Thursday, February 7, 2013

VA serving high number of women

VA serving high number of women
13 News Orlando
By Margaret Kavanagh
Reporter
Last Updated: Thursday, February 07, 2013

“Being here with other people or just trying to be a civilian is really hard, I was completely different. As if I was an alien from another planet it felt like that. Like welcome to civilian life,” Murray said.
CENTRAL FLORIDA
More and more female soldiers are returning home in desperate need of help.

Now, as the U.S. military is allowing women on the front lines, they’re also working on a plan to help them once they come back home.

Life got difficult for 25-year-old Sarah Murray once she said she got out of the military in 2008.

“It was really hard to adjust to civilian life. I didn’t know how to fit in or find a job easily. I had a hard time socializing with people and I became homeless,” Murray said.

Last year, Murray wound up in a food pantry in Cocoa Beach struggling to make ends meet to feed her 3-year-old daughter.

Bill Breyer, a volunteer with the National Veterans Homeless Support group, pointed her in the right direction.

"This is why we are here, to go out and get these veterans much more out of a life that is due to them as a result of their service,” Breyer said.

Murray said he provided her with information about resources that were available to her.
According to the VA, the number of female veterans using VA Health Care as more than doubled since 2000 from nearly 160,000 to more than 337,000 in 2011.
read more here

CBS4 Investigates: Standoff With A Soldier in Miami

CBS4 Investigates: Standoff With A Soldier
February 6, 2013
Michelle Gillen

MIAMI (CBSMiami) — “Sir. I am writing to you because I am in urgent need of preventing a crisis from occurring.”

It was an e-mail that stopped its reader in her tracks. An e-mail that made its way to a specialized Miami-Dade mental health program, the 11th Judicial Circuit Criminal Mental Health Project, created to interface counselors with police and the courts. The goal is to save lives and reduce the number of people with mental illness in the criminal justice system.

The e-mail arrived on the heels of the Sandy Hook tragedy in Connecticut and just days before December 21, 2012 – a date that some believed signaled the end of the world. In fact, a worried family member of a young Iraqi soldier wrote of her unsuccessful attempts to get the young soldier help. A man the family member said suffered from Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome, Schizophrenia and more. She detailed that she believed the young soldier was going to kill himself and others and included a laundry list of weapons he allegedly he possessed, including shotguns, rifles and handguns.

“That’s when the second best of luck happened. We got a hero who came out who turned out to be an Iraqi vet himself.” said Leifman.

“He was in crisis and he truly believed that what he was doing was the right thing,” says Victor Milian. To the judge, a hero in this story.

Millian is not only a Miami-Dade Hostage negotiator, but also a veteran of the Iraqi war, a senior sergeant, and when he arrived at the soldier’s apartment complex he was determined to get the roubled soldier out alive, while trying to make sure that residents and his fellow officers were kept safe.
read more here

Todd Love, triple amputee, went skydiving

Triple amputee former Marine pushes physical limits by sky diving, wrestling gators and driving in demolition derbies
(VIDEO)

Marine Cpl. Todd Love lost his arm and both legs to a landmine in Afghanistan in 2010. Since recovering, he's taken up a series of extreme hobbies to help inspire and empower wounded vets.
By Philip Caulfield
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Wednesday, February 6, 2013

He's got a lust for life.

Todd Love, an iron-willed former Marine who lost an arm and both legs to a landmine in Afghanistan in 2010, has found a new lease on life through a series of adventures that would prove trying to most able-bodied adrenaline junkies, CBS reports.
read more here

Veterans in Maryland seeking disability benefits can face a perilous wait

Veterans in Maryland seeking disability benefits can face a perilous wait
Washington Post
By Steve Vogel
February 03, 2013

BALTIMORE — Veterans across Maryland who have filed disability claims at the Department of Veterans Affairs’ Baltimore office may wait more than a year for a decision and even then face a 25 percent chance that their claims will be mishandled, according to agency figures.

Nationally, the system is struggling with a backlog of more than 900,000 claims, the result of a sharp increase in filings by veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars as well as by older generations. The Baltimore regional office’s performance is among the nation’s worst, with claims filed by veterans seeking disability compensation pending 429 days on average, six times VA’s goal of 70 days, and 162 days longer than the national average.
read more here

Reporters missing the points on Combat PTSD

Reporters missing the points on Combat PTSD
by Kathie Costos
Wounded Times Blog
February 7, 2013

There are some great questions the Associated Press asked about PTSD and these are the most important to understand.

More than 500,000 vets had a post-traumatic stress disorder diagnosis in fiscal year 2012
By Associated Press
Published: February 4, 2013

WASHINGTON — The shooting death of a former Navy SEAL sniper has brought attention to the problem of post-traumatic stress disorder, which has affected as many as 20 percent of veterans from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

Q: How many veterans are believed to be dealing with PTSD?

