauma but can look like a lot of other illnesses including heart problems and gastrointestinal. Instead of noticing what was happening around the country with training to address people after crisis and traumatic events, the military was performing with their head in the sand. This is not a baseless claim. I've talked to too many veterans over the years telling me they were treated by idiots when it came to what was going on inside of them. They were given bags filled with prescription medications and very little therapy or information on what PTSD was.

What was the military thinking when they trained these mental health experts when they were not addressing the number one cause of mental health crisis with troops deployed into two military campaigns? Some VA doctors were fully trained and knew what they were talking about. The veterans were treated with medications and talk therapy. The problem here is that they were not told what they really needed to hear so they understood exactly where PTSD came from and why it "picked" on them instead of buddies they served with. They also had no clue they were supposed to address all aspects of their being with spiritual healing as well as physical healing on top of mental healing.

This is the most mind boggling aspect of all. When you think about what programs followed from yoga to martial arts, from art and writing for therapy, all the way up to civilian spiritual programs being studied over the years, you'd think the military was paying attention to at least some of this, but they were not. They also never addressed the need for the families to be educated on what PTSD was so they could help with the healing instead of making things worse.

When the military became overwhelmed by suicides going up every year, again, they took no clue from the civilian world. While they were well aware crisis teams responded to the people in New York after 9-11, they would not let that reaction to trauma penetrate into addressing crisis in the units deployed into combat.

Chaplains were not trained to address it. Mental health professionals were not trained properly. All this lead to what we've been seeing and unfortunately, they are nowhere close to being prepared for what is to come. The numbers keep going up for the troops and our veterans committing suicide along with attempted suicides. The numbers keep going up when it comes to families falling apart while commanders look for excuses instead of the basis for the problems the families face. Drug and alcohol abuse is seen as a discipline issue instead of self-medicating. Dangerous driving is the cause for reprimand instead of a clue these are the men and women willing to lay down their lives for the sake of their countrymen and would not so easily change into people with no regard for the lives of others. The same applies with domestic violence when the soldier responds to someone with sudden violence when they had absolutely no history of it in the past.

What happened at Fort Hood needs to be looked at but not the way they are looking at it. The tragedy of the safe zone being invaded by one of their own will end up complicating the traumas of war so severely that no amount of pills will ease it. If they are responding with what they've already been doing addressing PTSD, then we can expect far more tragedies to come.

Shortage of military therapists creates strain
By KIMBERLY HEFLING (AP)

WASHINGTON — Amputations. Combat stress. Divorce. Suicide. For troubled service members, military therapists are at their sides.

But with the U.S. fighting two wars, an acute shortage of trained personnel has left these therapists emotional drained and overworked, with limited time to prepare for their own war deployments.

An Army psychiatrist is suspected in the shootings at Fort Hood, Texas, and the rampage is raising questions about whether there's enough help for the helpers, even though it's unclear whether that stress or fear of his pending service in Afghanistan might be to blame.

An uncle of Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan said Saturday that Hasan was deeply affected by his work treating soldiers returning from war zones. "I think I saw him with tears in his eyes when he was talking about some of patients, when they came overseas from the battlefield," Rafik Hamad told The Associated Press from his home near the West Bank town of Ramallah.

Rep. Tim Murphy, R-Pa., a psychologist in the Navy Reserves, said the toll is sometimes described as "compassion fatigue" or "vicarious trauma."
read more here
Shortage of military therapists creates strain


Right after Fort Hood was traumatized, an ex-employee in Orlando went to kill people he used to work with. He killed one and wounded several others. What came after was that a church was opened up to the survivors and their families and crisis teams were sent in to address this horrific event. These are highly trained people on trauma. They did not send in any people they could get just to have someone there. They knew untrained people would add to the crisis. Who knows who will be sent to help the survivors of the Fort Hood massacre or if anyone will be sent to help the families scattered around the country to cope with their own trauma. Given what we've already seen, it's easy to guess they haven't even thought about this at all.

As for this evil committed by a "healer" we also need to be asking what he was telling the soldiers going to him for help after the traumas they had seen in Iraq and Afghanistan. Did he fill their heads with facts or did he tell them things that would make their PTSD worse? Was he part of an even bigger problem in the military behind what we've seen?

Saturday, November 7, 2009

PTSD should be a badge of honor

With PTSD in the news after what happened at Fort Hood, when a doctor that was supposed to help PTSD soldiers, ended up going on a killing mission, we forget a lot of history. As bad as it is for the newer veterans, think of what it's been like for the Vietnam veterans as they suffered all these years, watching their families fall apart, doing the best they can to "get over it" and attempt to hide it without anyone they knew understanding it. Heck, some of them didn't understand it themselves. Some still don't understand.

