Tuesday, December 18, 2007

PTSD and why war could shrink your brain

When I have time, (lately that hasn't happened much)I pop into different news sites and see what they have reported on in the past. Occasionally I come up with something that supports PTSD is not new and the studies on PTSD have been done before. It galls me no end that there are still "experts" acting as if the studies they do are brand new. Tonight is just one of those nights. I came across this report out of Scotland from 2003.

There has been a lot of talk from parts of this nation acting as if PTSD is new, that the numbers of veterans claiming PTSD are fakes or frauds, looking for a free ride, along with a whole host of character assignations. It's almost as if these people live in some kind of alter-reality where they are touched by nothing.

PTSD is not new. It's been documented since man first knew how to write. Veterans get PTSD just as ancient warriors did. It has nothing to do with what nation they live in or if they support their mission or not. It has nothing to do with courage either. Had it involved courage, they would fall apart before their first mission, not after the risk to their life is over and they are home and certainly not after their second, third or fourth tour.

I hope that Raj Persaud, the reporter on this forgives me for posting this in its entirety but as I was trying to pull out different sections, it was just too good to break up. kc

Why war could shrink your brain
Published Date: 25 March 2003
Source: The Scotsman
Location: Scotland

"‘PTSD could soon be an exclusionary factor for some types of military service’"
By Raj Persaud

Doctors have long known that stress can have crippling and tangible effects on the body, directly contributing to physical problems including stomach ulcers, heart disease and asthma. But new medical research suggests it could actually shrink our grey matter, causing physical brain damage.

The finding came about through the study of one of the most stressful experiences of all - war. In the mid-1990s military combat veterans in the US had their brains scanned with the latest imaging machines. The surprising finding was that those who had seen more action, who had been nearer and longer at the front line, tended to have a significantly smaller brain structure called the hippocampus. It looked as if being at war actually caused parts of the brain to shrink and wither away.

The hippocampus - the word derives from the ancient Greek sea horse because this small, paired structure near the centre of the brain resembles the shape of a tiny sea horse - now appears to be the part of the brain most vulnerable to sustaining structural damage secondary to mental stress.

Stress causes an increase in a variety of hormones released into our bloodstream, but of most interest is a group called glucocorticoids, which raise the heart rate, boost the immune system and suppress energy-intensive systems such as reproduction. Such changes are clearly useful for an animal trying to escape from a predator, but a side-effect of decades of chronic stress is that over-exposure to these particular stress hormones seems to shrink the hippocampus.

But do you have to go to war to damage your brain? Is less extreme stress still a danger? Sure enough, studies have now established that the longer people have experienced symptoms of mere depression, the smaller their hippocampus.

Yvette Sheline of Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis recently reported a brain imaging study which revealed that the hippocampi of depressed patients were on average 12 per cent to 15 per cent smaller than those of controls of the same age, height and level of education. Numerous other studies have found similar results. "It is absolutely clear that really prolonged major depression is associated with loss of hippocampal volume," concludes Robert Sapolsky of Stanford University - the first neuroscientist to discover how vulnerable the hippocampus was to stress from his work with primates.

Exactly why the hippocampus shrinks is still open to debate, but we also know that it is one of the few parts of the brain where new nerve cell growth occurs. This may be because it is a key part of the nervous system involved in memory. It now seems that when we lay down new memories it is because new nerve cells have grown in our hippocampus to code for these recollections.

The kind of memory supported by the hippocampus is spatial memory - when you are looking for your misplaced car keys it is your hippocampi that will be activated.

Taxi drivers recently given brain scans by scientists at University College London had a larger hippocampus compared with other people - it appears that their extensive geographical knowledge leads to remarkable growth in this part of the brain.

The hippocampus is significantly bigger in birds and animals for whom navigation is a vital part of their evolutionary strategy. For example, birds that use space around them to hide and locate food, and voles and deer mice that traverse large distances to find mates, all have larger hippocampal volumes than closely related species which do not.

If the hippocampus codes for spatial memory and shrinks when stressed, it is intriguing to note that stress can have important effects on our memory. Traumatic stress often leads us to avoid the place where we experienced the shock, or to become anxious as we get near that location again, particularly as a result of our vivid memories for the traumatic incident.

For example, those involved in automobile accidents often become more upset as they get closer to the precise road where the event occurred, suggesting that the hippocampus which codes for spatial memory is playing a key role in how stress effects us. A key symptom of post traumatic stress disorder is intrusive memories, nightmares that recall the original shock and flashbacks.

Princeton University neuroscientist Elizabeth Gould has found that exposing monkeys to chronic stress blocks the new nerve growth and perhaps it is cell destruction combined with a lack of new growth that produces the effects of stress on our hippocampi.

Intriguingly, several treatments for depression might have the opposite effect. Some anti-depressants, for example, increase the amount of serotonin in the gaps between brain cells, and serotonin is a well-known promoter of cell growth. Neuroscientist Ronald Duman of Yale University has found that rodents given antidepressant drugs or electroshock therapy all have significantly more newly grown cells in the hippocampus. This suggests, Duman argues, that increased nerve cell growth is a common effect of antidepressant treatment and could even be the main mechanism by which antidepressants work.

A recent study published in the Lancet confirms that patients on mood stabilising medication such as Lithium for just four weeks do seem to grow a small but measurable amount of grey matter as a result.

Doctors had assumed that depression results from changes on a more molecular scale - an imbalance in chemical messengers that communicate among brain cells. But perhaps the real issue is the way the actual physical structure of the brain is altered in depression or stress.

A more natural antidepressant - exercise - may also encourage brain cell growth. Exercise has been shown to increase the level of serotonin in the brain and can often help patients shake off mild depressive symptoms. Neuroscientist Fred Gage, of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in California, reports that rats with access to a running wheel had more than twice as many newly growing brain cells as did mice with no running wheel. Since the rodents ran an average of nearly five kilometres per day for several months, it would seem that next time you pass an ardent jogger you should admire the size of their grey matter.

But one question continued to trouble scientists despite these exciting developments: how could they be sure that the smaller hippocampi the depressed and stressed seemed to have was a consequence of stress? Perhaps it was still remotely possible that it was having a smaller hippocampi in the first place which predisposes some to more mental problems? Which comes first: the small hippocampi or the large stress?

Now a study has been published which appears to take a big step to resolving this vital question. Mark Gilbertson, of Harvard Medical School, brain scanned 70 identical twins, one of each pair was a Vietnam combat veteran who was clearly exposed to the stress of war, while the other stayed at home and had no combat exposure. Sure enough, the men who went to war, and who ended up suffering from post traumatic stress disorder, also had smaller than average hippocampi.

But more astonishing yet was the finding that their identical non-combat twin also had smaller hippocampi, of roughly the same size as the twin who had served in war and then developed PTSD.

So one group went though combat trauma while their siblings were not in the war, yet both groups had small hippocampi. So instead of brain shrinkage happening as a consequence of stress, a small hippocampus must have preceded the war. The amazing finding suggests that having a smaller hippocampus predisposes a person to develop traumatic stress, and maybe even predicts that they will suffer from mental health problems if they are stressed.

It could well be, with more research to explore and confirm this finding, that a small hippocampus should be viewed as a risk factor for PTSD and thus, like a heart murmur, be an exclusionary factor for some types of military service. It could even be that brain scanning our hippocampi might help predict who is going to develop depression or other mental illnesses in the future.

Just because identical twins were involved in the study does not mean that having a smaller hippocampus is a purely genetic effect. Identical twins can have much more similar foetal environments than do non-identical twins. A "two hit" model is possible whereby early childhood stress causes the hippocampus to shrink a lot and it was this prior vulnerability combined with the second hit of stress from then fighting a war that later tipped those who finally got PTSD over the edge.

Some support for this "two hit" model comes from Gilbertson’s finding that those who developed PTSD had a shared higher chance of experiencing childhood abuse with their co-twin who had not gone to war.

Oddly, the "two hit" theory has dramatic implications for the population back home when an army is abroad fighting, which is that the first "hit" could be happening as mothers who are pregnant experience the stress and uncertainty of war. Recent research by psychiatrist Jim Van Os from Holland has found that the chances of a Dutch mother giving birth to a child who later grows up to develop schizophrenia went up by at least 28 per cent if she was pregnant during the very stressful time of May 1940, when the Germans invaded the Netherlands.

The maternal stress hormones or glucocorticoids, which can damage the hippocampus in adult life, might even be damaging the hippocampus of an unborn child.