A: In the latest fiscal year ending Sept. 30, more than 500,000 veterans with a PTSD diagnosis were treated at hospitals and clinics run by the Department of Veterans Affairs. The numbers show that PTSD is not just a phenomenon of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Veterans from those wars made up only about a quarter of the patients treated last year with a PTSD diagnosis. That the vast majority served in the first Gulf War, Vietnam or earlier shows how long PTSD can last. The VA says that not everyone who gets treatment will be cured, but treatment can help people cope better with their symptoms.

Q: How is PTSD treated?

A: Everyone is different. Dr. Charles Marmar of New York University Langone Medical Center said that treating a highly-functioning person soon after their trauma can be accomplished in four to six weeks. But if a soldier served three tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the PTSD is complicated by depression or drug use, treatments can last one or more years.

The two main treatments for people with PTSD are psychotherapy or medication, and sometimes both. It’s also important to get care from a mental health provider who is experienced with PTSD. In psychotherapy, patients work through how trauma changed the way they look at the world and themselves and how they can change their thoughts in a constructive way. A class of anti-depressants used in treating depression, called SSRIs, is effective in treating PTSD, too. Another medication called Prazosin has been found to be helpful in decreasing nightmares.


The 500,000 number of veterans treated for PTSD is vital whenever reporters have the subject of Combat and PTSD. That many veterans but few of them are committing crimes. There is yet another number they need to remind people of. That is the simple fact less than half of the veterans seek help for PTSD, in other words, the 500,000 represents less than half of the veterans with PTSD because of the stigma attached to it and denial.

Older veterans prove this point. They think they are able to "get over it" and just suffer from serial marriages, destroyed families, nightmares, flashbacks and mood swings, because they had a busy life until they retire. They are top veteran group committing suicide.

US military veteran suicides rise, one dies every 65 minutes
Published February 04, 2013
Reuters

The most extensive study yet by the U.S. government on suicide among military veterans shows more veterans are killing themselves than previously thought, with 22 deaths a day - or one every 65 minutes, on average.

The study released on Friday by the Department of Veterans Affairs covered suicides from 1999 to 2010 and compared with a previous, less precise VA estimate that there were roughly 18 veteran deaths a day in the United States.

More than 69 percent of veteran suicides were among individuals aged 50 years or older, the VA reported.

"This data provides a fuller, more accurate, and sadly, an even more alarming picture of veteran suicide rates," said Democratic Senator Patty Murray of Washington state, who has championed legislation to strengthen mental health care for veterans.

The news came two weeks after the U.S. military acknowledged that suicides hit a record in 2012, outpacing combat deaths, with 349 active-duty suicides - almost one a day.


What they report on are crimes committed by them instead of the fact they are more likely to harm themselves than they are to harm someone else.

These veterans have risked their lives for those they served with. Don't reporters get that? Will they ever get that point? I doubt it. Ever since Chris Kyle was shot and killed while trying to help a Marine with PTSD they make it sound as if veterans are someone to fear yet the majority of murders are not committed by veterans.

If reporters keep getting this all wrong, then there is little hope the American public will get it right and even less hope they will ensure Congress gets any of this right for veterans' sake.

If they cannot grasp the number of older veterans suffering right now, then while there is a chance to reduce the suffering for the newer generation of veterans, it is all allowed to get worse now and we'll see the increase in veterans taking their own lives for many, many more years to come. Still the subject that is covered the least is what all of this does to families. No one is really talking about families forgotten by everyone.

(Update)
Mental Disorders Among OEF/OIF Veterans Using VA Health Care: Facts and Figures
OEF/OIF Veterans Using VA Health Care
Veterans generally must enroll in the VA health care system to receive medical care; for information about enrollment, health benefits, and cost-sharing, see CRS Report R42747, Health Care for Veterans: Answers to Frequently Asked Questions, by Sidath Viranga Panangala and Erin Bagalman. From FY2002 through FY2012, 1.6 million OEF/OIF veterans (including members of the Reserve and National Guard) left active duty and became eligible for VA health care; by the end of FY2012, 56% of them had enrolled and obtained VA health care.

Second, some conditions may be understated, because veterans who have a condition might not be diagnosed (and therefore might not have the diagnosis code in their records), if they choose not to disclose their symptoms. Veterans might not want to disclose information that would lead to a diagnosis of mental illness. Veterans have reported not wanting to disclose trauma for fear that they will not be believed, that others will think less of them, that they will be institutionalized or stigmatized, or that their careers will be jeopardized, among other reasons.

Also, veterans using VA health care services may receive additional services outside the VA, without the knowledge of the department.