PTSD should be a badge of honor
By Guest Columnist
November 07, 2009, 7:33AM
By JACK ESTES

The doctors fixed his body but there was trouble in Bobby's mind.


What happens to our soldiers when they return from war? Where do they go? What do they do? For many the war isn't over, it's only just begun.

Forty years ago I carried Bobby out of a rice paddy. He was shot four times and covered with blood when I laid him down in the safety of a tree line. He had a shoulder wound, a sucking chest wound and his forearm was shattered. I tied my sock around his arm to hold the bone in place.

Then I pulled Bobby to his feet and we staggered to the medivac truck. As he left I feared I'd never see him again. They took him to a firebase, put him in a bunker and worked feverishly to save his life. When the doctor probed inside the hole in his chest, to spread his ribs, the pain was so great Bobby sat up and punched him. They shot him up with more morphine, inserted a tube in his lung and soon he's on a gurney, in a plane full of wounded, on his way to Guam.

In Guam they re-broke his arm and spent hours suturing him up. Days later he's on another plane headed to Camp Pendleton in Southern California. Back in Vietnam I already missed him. I trusted him. We used to run patrols during the day, set up ambushes at night and lived through nightmare firefights, often tending to our dying brothers. Like all combat Marines, we became adrenaline junkies, hooked on hunting other men.

Months later, Bobby is awarded the nation's second-highest medal, the Navy Cross, and meritoriously promoted to sergeant. Then he began his long rehabilitation at the Naval Hospital and soon married his high school sweetheart. The Marines tried to give him a medical discharge but he wanted to go back to Vietnam, to finish his duty. He worked out every day. He aced the physical fitness test and appealed to the commandant and was allowed to stay in the Corps.
read more here
PTSD should be a badge of honor

Two veterans laid to rest with honor instead of pauper's grave

Unknown vets spared paupers' graves
By Tim Hart, CNN
November 7, 2009 6:07 a.m. EST

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Two Air Force veterans died in California without any next of kin
Local coroner's official helped make sure the men got military burials
Without her efforts, they would have been interred in a county-owned facility
Small army of men and women turned out to pay their respects

Bakersfield, California (CNN) -- When Vincent Barrett died alone in July at age 72, the coroner's office could not find any next of kin.

Similarly, Ronald Axtell was listed as indigent -- no survivors and no funds for a funeral -- when he died at age 69.

And yet a small army of men and women gathered to pay their respects to the two men, both Air Force veterans, as they were buried at Bakersfield National Cemetery in September.

Marsha Dickey, who works in the Kern County coroner's office, was instrumental in making sure the men got the honors they deserved.

"She worked very hard to see that they were veterans ... and without that ... we probably would not be here today to honor them," said Lynn Sprayberry, founder and chairwoman of Friends of Fallen Heroes, a local organization that makes sure veterans receive a respectful service at Bakersfield National Cemetery.
read more here
http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/11/07/vif2.unknown.vets/index.html

Staff Sgt. Amy Seyboth Tirado, served with her husband

Death quiets hero's music
Staff Sgt. Amy Seyboth Tirado, who played Taps, comes home at last

By DENNIS YUSKO, Staff writer

First published in print: Saturday, November 7, 2009

COLONIE -- Someone else will have to play Taps.

Staff Sgt. Amy Seyboth Tirador was remembered Friday as a determined soldier who was passionate about her job, family and hometown. She is the first woman soldier in the Capital Region to die in Iraq.

The 29-year-old Albany native grew up with sports and music at South Colonie High School, and had played Taps on her trumpet at the funerals of family members who were veterans of World War II, her father Gerard Seyboth recalled.

Tirador also played the instrument in church and excelled in softball and lacrosse. She grew up to become an Army medic, and helped save the life of a soldier while taking arms fire in Iraq during an attack on an American convoy. She also volunteered to return to Iraq in August as an Arabic-speaking interrogator, a job she would not talk about, her father said.


Amy Tirador deployed to Iraq in 2004 with the Army's First Infantry Division. She provided medical support for escorts on convoys, a dangerous job in an environment of roadside bombs and snipers.

"She had no problems with it," her father recalled. Amy Tirador returned happy, and her family threw a welcome back party in the Joseph E. Zaloga Post 1520 on Everett Road.

A few years later, she met her husband on a military base. They moved to Washington before deploying together.

read more here
http://www.timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=862862&TextPage=1

Friday, November 6, 2009

Fort Hood soldiers stories begin to come out

Report: Fort Hood victims include PA soldier

The Associated Press

PITTSBURGH - A western Pennsylvania soldier is reportedly among those wounded in the shooting rampage at Fort Hood.

Sabrina Heath, of Monessen, told KDKA-TV on Friday that her niece Army 2nd Lt. Brandy Mason was shot in the thigh.