It would seem that it is vital pregnant mothers try to stay as relaxed as possible during these troubled times and in particular ensure that they keep eating a healthy diet . Otherwise their stress and possible temporary loss of appetite could effect the brain development of their unborn children, leading the first part of the two hits needed to cause later problems such as depression or traumatic stress.

In other words, to echo the words of one psychiatrist Robert Sapolsky likes to quote, and who oversaw a ward full of PTSD sufferers in an American Veteran’s Administration hospital: "You have to understand that these boys had a lot of mileage under the hood before they ever set foot in Vietnam."


Dr Raj Persaud is consultant psychiatrist at the Maudsley hospital and author of From The Edge Of The Couch - Bizarre Psychiatric Cases And What They Teach Us About Ourselves, Bantam, £12.99.

The full article contains 1748 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Last Updated: 24 March 2003 6:30 PM

Former Lance Cpl. Kevin Dickes wants his pot plants back, they are legal!


Former Lance Cpl. Kevin Dickes could have faced up to six years in prison after police raided his home and charged him with a felony count of cultivating marijuana. But last week, a prosecutor dropped the charge after confirming that Dickes is a licensed grower of medical marijuana.

Former Marine wants marijuana plants back

By Andrew Tilghman - Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday Dec 18, 2007 19:09:11 EST

A former Marine and 1991 Persian Gulf War veteran is demanding that Denver-area police return dozens of marijuana plants they seized from his basement.

Kevin Dickes, 39, a construction worker and former lance corporal, could have faced up to six years in prison after Aurora, Colo., police raided his home April 27 and charged him with a felony count of cultivating marijuana.

But last week, a Colorado prosecutor dropped the charge after confirming that Dickes is a licensed grower of medical marijuana.

Dickes says he suffers severe pain in his legs stemming from shrapnel injuries sustained in Kuwait in early 1991. He was transporting a group of Iraqi prisoners of war when one of them detonated a grenade hidden under his clothing.

Dickes said he prefers marijuana to other pharmaceuticals. “It keeps me off the Percodine, and it’s better than OxyContin,” he said in a telephone interview Tuesday.

“It may not relieve your pain, but it helps your mood swings — if you’re down, it will bring you up.”

On Wednesday, Dickes is going to state court to demand that police return the plants that he grew legally.
go here for the rest
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2007/12/marine_marijuana_071218/
They are legal for him to grow them. Pot helps a lot of veterans when the drug companies won't. Pot helps veterans when the VA won't. I think all PTSD veterans should be given a prescription for medical marijuana. After all, other civilizations have been using it for centuries. Isn't that where most medications come from? What's the problem? Is it because Nixon caved into the drug manufactures to make pot illegal? Do you have any idea how many veterans ended up in jail because pot helped them cope with what combat did to them? What about the other health problems all kinds of people have and pot is there only relief? Give them what works!

Israel Defense does not take care of troops wounded by PTSD

Israel Defense does not take care of troops wounded by PTSD
Last update - 23:34 18/12/2007


Shell-shocked troops overlooked by gov't recognized in new law

By Yuval Azoulay, Haaretz Correspondent

Tags: Israel, IDF

An amendment passed Tuesday will enable shell-shocked Israel Defense Forces troops to receive recognition and stipends as disabled veterans from the Defense Ministry, despite prior recognition as disabled by the National Insurance Institute.

MK Zahava Gal-On (Meretz) advanced the amendment, which is to the law on disabled soldiers.

Gal-On said that soldiers experiencing post-traumatic stress disorder frequently failed in proving to the Defense Ministry's pensions officer the connection between their suffering and their army service. As such, they were discounted from benefits mandated by the law on disabled soldiers.
go here for the rest
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/935989.html


Canada does not take care of their troops with PTSD

England, Scotland, Australia, the list goes on but at the top of the list of the nations not taking care of their veterans with PTSD is America. Why? Because they have the most vetearns needing to be taken care of and failing them the worst.

Christmas random act of kindness

From WanderingVets

“I noticed a man looking rather down and just… not right… at a bus stop right next to (in front of) where my car was parked at a convenience store near my sister’s, and he slowly began to approach me as I was walking back to my car after being in the store. I didn’t smell alcohol. The guy looked more depressed than anything, but was certainly not waiting for the bus. It was a sheltered stop, and a place to sit out of the rain.

Before he could say something I said, “You have a place to stay tonight?” trying to get him to look at my face “No, ma’am.” “Have something to eat… or any money? I assume you’re not actually waiting for the bus.”

“Well… no, not actually, ma’am” (must’ve been in the military).

He wouldn’t look me in the face, but it was dark, and raining. It’s been pretty cold here. I handed him a juice I’d just bought for myself and a five dollar bill from my wallet, and I thought he didn’t believe me at first.

He just kinda stood there and then said, “Wow, thank you!!!” and he finally looked me in the eyes. I smiled at him and told him good luck and wished him a merry Christmas, such as it was.

“God bless you ma’am, and merry Christmas to you, too” and then looked down at the bill I’d handed him. He was still looking at it as I was driving away.

‘So then I drove to my sister’s crying. Thankfully my son was asleep in his booster seat.”

go here for more
http://wanderingvets.wordpress.com/2007/12/17/92random-acts-of-kindness/



Ok so you know there is a sermon coming on. I can't help it.

When Joseph and Mary went to Bethlehem there was no place for them to stay. No one knows what would have happened that night to them or to the baby Mary was delivering that night had it not been for a random act of kindness from the man letting them seek shelter in the stable. Where would the angles have lead the shepherds? Where would the Magi have followed the star too? More to the point is what would God think of the people who would provide no shelter to His child?

We are all children of God. Our souls sent from His side to live on this earth. We live in a nation claiming to be a "Christian Nation" since most claim the faith in Christ and we claim God "shed His grace on thee" "crowning they good with brotherhood" and yet we allow our brothers and sisters to go without shelter, food, clothing and depleting hope on a daily basis.

A while ago someone posted an angry comment about how I could pay more attention to the homeless veterans in this nation than I do to all the homeless. I tried to explain that if we cannot even take care of the homeless veterans, who unselfishly were willing to sacrifice their lives for this nation, the rest of the homeless were more unlikely to be taken care of or even noticed in the kind of nation refusing to take care of the ones responsible for this nation still existing.

As individuals we can do random acts of kindness that will warm the heart of God but as a nation on the whole, we prove we are not as good as what all the songs about this country claim. We ask God to bless this nation and yet we act like the man in this parable;

Luke 12
The Parable of the Rich Fool 13Someone in the crowd said to him, "Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me."
14Jesus replied, "Man, who appointed me a judge or an arbiter between you?" 15Then he said to them, "Watch out! Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; a man's life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions."
16And he told them this parable: "The ground of a certain rich man produced a good crop.
17He thought to himself, 'What shall I do? I have no place to store my crops.'
18"Then he said, 'This is what I'll do. I will tear down my barns and build bigger ones, and there I will store all my grain and my goods. 19And I'll say to myself, "You have plenty of good things laid up for many years. Take life easy; eat, drink and be merry." '
20"But God said to him, 'You fool! This very night your life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what you have prepared for yourself?'
21"This is how it will be with anyone who stores up things for himself but is not rich toward God."
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke+12%3A13-34



I often wonder what people are going to do with all the money they have accumulated over the last decade when they die? What could they possibly plan on doing when their kids will inherit it all after they die? Do they really think their kids need that much money? It's one thing to want a mansion and live the good life if they worked hard for it, but too many have made their billions off the backs of other people. We have a nation of over 300 million people yet less than 30 million veterans and only about 17 million of them are combat veterans. We no longer attribute wealth in the millions but in the billions. You cannot even get honorable mention on Forbes anymore unless you have a billion.

The World's Billionaires
Edited by Luisa Kroll and Allison Fass 03.08.07, 6:00 PM ET
It has been a busy year in the fortune-hunting business. Strong equity markets combined with rising real estate values and commodity prices pushed up fortunes from Mumbai to Madrid. Forbes pinned down 946 billionaires, including 178 newcomers and 17 people who climbed back into the ranks after being absent for a year or more. Two-thirds of last year's billionaires are richer. Only 17% are poorer, including 32 who fell below the billion-dollar mark. The billionaires' combined net worth climbed by $900 billion to $3.5 trillion. That equates to $3.6 billion apiece. More . . .



