Tuesday, February 5, 2013

NBC feeding the myth of PTSD veterans being dangerous

Hundreds of thousands of veterans are treated at the VA for PTSD. That should have been the lead in this story. It wasn't and we should be asking why not. Veterans are more likely to hurt or kill themselves than someone else. This is a fact and is supported by the high number of suicides along with attempted suicides (another subject not discussed) which is what the accused shooter of Chris Kyle had sought help for.

Suffering military and veteran is not something they are interested in. They get a lot more attention out of covering the gun murder of a decorated sniper as if it was the Wild West and this was a shootout with the fastest gun.

Will slaying of ex-SEAL Chris Kyle mar veteran job market?
By Bill Briggs
NBC News contributor

The weekend homicides of ex-Navy SEAL and “American Sniper” author Chris Kyle and a friend in Texas have stoked fresh concerns among mental-health experts and veteran advocates that the crime’s PTSD theme will further stigmatize and dampen an already-soggy job market for men and women home from war.

“What worries me about this story is it will frighten potential employers away from hiring veterans who have been in Iraq and Afghanistan,” said Dr. Harry Croft, a San Antonio-based psychiatrist who has talked with more than 7,000 veterans diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome.

“The myth is all of them have PTSD — not true, only 20 percent. Another myth is that all of them who have a severe case of it — not true; it goes from very mild to severe. The third myth is that everybody with PTSD is aggressive, unreliable, or trouble in the workplace, and none of that is (true) either. It scares me,” Croft said.
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Military veteran reportedly killed by son

Military veteran reportedly killed by son outside of Massachusetts home
Published February 05, 2013
FoxNews.com

A military veteran was reportedly killed by his own son in front of their Massachusetts home, MyFoxBoston.com reports.

Michael Beaudry, 20, allegedly struck his father, 58-year-old Ronald Beaudry, multiple times with an unknown blunt object, the station reports.

The elder Beaudry was pronounced dead shortly after arriving at the hospital.

Witnesses told the station that the younger Beaudry attended to his father after striking him, cradling his father's head and apologizing.
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Chris Kyle murder causes PTSD sufferers to fear backlash

PTSD sufferers fear backlash in wake of SEAL murdered
Feb 04, 2013
By Greg Groogan
Special Projects Reporter
HOUSTON (FOX 26)

It is fact for which there is rock solid confirmation - during his four combat tours Navy Seal sniper Chris Kyle saved scores of Marines from insurgent bullets.

That a deeply disturbed former Marine would senselessly take the life of a comrade who was so clearly trying to help him speaks to the real and present danger of battle related post-traumatic stress.

"That should be a wake-up call to everybody that these guys continually need help, these guys and girls that come back from combat," said Paul De La Cerda, an Iraq War veteran.

With his band "Warrior Spirit" De La Cerda deploys music as a force of healing for both his own PTSD as well as that suffered by the military comrades with which he regularly comes in contact.

"We are just trying our best to bring these guys back to who they were," said De La Cerda.

De La Cerda genuinely fears the killing of Chris Kyle will result in the kind of negative "blowblack" against veterans that the Seal sniper was fighting to end.

"You already know the backlash from it is going to be guys with PTSD will automatically be labeled as killers or guys that are about to snap," said De La Cerda.
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MOH Dakota Meyer asked Ron Paul if he lost his mind

MOH Recipient Slams Ron Paul Over Kyle Tweet
Feb 05, 2013
Military.com
by Michael Hoffman

Medal of Honor recipient Dakota Meyer criticized former Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul on Twitter Monday night after Paul posted a controversial tweet about former Navy SEAL sniper Chris Kyle, who was killed Saturday at a Texas gun range.

Meyer sent his tweet in response to one by Paul that read: “Chris Kyle's death seems to confirm that "he who lives by the sword dies by the sword." Treating PTSD at a firing range doesn't make sense.”

Meyer tweeted: “Hey @ronpaul have you lost you mind? That sword protected your freedom. Guess since I live by it I deserve to get murdered as well? #wow.”

Meyer, a former Marine sergeant, is one of three living recipients of the Medal of Honor for service in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He is credited with saving 13 American and 23 Afghan soldiers’ lives in a firefight in Afghanistan in 2009.

Kyle, a former SEAL and author of “American Sniper,” left the Navy in 2009 after 10 years of service. He completed four deployments to Iraq and is credited with killing 160 enemy combatants. He received two Silver Stars, five Bronze Stars for valor and two Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medals.
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WTF is Secretary of the Army John McHugh thinking?

WTF is Secretary of the Army John McHugh thinking?
by Kathie Costos
Wounded Times Blog
February 5, 2013

The book I thought I'd have done last month keeps writing itself because of what is going on and the rise in military suicides. When will it ever be enough for someone to finally be held accountable for all of this? I am tired of asking that question but as tired as I am of that, I am heartbroken of family after family blaming themselves when there are so many others to blame first.