Heath said Mason made a brief call Thursday. Mason said she was at the a Soldier Readiness Center waiting her turn when the suspect came in and opened fire.

Heath says Mason spent 14 months in Iraq and was never shot at.
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Fort Hood victims include PA soldier




Soldier was willing to give 'anything it took' for her country
By Tom Held of the Journal Sentinel

Posted: Nov. 6, 2009 2:32 p.m.

Kiel - Staff Sgt. Amy Krueger decided she was willing to put her life at risk for her country the instant a second airplane crashed into the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001.

"We looked at each other and knew, and the next day we were in the recruiter's office," recalled Kristin Thayer, who watched the attack with Krueger in a commons area at a college in Sheboygan. "Anything it took, anything our country needed of us, even if that meant giving our lives."

Krueger made the ultimate sacrifice that pledge carried. She died Thursday when an Army psychiatrist opened fire on soldiers proceeding through deployment preparations at Fort Hood, in Killeen, Texas.

On Friday, Thayer grieved the loss of her best friend, a classmate and teammate who joined her at that recruiting station determined to serve her country. Both joined the Army Reserves.

go here for more

http://www.jsonline.com/news/wisconsin/69398932.html




Ogden soldier injured in Fort Hood shooting
By Joseph M. Dougherty

Deseret News

Published: Friday, Nov. 6, 2009 5:09 p.m. MST

WASHINGTON TERRACE — These emotions weren't supposed to come yet.

The worry, the heartache, the fear: They were expected later, once Aggie Foster's son deployed to Afghanistan, not on Thursday while he still was awaiting his deployment at a Texas Army base.

Aggie Foster was at work at Ogden Regional Medical Center when her daughter-in-law called to tell her that a gunman had walked into Fort Hood's Soldier Family Readiness Center and shot her youngest son, Joey, an Army private first class, in the hip.
read more here
Ogden soldier injured in Fort Hood shooting




Local Soldier Injured in Fort Hood Attack
A Dothan man serving in the Alabama National Guard was wounded yesterday when a fellow soldier allegedly opened fire on Fort Hood, Texas.
A Dothan man serving in the Alabama National Guard was wounded yesterday when a fellow soldier allegedly opened fire on Fort Hood, Texas.

13 people were killed and the Wiregrass man was among the more than 30 injured.

Major Randy Royer of the 135th expeditionary sustainment command based in Birmingham was shot twice during Thursday’s shooting spree.
read more of this here

http://www.wtvynews4.com/news/headlines/69413897.html




Fort Hood victims include St. Paul soldier

11/06/2009

By AMY FORLITI / Associated Press


A Minnesota soldier and father of three who had a knack for making people laugh was among those killed when an Army psychiatrist allegedly opened fire on fellow soldiers at Fort Hood, Texas.

Kham Xiong of St. Paul, died in the attack Thursday that left 13 people dead and more than two dozen wounded. The alleged gunman, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, was among the injured.

KSTP-TV reported that Xiong was 23, and had three children ages 4, 2 and 10 months. He and his wife had moved to Texas just five months ago, the station said.
go here for more

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/APStories/stories/D9BQB69G1.html




Oklahoma high school graduate one of the soldiers killed at Fort Hood
By BRYAN DEAN Staff Writer
Published: November 6, 2009

A Tipton soldier killed Thursday during a shooting rampage at Fort Hood, Texas, was a quiet boy who thought the military would help him grow into a man, his family said Friday.

Spc. Jason Dean Hunt, 22, was one of 12 soldiers killed when a gunman opened fire at a soldier readiness center on the post. The gunman, identified by authorities as Maj. Nadil Malik Hasan, 39, was shot several times by a civilian police officer but survived the attack.

Hunt was a 2005 graduate of Tipton High School. Tipton is near Altus in southwest Oklahoma.
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Oklahoma high school graduate one of the soldiers killed at Fort Hood


UPDATE from CNN

Fort Hood victims: Sons, a daughter, mother-to-be
November 7, 2009 12:52 p.m. EST
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Kham Xiong, 23, remembered as "a very fun, outgoing person"
"What hurts the most is that one of her own killed her," Francheska Velez's father says
Sister recalls Spc. Jason Dean Hunt's words: "He said he would die for a stranger"
Sheryll Pearson, mother of slain soldier Pfc. Michael Pearson says: "We're all very angry"

A CNN Special Investigation drills down on the causes and the impact of the Fort Hood shootings, at 8 p.m. ET Saturday on CNN TV.

Fort Hood, Texas (CNN) -- Thirteen people died after a shooting spree Thursday at Fort Hood, a sprawling Army post in Texas.

Here's a look at the victims whose names have been released:

go here for more

http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/11/06/fort.hood.shootings.victims/index.html