BILLION BUCKS isn't what it used to be. Own a few apartment buildings in Tokyo, and—even in this market—you're almost certainly worth a bill. Take a high-tech company public when it's hot, and you're in the no-longer-so-exclusive billionaire club.
Ten years ago Forbes started counting billionaires outside the U.S. We found 96. Last year, 298—plus 149 American billionaires. With stock markets around the world up an average 23% in the last year, the billionaire population, like the deer population, is sure to have increased.
http://www.uni-muenster.de/PeaCon/eliten/Forbes-Global.htm

If this makes sense to people who want to have a fit over the so called "war on Christmas" like Bill O'Reilly, then you haven't a clue who Christ was, what He wanted us to be or what He wanted us to do. You don't have the slightest idea what He was born to teach all of us as well as die for us because of our own sins.


This Christmas, have a real war on Christmas that would make Jesus smile. Wage war on greed and selfishness. Return one of your gifts and donate the money to a shelter. Take the sweater someone gave you and donate it. Tell your husband you don't need another diamond but you want him to donate the money to a charity in your name for all the love you gave him over the years. Tell your wife you don't need a new set of golf clubs but you want her to donate the money instead to a charity in honor of your life. Create your own random act of kindness and be blessed like the Inn keeper was on the night Christ was born or you can be cursed like the rich land owner who only care about what he could gain.


Kathie Costos

Namguardianangel@aol.com

http://www.namguardianangel.org/

http://www.namguardianangel.blogspot.com/

http://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

"The politicians should be ashamed Umoja Village had to exist"





Cata hugs Florida International University student Nathaly Charria after a news conference held by former residents and activists at the Umoja site. College students from FIU and the University of Miami spent many hours volunteering at Umoja. They built model shanty towns on their campuses to show solidarity with the Umoja residents. They donated water and canned foods and built a library for the residents and filled it with books. NURI VALLBONA/MIAMI HERALD STAFF


MEAN STREETS A STORY TOLD IN THREE PARTS
Flames ignite activism in homeless man
A fire that ravaged Umoja Village consumed John Cata's belongings -- and set him on a mission to call attention to Miami's affordable-housing crisis.
BY LISA ARTHUR AND NURI VALLBONA
larthur@MiamiHerald.com

Just after daylight on April 26, John Cata knelt in the charred remains of his Umoja Village shanty and picked through the rubble.

Someone had apparently left a candle burning when going out for the night. About midnight, it tipped over and flames raced through the wood and cardboard village. Several propane tanks in the open-air kitchen exploded. The entire village was consumed in less than 20 minutes.
go here for the rest
http://www.miamiherald.com/519/story/347517.html


PART 1: Homeless man fights for place in a new Miami
Video Activist without a home

Clark County Washington Bowlers take care of local veterans

This is what people in a community can do when they care more than words. This is being repeated by different groups all across the country, but there are not enough of them. If you really care about our veterans and belong to a local group, talk to them about doing something like this for the veterans.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007


The Veterans Administration hospital in Vancouver received about $2,700 worth of merchandise last week as part of the Clark County United States Bowling Congress chapter Bowlers to Veterans Link program.

The merchandise was purchased from donations by bowlers in Clark County leagues and tournaments.

Among the items donated last week to the recreational therapy program at the local hospital were three carts to haul TVs, three boom boxes, six 20-inch TVs, and eight VCR-DVD combinations.

The decades-old program has raised funds for veterans hospitals by seeking donations and running 50-50 raffles during league play and tournaments at area bowling centers. Prior to last year, money raised was given to the VA. Beginning last year, the Clark County program began buying the local hospital items it requested with the funds.

"They give us a wish list and we fill their wish list for them," said Dan Neuman, who coordinates the BVL program for Clark County.

The new system ensures the money donated by area bowlers helps the local VA, Neuman said. It also helps him deliver requested items quickly. He said the new process also allows him to show the bowlers photographs of the items their donations purchase, which helps maintain interest in the program.

"I think it's been great to be able to show the bowlers where their money has gone," Neuman said.

Neuman said local bowlers have raised about $3,535 for the BVL program so far this year. The main fundraising push happens around Veterans Day, though the program accepts donations at any time, Neuman said.

http://www.columbian.com/sports/localNews/2007/12/12182007
_Community-Notebook-Bowlers-donations-help-local-VA-hospital.cfm

Monday, December 17, 2007

New Mexico LT. Gov. Denish plays Santa for wounded soldier to go home

Denish helps unite wounded Iraq veteran with family
Posted 12/17/2007 09:02:00 AM


Lt. Gov. Diane Denish has stepped up in a big way to help unite a wounded Iraq veteran with his family this Christmas.

Army Private James Browning was wounded during a firefight in Iraq earlier this year. Twelve of his fellow soldiers died; only two survived. Since then, Browning has battled post-traumatic stress disorder and a traumatic brain injury. He’s currently at Fort Hood in Texas and was recently granted holiday leave.


His family, however, was unable to afford a ticket home.
http://haussamen.blogspot.com/2007/12/denish-helps-unite-wounded-iraq-veteran.html

What a great story! Random acts of kindness, stranger helping a stranger because of someone in their life had touched their hearts. She did this because of her uncle's actions during his life. It's amazing how much we can touch other people many years from now by what we do today.

Vietnam vets used courage to fight for their wounds to be taken care of, to be accepted by other veterans who shut them out and now they are moving mountains for the sake of the newest generation to make sure they are not shut out or forgotten about. We can make a difference just by doing what Lt. Gov. Denish did. She cared enough to help.

Galloway: Disgraceful treatment of veterans stains America's honor

Galloway: Disgraceful treatment of veterans stains America's honor
Joseph Galloway
Article Last Updated: 12/14/2007 07:22:13 PM MST


As you do your holiday shopping this year and think about a big turkey dinner and piles of gifts and the good life that most Americans enjoy, please spare a thought for those who made it all possible: those who serve in our military and the veterans who've worn the uniform. There are some new statistics that give us reason to be ashamed for the way that our country has treated those who've served and sacrificed for us. Those statistics damn the politicians who start every speech by thanking the troops and veterans and blessing them. They indict our national leaders who turn up at military bases and the annual conventions of veteran's organizations and use troops and veterans as a backdrop for their photo-ops.

Consider this:
* An average of 18 veterans commit suicide each and every day of the year, according to recent statistics from the Veterans Administration. That's 126 veterans who kill themselves every week. Or some 6,552 who take their own lives each year. Our veterans are killing themselves at twice the rate of other Americans.
* One quarter of the homeless people in America are military veterans. That's one in every four. Is that ragged man huddled on the steam grate in a brutal winter wind a Vietnam vet? Did that younger man panhandling for pocket change on the street corner fight in Kandahar or Fallujah?

go here for the rest
http://www.sltrib.com/opinion/ci_7725456

Another non-combat death in Iraq

Multi-National Corps – Iraq
Public Affairs Office, Camp Victory
APO AE 09342

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
RELEASE No. 20071217-05
December 17, 2007

MNC-I Soldier dies from non-combat related injury
Multi-National Corps – Iraq PAO

LSA ANACONDA, Iraq – A U.S. Soldier died as a result of a non-combat related injury in the vicinity of Camp Taji, Iraq, today.

The Soldier was taken to a nearby Coalition Forces medical facility for emergency life-support treatment and was subsequently pronounced dead by the attending medical official there.

The name of the deceased is being withheld pending notification of next of kin and release by the Department of Defense.

The incident is under investigation.
http://icasualties.org/oif/

UPDATE
12/18/07 DoD Identifies Army Casualty
Pfc. Juctin R. P. McDaniel, 19, of Andover, N. H., died Dec. 17 in Baghdad, Iraq, of injuries sustained from a non-combat related incident in Taji, Iraq. He was assigned to the 524th Combat Service Support Battalion, 45th Sustainment Brigade...

Notice to emailers

I'm not your therapist!

I'm really sorry to all the veterans and their family members emailing me seeking help with your relationships because I know there is not enough help out there, but that is not my role in all of this. I am mainly researching whatever is printed on PTSD to provide greater understanding of what it is. The more people learn about PTSD, the easier it will be to remove the stigma of it, remove the barriers of seeking help and hopefully moving Congress past talking about addressing the problem so they actually do something about it. The more time I spend doing one on one, the less time I have to research.

I will continue to answer your questions and provide you with knowledge of what is normal and part of PTSD, but I cannot be used as a tool between you and your spouse. I can no longer go on acting as a surrogate therapist or marriage councilor. There are several message groups available on line for when you want to reach out to others who will understand.