I screamed when I ran into this "report" thinking it would have something to offer.
A War on Two Fronts: Army Orders Plan to Combat PTSD
Feb 5, 2013
By News 92 FM

Army Secretary John McHugh signed an order Monday for all Army commanders to come up with a plan to better handle post-traumatic stress disorder. McHugh admitted its going to take a culture shift in the Army to face mental health issues at home and on the battlefield.
This is coming from a "news" station as if it was some major story to cover but that is all there is on the post. Nothing more. No questions? No data? No evidence? Not even one single WTF moment of accountability?

They have been "doing" that since the reports first started to come out over ten years ago! Well, now they are to begin to spread the pain even further using a failed program that is the major one problem in the military.

Army secretary calls for mental health 'resilience' training
By Kim Murphy
February 4, 2013

JOINT BASE LEWIS McCHORD, Wash. — With suicides in the Army reaching another record in 2012, Army Secretary John McHugh said Monday he is reviewing recommendations from a study of soldier behavioral health evaluations and intends to adopt mental health “resilience” training for all soldiers.

McHugh said he was not ready to announce the results of the behavioral health review — launched after several troubled soldiers at the Madigan Army Medical Center here complained that their post-traumatic stress disorder diagnoses were downgraded by a forensic psychiatric team. The Army continues to hold close to the vest what it found when it looked across the country at how soldiers with mental health problems were being diagnosed.

“A few things are already clear,” McHugh said at a briefing to announce the “completion” of the report.

“Our commanders are working very, very hard. They’re trying to do everything they possibly can to provide to our soldiers the right programs, the right care.” But the “abundance” of programs made available over the past decade has led in some cases to “confusion” about what services are available, especially when good programs are “stovepiped” in individual locales and not telegraphed to all bases and commands, he said.

“Often commanders and those charged with delivering care are unaware of certain benefits and opportunities that are are available. Other times, they are aware of them but not sure how to apply them … interventions are often not coming as early as we would like to see them,” the secretary said.

As a first step, McHugh said he has ordered his top staff to develop a Ready and Resilient campaign to integrate and synchronize programs aimed at combat readiness and resilience for active duty soldiers and reserve and National Guard forces, as well as civilian employees and family members.
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Is McHugh new to this job? No.

Secretary John McHugh became the 21st Secretary of the U.S. Army on September 21, 2009.
Education:
State University of New York's Nelson A. Rockefeller Graduate School of Public Affairs Utica College of Syracuse University
Most Recent Assignment:
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives, represented northern and central New York from January 1993 to September 2009


Trainers in this program tell the soldiers they can "train their brains" to be resilient. What the soldiers hear is if they end up with PTSD, it is their fault because they didn't train right and have weaker minds than the others they are with. Do they really think a soldier will admit they need help after their buddies think the same way? Do they think soldiers will be honest about what is going on with them when their buddies aren't admitting they need help either?

This is just too ridiculous to keep going on without one single reporter asking what has failed already!

They keep pushing this crap no matter who is paying the price. Is there any wonder why they feel they cannot ask for help after all these years?

Thoughts while working out in the gym
Maj. Gen. Dana J. H. Pittard 1st AD and Fort Bliss Commanding General
1st AD and Fort Bliss Commanding General
No More Preventable Soldier Deaths

On Monday, following Super Bowl Sunday, most Soldiers at Fort Bliss will have the day off because we, as a post, went more than 100 days without a preventable Soldier death from September 2012 to January 2013. Unfortunately, we had one of our Soldiers die this month. His death was preventable. I wish someone could have successfully intervened to help our fellow Soldier in need. We all need help at times. Seeking help is strength, not weakness. I ask all Soldiers and family members to look out for each other. If you need help or someone you know needs help, call your chain on command or duty chaplain at 637-4265, or Military One Source at 800-273-TALK. Help us ensure there are no preventable deaths at Fort Bliss.


Yes, the same general who called military suicides "selfish acts" while working out in the gym. Now he's saying instead of "Army Strong" it is "Iron Strong" but again reporters just decided to report on the reduction of suicides at Fort Bliss and not asking any questions as to why that happened. How about asking how many were discharged and then committed suicide? How about how many were transferred to other bases and then committed suicide? Anyone have a single clue other than the people in charge?

Has anyone asked McHugh about all of this? Has anyone asked him why they kept redeploying soldiers over and over again even though their own research showed it would increase the risk of PTSD? Anyone ask him why they did not deploy trauma specialists right away when they discovered this? Anyone ask him why some of the chaplains in the military are still trying to get soldiers to convert to their faith at the same time they tell troubled soldiers they are going to hell if they do not covert and accept Christ as members of their denomination?

Has anyone asked any of the people in charge who is responsible for this? Who is being held accountable? Who has been fired or who has been discharged for dereliction of duty?

They keep surviving combat but can't seem to survive being back home. Anyone even wondering why this keeps happening or why families leave the graves filled after suicide, blame themselves for it and then they discover what they should have been told all along?

While I read way too much, I hear even more. I hear because I listen and ask questions. The problem is, I hear all too often from families when it is too late to save a life and they need comfort because they can't stop blaming themselves for what the military didn't do and reporters didn't report on.