I am only one person that cannot keep doing this 12 hours a day seven days a week while holding down a job and taking care of my own family. My health is paying the price. I posted that I am now on blood pressure medicine for the first time in my life and I'm not able to sleep. Emails keep me up too late at night and then I cannot fall asleep. There has to be a line that cannot be crossed over no matter how much more I would like to do. I simply cannot go on doing what is asked of me.

My book is on this blog. All you have to do is open it in Adobe and read it to understand what they go through as well as what a spouse goes through. It covers 18 years of the hardest time in our life together. I should not have to keep repeating what is in the book. That's why it's on line for free. Chapters are titled so that you can skip over parts you feel as if you do not need to read.

My web page at www.namguardianangel.org is on line and has five pages of information. Most of you never go there.

My videos are on line and posted on this blog. Watch them. If you still do not understand or have more questions after, then please email me. I'll be happy to answer any remaining questions but please understand the days of using me as a private therapist are over. I made it clear to you that I am not a therapist, not a psychologist or a psychiatrist. I am just one of you with 25 experience in all of this. Please stop asking me to solve all your problems.
Kathie Costos
Namguardianangel@aol.com

Fort Carson Commander wants a network of caregivers

Commander wants a network of caregivers
By TOM ROEDER
THE GAZETTE
December 17, 2007 - 12:00AM


Fort Carson’s top general says his post is ready for the growth ahead and is focusing on caring for soldiers coming home now.

Maj. Gen. Mark Graham, who took command of the post this fall, has set his top priority as building a network of Army and civilian caregivers who can address the needs of soldiers and their families as the post deals with continued wartime deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan.

With the post expecting 4,000 soldiers back from Iraq combat in the next month, Graham said he recognizes that all of his soldiers will come home changed men and women and that some of them will have what is becoming the signature disease of this war: post-traumatic stress disorder.

“PTSD is like a hurricane,” Graham said. “If you’re in the path, it doesn’t matter who you are, it hits you.”
http://www.gazette.com/articles/soldiers_30975___article.html/graham_post.html

Veterans with injuries physical and mental, struggle to adapt and get care


Derek Gee/Buffalo News
“ One night in bed I woke and had my wife in a headlock. She said ‘ What are you doing? It’s me, babe.’ ” — EDDY DELMONTE, 21, IRAQ WAR VETERAN

Veterans with injuries physical and mental, struggle to adapt and get care
By Lou Michel NEWS STAFF REPORTER Updated: 12/16/07 8:52 AM

You can see the cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in their empty shirt sleeves, the scars on their heads, in their eyes so weary from sleepless nights.

They return to their homes, trying to fit in again. Most will. Too many will not.

At least 25 local soldiers, four Marines and one sailor have been killed overseas since the war on terror began. Less known are the local veterans returning home with broken bodies or troubled souls.

Some 30,434 men and women in uniform have been wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan, but the Pentagon does not say where they are from, so it’s unclear exactly how many of the wounded hail from Western New York.

Almost 1,700 of those veterans have sought medical treatment at the Veteran Affairs Medical Center in Buffalo since 2003, with a majority seeking help for war-related injuries.
There are probably many more local veterans seeking medical treatment who are not counted in VA enrollment figures because of their status as citizen soldiers. Reservists and National Guard members often have access to private health insurance provided by from their civilian employers, according to VA officials in Washington, D.C.

But for the veterans who are trying to adjust while under the care of the local VA, the navigation of a sometimes unresponsive bureaucracy adds to the pain of life beyond the combat zone.
More than 600 of the 1,659 veterans treated here sought assistance for posttraumatic stress and other psychological readjustment troubles, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs.

go here for the rest
http://www.buffalonews.com/cityregion/buffaloerie/story/230124.html

Support the troops and get rid of Mitch McConnell

This is a no-brainer! If you really support the troops and the veterans, you need to get rid of Mitch McConnell. Take a look at his record and fully understand that while he claims to care about those who serve this nation, he has served his friends instead. This is a double post on both blogs because it is too important to not post all over the place. If you're like me, you are tired of hearing what they say but watching what they do proves they are full of hot air!

Dear VoteVets.org Supporter,
How badly do you want to send Mitch McConnell, the Senate Minority Leader, packing? Pretty bad, right? Now, how badly would you love to see an Iraq War Marine be the guy who takes McConnell's place? If you're like me, the very idea of that has you pretty pumped.
Well, I have some good news for you. Lt. Col. Andrew Horne (Ret.), a Marine who served in both the current war in Iraq and Desert Storm, has launched his campaign to beat Mitch McConnell and take this government and country back for the people. The Louisville Courier-Journal wrote of the promise Andrew holds in an editorial this weekend, saying, "Mr. Horne is a serious man, and his candidacy should be taken seriously," and "He would be a credible alternative to the incumbent."
CLICK HERE TO SUPPORT ANDREW HORNE IN HIS RACE TO BEAT MITCH MCCONNELL
While Andrew holds great promise for us this cycle, he cannot do this without your financial help. Mitch McConnell is one of the best-funded politicians in 2008, because of the support he gets from his corporate buddies. So, what's all that special interest money gotten us? Let's take just a small walk through the record of Mitch McConnell (Warning: Hold your nose):
He led the filibuster of the Webb-Hagel "Dwell Time" amendment that would have given our exhausted troops as much time at home as in the field.
He led the all-night filibuster of legislation that would have set us on a real change of course in Iraq, that would have allowed us to give Iraqis more responsibility, while freeing U.S. forces to take on the real threat to America -- al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
He consistently worked his side of the aisle against the same veterans he's been fighting tooth and nail to keep in Iraq, beating back amendments to ensure a funding stream for veterans' health care, increase Veterans' medical services by closing corporate tax loopholes, and guarantee full-funding for the Department of Veterans Affairs.
And, most recently, he callously quipped that we ought not feel too bad about those who died in Iraq, because, afterall, "remember, these are not draftees, these are full-time professional soldiers."
CLICK HERE TO TAKE DOWN MITCH MCCONNELL AND SUPPORT THE TROOPS
We all know these issues are going to come up in McConnell's campaign. When they do, at the debate, who do you want on the stage with McConnell to challenge him face-to-face? A politician, or a genuine patriot who served our nation in Iraq? As Andrew says, "Simply put, while Mitch McConnell carries George Bush's water on Iraq, I carried a rifle in Iraq."
That's the type of opponent that Mitch McConnell fears the most, but this can only come to pass if you get into the fight. That's why today, I'm proud to say VoteVets.org PAC endorses Andrew Horne for Senate, and why I am asking you to please give him your support.
Sincerely,
Jon SoltzIraq War VeteranChairman, VoteVets.org
P.S. The above links will take you to Andrew's donation page. If you're in Kentucky and are interested in helping his campaign, or just want to find out more, you can go to his website - http://salsa.wiredforchange.com/dia/track.jsp?key=135352556&url_num=4&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.andrewhorne.org%2F

Champix warning: Quit smoking drug should be avoided if you have depression

Anti-smoking pill linked to suicide

Natasha Wallace Health Reporter
December 17, 2007


THE first anti-smoking drug that specifically targets nicotine cravings will be launched in Sydney today, but there are concerns that it has been linked to depression and suicide.

Varenicline tartrate, a prescription treatment for adults marketed as Champix, will be available on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme from January 1 and will cost about $60 for a 12-week treatment and about $10 for pensioners and health care card holders. Patients will receive a subsidy for one course a year.

The drug works by blocking the effect of nicotine on the brain, reducing the pleasurable and reinforcing feelings associated with smoking. Smokers set their quit date between day eight and day 14 of taking the tablets.

Nick Zwar, professor of general practice at the University of NSW, said he was concerned about US reports of suicide and depression among users of the drug and recommended that people with mental health problems avoid it.
click post title for the rest

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Another Non-combat death

Helena soldier killed in Iraq
By MARTIN J. KIDSTON - Independent Record - 12/16/07
A 19-year-old soldier from Helena died in Iraq on Thursday of non-combat related injuries, the Department of Defense announced Saturday night.

Pvt. Daren Smith became the sixth soldier or Marine from Helena to die in the Iraq war since it began more than four years ago.

Capt. Michael MacKinnon was killed on Oct. 27, 2005; Cpl. Phillip Baucus on July 29, 2006; and Sgt. Scott Dykman on Dec. 20, 2006.

Three additional Helena men have died this year including Staff Sgt. Shane Becker on April 3, 2007; Spec. Donald Young on Aug. 8, 2007; and Smith on Thursday.

To date, 22 Montana men have died in Iraq dating back to Dec. 22, 2003, when 1st Lt. Edward Saltz was killed by a roadside bomb.

The DOD has not released any additional information regarding Smith’s death, but said the incident is still under investigation.
http://www.helenair.com/articles/2007/12/16/helena/a03121607_01.txt


UPDATE
8/13/08

Montana Discovers Local Soldier's Suicide in Iraq -- Files for Documents




Published: August 13, 2008 12:25 PMET

HELENA, MT. A U.S. Army investigation has determined the December 2007 death of a 19-year-old Montana soldier was a suicide.

Jeffrey Castro, a spokesman for the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command, told the Independent Record on Tuesday that Pvt. Daren Smith died Dec. 13, 2007, of self-inflicted wounds. [As often the case, this information only became public due to the queries of a local newspapper.]

Castro declined further comment, prompting the newspaper to file a Freedom of Information Act request for details about the soldier’s death. Attempts to reach Smith’s family Tuesday were unsuccessful.

Records show that Smith, who was born in Butte and grew up in Helena, joined the Army in March 2007. He was deployed to Iraq around Nov. 30, where he was a cavalry scout with the 10th Mountain Division.
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003838442

4th tour in Iraq with PTSD

On his fourth tour downrange, soldier would like to see system tweaked
By Nancy Montgomery, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Sunday, December 16, 2007

After his third deployment, Sgt. 1st Class Charles Tingle started to think maybe he had done his bit for the global war on terror.

He had bivouacked in Afghanistan. “We lived like animals pretty much,” he said.

He had invaded Iraq. “We never stopped rolling,” said Tingle, a mechanic. “Just not sleeping for a year, always having eyes in the back of your head.”

He had spent thousands of hours on convoys, fixed who-knows-how-many broken vehicles and, although not part of his job description, worked a nightmarish job with mortuary affairs. “Part of my life I’ll never talk about,” he said.

His grandfather died during Tingle’s first Iraq tour — he heard the news three weeks later. His wife’s parents both died on another. “They let me go on leave for 10 days,” he said. “I didn’t make it to the funeral, of course, because it took me three days to get home.”

He has been married 10 years, but has spent nearly half that time thousands of miles from his wife, whose patience with him — his absence, followed by a rocky readjustment, followed by his absence — he treasures. Most of their friends have divorced, he said, but his wife has stood by him.

“She’s a good woman,” he said.

So when his request was denied to leave Fort Campbell, Ky., after a third combat tour and go to Fort Bliss, Texas — an area near relatives and to a unit that wasn’t deploying — and he instead got orders to go to Fort Riley, Kan., Tingle protested.

“I said, ‘You all know Riley’s deploying, right?’

“They said, ‘You’re going to Third Brigade. They’re not deploying for two years.’

“So I get there, they put me in First Brigade, and they were going out the door.”

Tingle is now on his fourth combat tour, based this time at Camp Taji. None of his tours have been a cakewalk, he said, and he’s been treated in the past for post traumatic stress disorder.
click post title for the rest

How long are we going to keep doing this to them?

Building a life after escaping death

Staff Sgt. Ian Newland
“After I was wounded, I had nowhere to turn,” he said. No one told him about the Wounded Warriors program. He had been booted out of Landstuhl Army Medical Center in Germany, still heavily medicated and with no instructions about future treatment. And no one bothered to tell him he had been diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury. he fought for benefits and treatment; he worked to make sure the other wounded soldiers living in the barracks made their appointments and got what they needed. And he started to fall apart. So did his marriage as he tried to deal with his problems with alcohol.

Building a life after escaping death

Ian Newland gets help as he struggles to plan his future

Posted : Saturday Dec 15, 2007 15:52:51 EST

Staff Sgt. Ian Newland promised after Pfc. Ross McGinnis died to save his life that he would never waste the gift.

“I very easily could have died that day,” Newland said. “But my children still have a father. I try to live each day to its fullest potential because of what he did for me.”

On Dec. 4, 2006, an insurgent tossed a hand grenade through the turret of the Humvee in which McGinnis, 19, was manning the .50-caliber machine gun. McGinnis could have followed training procedures and jumped from the turret and saved himself. Instead, he threw himself on the grenade and absorbed the blast, saving four men, including Newland. For his heroic actions, McGinnis has been nominated for the Medal of Honor.

But Newland said that though his friend’s sacrifice allowed him to live, he does so with guilt and pain that have made it difficult to honor his promise.

“I thought I could have done more,” Newland said during an interview at his Colorado home. “Every second, I was reliving it. All of a sudden, I’m in the Humvee again and the grenade goes off.”

He traveled to Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia outside Washington, D.C., for McGinnis’ funeral services, and there he met McGinnis’ family.

“They were so loving and so compassionate,” Newland said. “I thought it was hard losing my soldier — this was just too much. But his dad grabbed me and said, ‘You don’t owe my son anything.’”

Pay close attention to this part from his wife

“I said, ‘I can’t handle this,’” his wife, Erin Newland, said. “‘I’m done. I just can’t take this anymore.’”

Instead, she went online and did some research, and she talked to the family therapist who had been assigned to take care of her husband’s post-traumatic stress disorder.

“I learned to not get into it with him and not get mad,” she said. “Instead, I’d just need to let him do his ranting and raving.”


go here for the rest
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2007/12/bloodbrothersside4/


Emails come in all the time from wives and girlfriends, even a few husbands and boyfriends dealing with their GI coming home. Without the tools, the knowledge of what's going on, there is little reason to stay in a marriage or relationship. Most relationships are hard anyway but when you add in PTSD, it is damn near impossible unless you have the support and gain the understanding of what this is and where all of these thoughts are coming from. When you understand you are not looking at a normal person, but a person who has been through a very abnormal time in their life, you can cope without putting yourself through hell. You can keep a marriage together and even save their lives.

I'm not going to gloss over any of this now with you. We cannot save all of them but we can get a lot closer to it than we are right now. There is no reason for them to lose all hope and take their own life. There is no reason for marriages to end when most will be able to function and start living again. We learn to adapt when there is love there. We learn to deal with the changes that cannot be overcome with therapy and medication. We learn that we can find a "normal" we can live with but only when we truly know what we are dealing with.

I cannot imagine the pain and confusion in partners of trauma survivors when they have no clue what it is. Honestly I damn near fell apart even knowing what it was from the start. I can assure you that once you have all the facts, learn the signs and come to grips with it, you can make it together. I'm not guaranteeing anything other than the simple fact no relationship has to end because of PTSD. The only thing that has to end is the way it was before because this is a whole new life together. It's relearning about who the other person is. Deep down inside their character is still there. You just have to search beneath the pain to find them there. All the love that was there before is still there and for some, it is even stronger because they survived the worst kind of events man has ever known. Most will cherish what they have more even while they deal with the ravages going on inside of them.

Ian Newland and his wife are off to a great future together because as he is healing, she is learning. Changes happen in every marriage. Add PTSD into a marriage and it becomes a roller coaster. It's a ride I've been on for 25 years and there hasn't been one dull moment in all of them. It's a price we pay for the ride he started in 1970 and never managed to get off of. At least with help, he is riding a lot higher than straight down on his own.

Blood Brothers Part Four Picking Up The Pieces of Charlie Company

Defense Department research shows one-third of Iraq war veterans have sought help for mental health issues, and officials estimate 150,000 troops have suffered concussions — mild traumatic brain injuries — since the war in Iraq began.



Picking up the pieces

Charlie 1-26 comes home from war
Stories by Kelly Kennedy - kellykennedy@militarytimes.com
Posted : Saturday Dec 15, 2007 15:52:21 EST

For 12 months, Spc. Tyler Holladay, 22, patrolled the violent streets of Adhamiya, Iraq. He raced to strap tourniquets on wounded buddies to save their arms and legs. He picked out pieces of shrapnel and performed battlefield tracheotomies to open airways.

As a medic, he’d seen more than enough to know he wanted to avoid bullets, grenades and roadside bombs — especially roadside bombs. Back in March, when a military police company had hit a daisy-chain of roadside bombs, Holladay helped fill body bags with the liquefied remains of fellow soldiers.

“That was the day I thought, ‘You’re not only going to die here, you’re going to be disfigured,’” he said. “‘It’s going to hurt. It’s going to be quick. And it’s going to be messy.’”

Now it was the last day of July 2007, almost exactly a year since he took up residence at Combat Outpost Apache in Adhamiya, one of Baghdad’s worst neighborhoods, and Holladay was out on patrol with Alpha Company. The platoon was searching an abandoned car. Normally, they would have first surrounded it with Bradleys to keep themselves safe from snipers, but not this time. They were in a hurry and had only one Bradley on the patrol.

“I’m on one knee between the car and a wall,” Holladay said. “I take two steps back, and I’m joking about a girl, and all of a sudden, I heard a loud bang. I looked down and realized I’d been shot.”

The bullet entered through his back and exited through his stomach. He understood instantly that he had a stomach wound — on a soldier’s most-feared list, it stands just behind a sucking chest wound. He also knew he would have to treat it himself.

“My gunner was looking at me with a dry Curlex bandage,” Holladay said. “I needed a wet dressing. I had him treat my back while I concentrated on the front.”

He could tell his large and small intestines had been hit.

“I realized my stomach was filling up, so I had some internal bleeding,” he said. “I knew what the chances for survival were. I was really scared.”

As he started to fade out, he asked his gunner to relay a message to the other medics: “I love them and I’ll miss them.”

“Probably the greatest feeling in my life was to wake up,” Holladay said. Doctors at a military hospital in Baghdad had stitched his intestines back together. He couldn’t eat for several days, but would require no further surgery.

Holladay was the last member of 1-26 wounded in Adhamiya. In 15 months, 31 men from 1-26 were killed and 122 wounded, making it the hardest-hit battalion since the Vietnam War. Charlie Company suffered the most, with 14 men killed — most of them in Adhamiya, one attached to another company. Holladay had served as one of Charlie’s medics, but he remained at Apache when the company moved to the base established at the old Ministry of Defense.

“I could never get away from Sector 19,” he said, referring to Adhamiya’s roughest area. “And sure as hell, I got shot in Sector 19.”
go here for the rest

http://www.armytimes.com/news/2007/12/bloodbrothers4/

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Iraq conflict rekindles local Vietnam Vets' trauma

Iraq conflict rekindles local Vietnam Vets' trauma

By ROBERT M. COOK
Staff Writer
bcook@fosters.com


Article Date: Sunday, December 16, 2007
While many Americans may find daily television news coverage of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan disturbing, Joe Carroll finds it especially difficult.

"This war that we got now has brought everything back to me, especially the roadside bombs," said the Rochester resident, who is a Vietnam veteran.

The war on terror has sparked a resurgence of his post traumatic stress disorder symptoms, sparking a flare-up in the condition he's battled since returning from Southeast Asia 40 years ago.

He said he's started to have the same nightmares he had several years ago, nightmares that would make him wake up in a cold sweat and feel disoriented.

Carroll worked in a transportation unit that operated convoys. The trucks faced the threat of mined roads and often came under attack from snipers, he said.

"Getting hit in the convoys," is one dream Carroll often has, "or being shot from the side of the road on rice paddies."

One of his worst nightmares is related to one of the worst days he had in Vietnam. One night, members of his Army unit, the 573rd Transportation Co., were ordered to do a nighttime convoy run at high speed to reduce the risk of attack, Carroll said.

The soldiers were told that if anything or anyone got in their way they were to ignore it and keep driving. That proved tragic — Carroll said he hit and killed a Vietnamese man and child, but didn't realize it until after they'd reached their destination and saw body parts underneath the truck.

"I can still see them there," Carroll said.
click post title for the rest


Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam is an Emmy award winning 1987 documentary directed by Bill Couturié. Using real letters written by US soldiers and archive footage, the film creates a highly personal experience of the Vietnam War.
Roger Ebert commented, "There have been many great movies about Vietnam. This is the one that completes the story."
For my husband, it was watching Dear America, over and over and over again. He'd sit on the sofa, beer in on hand and the other holding a cigarette, both hands shaking. It came out in 1987 a year after that horrible day when I miscarried the twins. The only war back then was the one he was still fighting in his mind, Vietnam. I was fighting my own battles for him and against him, trying to get him to go for help. It didn't matter how much I knew about PTSD or Vietnam or what was happening to him. Nothing could get him to go for help. Yet even knowing what I knew about PTSD, I thought he would be willing to go for help if I had been a better wife, if I had a healthy baby, anything and everything ran through my mind because no matter what the facts were, I refused to think that it was all hopeless for us. I refused to think that his love for me was too weak to fight against Vietnam. I was wrong.

It took three more years to get him to just go to a psychologist, then to the Veterans center, then another three years to get him to go to the VA. All in all it took 14 years of watching him die a slow death for him to really begin to heal. He came home with signs of PTSD in 1971. All the issues he was dealing with, he was dealing with them. He coped. He covered up. He dealt with the flashbacks and nightmares. We dealt with the mood swings and his need to get away from crowds and his back needing to be against the wall instead of out in the middle of a restaurant. It took the secondary stressor of losing the twins to send him over the edge so extremely that I had to beg him to come back to the hospital that very night. All that was going on inside of him were no longer quirks. They were destroying him.

By the time Dear America came out, I was living with a stranger. My father passed away in 1987 but by then my best friend was cold, angry and ambivalent. When I discovered I was pregnant again, I was pretty shocked. Sex was a rarity but it was enough to begin the next chapter of our lives. Our daughter will be 20 next month. Looking back on those days, it astonishes me that we made it through all of those times. He is living proof that with therapy and medication, there is always hope. He is the reason why I keep drilling it into heads that it is never too late for healing to begin.

He is also the reason why I push so hard for help to be delivered as soon as possible. Had he been helped when he came home from Vietnam, we would not have spent so much of our lives dealing with the horrors, stress on our relationship, financial hardships or anything else that came with the lack of help. Instead of being retired early, he would still be doing the job he loved and still making a good living. I would be able to work full time again and financially we would be a lot better off as well as our marriage would be healthier, because of how close we had been in the beginning. The lost years ate away at him. We can never get those years back and no matter how much I have tried, there is still much more to overcome as far as my own painful memories.

It saddens me beyond belief when I hear of today's veterans heading into the same altered reality as he did knowing how much is possible right now. Things that were never even envisioned back then are possible today because of the work the Vietnam veterans did to make it all possible. Yet the delays, the backlog of claims, the sporadic help available to these veterans is basically killing off their futures as well as eliminating hope in them. You would think that with a mountain of studies the people in charge would be mobilizing every mental health professional in the nation to get every veteran dealing with PTSD into treatment as soon as they show the slightest sign of needing help, but they don't. They talk about doing it instead of doing it. They hold hearings as if they are going to hear anything new. They waste time as lives slip away. If they have not heard all the facts by now, they have not been listening. We need such a loud voice, they can never say they did not hear us again. Our veterans need our help today so they won't need help 20 years from now. How much time are we going to waste? How many lives are we going to let suffer with PTSD needlessly? How many more people will look back at lost years and wonder what could have been done to spare them the pain they had to go through? How many more veterans will be beyond reach next year? kc

PTSD and the government who would not listen or learn

I post extensively on the fact people like me were screaming from the start of operations in Afghanistan and Iraq but no one would listen. Whenever I find more reports going back to before the first set of boots landed in either occupation, I post it and then scream. This is yet one more of those cases when reports come out about what was already known and available for the "planners" to use in assessing the needs of our wounded coming back. Researchers and specialists have been studying PTSD for over 30 years. Why wasn't any of the data used? Why didn't anyone take a serious look at what history had already proven? No one cared! No everyone is pretending to be oh so shocked at why there are so many with PTSD or why there have been so many suicides and veterans ending up homeless already. Give me a break! They either knew and didn't care or they didn't care to know. None of this should have surprised anyone. Worse is that none of it had to happen the way it did.

Predicting Post-traumatic Stress Disorders In Deployed Veterans
ScienceDaily (Dec. 15, 2007) — Canada’s peacekeepers suffer similar rates of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders (PTSD) as combat, war-zone soldiers, according to a London, Ont. research team.


Psychiatrist J. Donald Richardson and his co-investigators also found that PTSD rates and severity were associated with younger age, single marital status and deployment frequency.

Richardson is a consultant psychiatrist with the Operational Stress Injury Clinic at Parkwood Hospital, part of St. Joseph’s Health Care, London and a professor with the Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry at The University of Western Ontario.

His team conducted a random, national survey of more than 1,000 Canadian peacekeeping veterans with service-related disabilities. The participants were below the age of 65 and had served with the Canadian Forces from 1990 to 1999.

The research, published in the Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, found a third of veterans deployed more than once suffered probable clinical depression, and 30 per cent of those deployed one time were affected.

The rates of probable PTSD were 11 per cent for those deployed once and 15 per cent for those deployed more than once. The authors also found peacekeepers were more likely to have PTSD and more severe symptoms if they were young, single, or had multiple deployments.

“This study has important clinical implications because understanding such risk factors can help predict potential psychiatric problems in veterans who have been deployed,” says Richardson.

“The high rates of depression observed in deployed veterans can have a significant impact when they seek treatment for PTSD because depression must be aggressively treated to help patients respond more effectively to psychotherapy.”

“Many veterans are also living and working in the community as civilians, therefore it is important that primary care physicians and psychiatrists become more knowledgeable about the emotional impact of military deployment and screen for possible PTSD," says Richardson.

The Operational Stress Injury Clinic is funded by Veterans Affairs Canada and provides specialized services to help veterans and members of the Canadian Forces deal with PTSD, anxiety, depression or addiction resulting from military service.

Adapted from materials provided by University of Western Ontario.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/12/071213120937.htm


Related Stories
For Iraq Veterans, Migraines May Be Sign Of Other Problems (May 4, 2007) — Soldiers returning from combat in Iraq who have migraine headaches are more than twice as likely to also have symptoms of post-traumatic stress, depression or anxiety than soldiers who do not have ... > read more
Traumatic Events, But Not Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, Common In Childhood (May 10, 2007) — Potentially traumatic events are common in children but do not typically result in post-traumatic stress symptoms or disorder, according to a new ... > read more
Asthma Linked To Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (Nov. 16, 2007) — For the first time, a study has linked asthma with post-traumatic stress disorder among adults in the community. The study of male twins who were veterans of the Vietnam era suggests that the ... > read more
Vietnam Combat Linked To Many Diseases 20 Years Later (Nov. 26, 1997) — Veterans of heavy combat in Vietnam who were diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are significantly more likely to have a host of both chronic and infectious diseases as long as 20 ... > read more

Friday, December 14, 2007

Another Likely Soldier Suicide in Iraq

Another Likely Soldier Suicide in Iraq



Published: December 14, 2007 12:35 PM ET

MINNEAPOLIS The local press usually covers quickly and heavily the death of any local man or woman who dies in Iraq. But in the case of Army Spc. Randy W. Pickering, who died Sunday under mysterious circumtances, this wasn't the case. He was listed by the Pentagon as coming from Bovey, Minn. but no one could quite place him near there except for a two-year period.

Then the story grew even grimmer with reports that he was likely another suicide in Iraq -- just as national news outlets were reporting that the military had confirmed a surge this year in that category.

Pickering, 31, died Sunday in Baghdad of "injuries sustained in a non-combat related incident," the Defense Department said in a news release Monday. It said his death was under investigation.

His brother, Chris Pickering, of Mason, Mich., told the Associated Press later in the week that the family expected to get the autopsy results soon. He said initial reports they got from the military is that his death might have been a suicide.

Soldiers Mother raises funds for veterans center

Reporters are now on official notice. Next time they want to run a story and repeat figures they are given by administration officials more interested in covering their asses than they are fixing a problem, all they are managing to do is become part of the problem instead of the solution. I lost count on how many erroneous figures they have printed over the last four years. Notice this part of this report?

She became an advocate for veterans’ mental health after her son returned home from Iraq with post traumatic stress disorder. The Veterans Administration reported that 317,000 veterans were treated for PTSD at VA medical centers and clinics in 2005.


Now back to this incredible woman. It took a mother's love to do this and she is doing what the government should have been doing all along but they just didn't care enough.
Mother raises funds for veterans center

James Coburn
The Edmond Sun

EDMOND — The joy troops feel when returning home from war is too often replaced by depression, anxiety, family problems, even sometimes post traumatic stress disorder as days turn to months.

A new Pentagon study reveals that nearly one-third of 88,000 veterans returning from Afghanistan and Iraq confront mental health problems. The study is reported in the November issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. The suicide rate in the Army has reached its highest level in 26 years, according to the National Alliance on Mental Illness.

The reintegration time that the Department of Defense provides for troops coming home is between 96 hours to five days, said Cindy Collins-Clark of Edmond, founder of Veterans’ Families United Foundation.

Clark founded the organization in 2006 to provide compassionate, holistic resources to encourage healing from combat trauma and a healthy transition from military service to civilian life.

The 2006 Oklahoma Mother of the Year and licensed mental health counselor long has contended that the readjustment period for military men and women returning from war needs to be longer.

Clark has proposed a Readjustment Facility and Family Annex for Veterans to help reduce the severity of mental illness. She said the project is considered by the Department of Defense as too expensive to be part of the overall military process. So she’s trying to raise $1.5 million of private funding for a center for veterans and their family members. So far, nobody has responded to her proposals.

“A readjustment period theoretically could reduce the severity of mental illness, of violence in homes, of incarcerated veterans — the total cost to our government,” Clark said.

Clark has three degrees to her credit, two of which are master’s degrees in education and counseling from the University of Central Oklahoma. She became a professional counselor in 2000.
go here for the rest
http://www.edmondsun.com/local/local_story_348121434.html

When we fail to value the warrior


Three Local Homeless Vets Laid to Rest



DALLAS (WBAP) - Three homeless Vietnam-era Army veterans were buried with honors Tuesday morning during three separate services at Dallas-Fort Worth National Cemetery.

Army veteran Macklin James Walker, 55, died on November 15, 2007. He asked for a ride to a homeless shelter and died on the way.

On October 22, 2007, Retired Army veteran Edna Lou Nolan passed away. The 69-year-old was dropped off at a local hospital and died the next day.

Army veteran Gilbert Hermes Mixon, 55, was found dead in White Lake Creek in Dallas in Sept. A family friend had to identify him.

None of the three homeless veterans had any family members present at their burial services, but one woman did come to support Mr. Mixon.
go here for the rest
http://www.wbap.com/Article.asp?id=530067&spid=6051


Senator Joe Biden said in a debate "My father told me, don't tell me what you value. Show me your budget and I'll know what you value." In this case it is apparent this President does not value the warrior close to the wars, which are in fact occupations. Bush has never once requested any kind of emergency supplemental funds for the veterans or for the wounded under the Department of Defense, despite the travesty of what they are coming home to with claims backlogs, understaffed departments, sporadic resources, geographic areas with little or no facilities at all, veterans centers opening under media spotlight closing down suddenly without any warning. The list goes on. This nation has once again proven they do not value the warriors they send to risk their lives.

Veterans die from neglect. They die waiting for their wounds to be treated and taken care of. They die suffering financial hardships none of them would have to go through had it not been for the wounds they received in service to this nation. They die at their own hand because combat wounds brought back in their minds were treated with indifference.

Active duty forces die from neglect. They are treated with the same apathy the discharged receive. You could hold a parade everyday of the year and place monuments to their sacrifices from Boston to San Francisco without doing one damn thing for any of them when they are living monuments needing care and attention. None of the parades and monuments really mean anything in their lives. Do we think we are doing anything at all for them with these things? Or is it a matter of easing our own conscience because we do so little for them?

Budget of the United States Government, FY 2007
Provides $439.3 billion for the Department of Defense’s base budget—a 7-percent increase over 2006 and a 48-percent increase over 2001


This is what this government values. Not the veterans needing help for the wounds they receive.


Employees
235,000+ (2006)
Annual Budget
$73.2 billion (2006)

It was formerly called the Veterans Administration, also called the VA, which was established July 21, 1930, to consolidate and coordinate government activities affecting war veterans. The VA incorporated the functions of the former U.S. Veterans' Bureau, the Bureau of Pensions of the Interior Department and the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers.

Long Beach VA medical center
On October 25, 1988, President Reagan signed legislation creating a new federal Cabinet-level Department of Veterans Affairs to replace the Veterans Administration effective March 15, 1989.
In both its old and new forms, the VA drew its mission statement from President Abraham Lincoln's eloquent Second Inaugural Address. The specific phrase quoted by VA is: "...to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan...".

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Department_of_Veterans_Affairs


Consider how much money is spent in a single year deploying the warriors and then think of all the veterans from the current occupations added to the wars of the past. When you look at the budget you need to see the faces of all veterans in the VA system and then you begin to understand how tragic this all is and how telling what is really valued in this nation.

"At a time when he says he wants to "rein in spending" the President has submitted a budget that includes an eye-popping request of $726 billion in new spending for the Department of Defense and for war-related costs for 2007-2008.
This includes $245 billion ($235 billion for Department of Defense) in new spending for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan-including a $100 billion supplemental request for FY 2007 and a $145 billion request for FY 2008."

http://majorityleader.house.gov/docUploads/BushBudgetIraq0708.pdf


"To care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan..." If we managed to come close to living up to this, do you think we would have so many homeless veterans? So many suicides? So many trapped in a system wounded and waiting? We have so few veterans compared to the general population. With over 300 million people we do not even have 30 million veterans and only about 17 million of them are combat veterans. We don't take care of them but we can if we ever really wanted to live up to the "grateful nation" title we love to use during their funerals when the flag is folded perfectly for the widow or the orphan left behind. Or in the case of these three homeless veterans, no one was there to receive the flag or the "gratefulness" of this nation.

Kathie Costos
Namguardianangel@aol.com
http://www.namguardianangel.org/
http://www.namguardianangel.blogspot.com/
http://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

Surge Seen in Number of Homeless Veterans


Surge Seen in Number of Homeless Veterans
By ERIK ECKHOLM
Published: November 8, 2007
WASHINGTON, Nov. 7 — More than 400 veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars have turned up homeless, and the Veterans Affairs Department and aid groups say they are bracing for a new surge in homeless veterans in the years ahead.

Experts who work with veterans say it often takes several years after leaving military service for veterans’ accumulating problems to push them into the streets. But some aid workers say the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans appear to be turning up sooner than the Vietnam veterans did.

“We’re beginning to see, across the country, the first trickle of this generation of warriors in homeless shelters,” said Phil Landis, chairman of Veterans Village of San Diego, a residence and counseling center. “But we anticipate that it’s going to be a tsunami.”

With more women serving in combat zones, the current wars are already resulting in a higher share of homeless women as well. They have an added risk factor: roughly 40 percent of the hundreds of homeless female veterans of recent wars have said they were sexually assaulted by American soldiers while in the military, officials said.


According to the V.A., some 196,000 veterans of all ages were homeless on any given night in 2006. That represents a decline from about 250,000 a decade back, Mr. Dougherty said, as housing and medical programs grew and older veterans died.

The most troubling face of homelessness has been the chronic cases, those who live in the streets or shelters for more than year. Some 44,000 to 64,000 veterans fit that category, according to the National Alliance study.

On Wednesday, the Bush administration announced what it described as “remarkable progress” for the chronic homeless. Alphonso R. Jackson, the secretary of housing and urban development, said a new policy of bringing the long-term homeless directly into housing, backed by supporting services, had put more than 20,000, or about 12 percent, into permanent or transitional homes.

A collaborative program of the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the V.A. has developed 1,780 such units. The National Alliance said the number needed to grow by 25,000.

click post title for the rest

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Man hangs himself in jail while waiting over a year for trial on assault charges

Man found dead in apparent suicide at jail in Port Angeles
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PORT ANGELES, Wash. -- A jail inmate in Port Angeles has been found hanging dead in his cell, and Clallam County sheriff's deputies say it appears to be a suicide.
Guards found 47-year-old John Young hanging by a bedsheet from a bunk in his cell Wednesday afternoon. Jail officials say he was not on a suicide watch and appeared OK when he was checked 45 minutes earlier.
The last suicide in the Clallam County jail was on March 6, 2001.
Young had been in jail since May 2006 awaiting trial on first-degree assault and other charges from Forks. The trial had been rescheduled eight times, most recently to Jan. 14.
According to a statement from jail officials, Young had asked to be placed alone in a segregation cell. Sheriff's Deputy Ron Cameron says he doesn't know the circumstances behind that request.
Information from: Peninsula Daily News,
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/

GOP Rep. Joe Donnelly privatizes TBI treatment?

Bill offers private TBI treatment - for some

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Thursday Dec 13, 2007 19:33:14 EST

An Indiana lawmaker is claiming victory for getting a provision included in the 2008 defense authorization bill that could make it possible for troops and veterans with traumatic brain injury to be treated by private-sector specialists.

However, the bill does not guarantee that option, said veterans’ advocate Meredith Beck of the nonprofit Wounded Warriors Project.

The provision allows the Defense Department to determine if private care is warranted by medical necessity, which leaves room for interpretation.

“We do not know how this may or may not be used,” said Beck, national legislative director of the group.
go here for the rest
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2007/12/military_TBI_privatetreatment_071213w/

Why would he think this was a good idea? Why does it always seem the GOP want to deny the problem and pass it off to someone else? Do they really hate the government that much? Face it. When they had the chance to take care of the wounded and give them the best care they deserved, they held hearings on other things instead of why they were not being taken care of. They didn't want to deal with any of this. Now, even after the voters told them they were doing a pissy job, they come up with letting traumatic brain injured soldiers go to private doctors? And the Democrats are just as bad for thinking this is a good idea! Does anyone in Washington have a clue what is going on and what needs to be done with any of these issues while lives are on the line?

Senate committee approves Peake to lead VA

Senate committee approves Peake to lead VA

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Thursday Dec 13, 2007 19:35:53 EST

The Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee unanimously approved the nomination of retired Lt. Gen. James Peake to be the next secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs on Thursday, and the full Senate could approve the appointment by the end of the day.

Sen. Daniel Akaka, D-Hawaii, the committee chairman, said the only serious questions about Peake, a former Army surgeon general who spent 39 years on active duty, involved his post-service employment by a company that held contracts to provide medical examinations and other services to VA.
go here for the rest
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2007/12/military_peake_071213/

I wish him luck. He can't be half as bad as Nicholson was at it. At least, I pray to God he isn't!

Suspected Army suicides set record

Suspected Army suicides set record
By Gregg Zoroya, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — A record number of soldiers — 109 — have killed themselves this year, according to Army statistics showing confirmed or suspected suicides.
The deaths occur as soldiers serve longer combat deployments and the Army spends $100 million on support programs.


ON DEADLINE: Vets' suicides also being scrutinized

"Soldiers, families and equipment are stretched and stressed," Gen. George Casey, Army chief of staff, told Congress last month.

The Army provided suicide statistics to Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash. Her staff shared them with USA TODAY.

FIND MORE STORIES IN: Iraq Afghanistan Army Sen. Patty Murray
Those numbers show 77 confirmed suicides Army-wide this year through Nov. 27 and 32 other deaths pending final determination as suicides.

The Army updated those statistics Wednesday, confirming 85 suicides, including 27 in Iraq and four in Afghanistan.
go here for the rest
http://www.usatoday.com/news/military/2007-12-12-Army-suicides_N.htm

Southwestern Oregon Veteran's Outreach

Area veterans cope with post traumatic stress
By Azenith Smith
North Bend - It's a disorder that affects millions of veterans nationwide, and here in Coos County, a local veteran's outreach program is seeing more and more clients dealing with it.

According to Vic Diaz, founder and president of the Southwestern Oregon Veteran's Outreach, or SOVO, in the past three months, they've had a significant increase of combat veterans, returning from the Iraq War, who have post traumatic stress disorder or PTSD.

Common symptoms include thoughts of depression and suicide, as well as isolation and withdrawal.

It's a problem that's affecting their way of life, as many of them tend to lose their jobs and have issues with their families.

"If the husband or the wife, who have been to war, come home, after time the rest of the family starts suffering from post traumatic stress disorder," says Diaz.

But he says, it can be treated and SOVO does offer resources like licensed psychiatrists and peer counselors to help veterans with PTSD and to let them know that they're not alone.

"The one thing in military is that they understand that we don't leave our dead or wounded out on the battlefield," says Diaz. "That doesn't stop once they come home, we still believe it and still live it.

If you are a veteran dealing with the disorder, or know someone who is, SOVO's open five days a week and welcome walk-ins.

For more information, call (541) 756-8718.

VA owes it to war veterans to provide licensed staff

VA owes it to war veterans to provide licensed staff
A Times Editorial
Published December 13, 2007

Service members wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan are returning with injuries that our troops did not survive in previous wars. That's a credit to medical advances in combat cases. But survivors are at risk of developing posttraumatic stress and other mental problems that America's veterans health care system is not equipped to handle. The president needs to get the Department of Veterans Affairs up to speed.

Brian Nussbaum, a psychologist at the James A. Haley VA Medical Center in Tampa, filed a complaint last month with the state Board of Psychology. He charged that about 12 of Haley's 34 psychologists are unlicensed and receiving little direct supervision. The VA quibbled with the figure, saying nine are unlicensed. That's still nearly a third of the staff at the nation's busiest VA facility. Nussbaum told the St. Petersburg Times he is the only licensed psychologist in Haley's Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Clinic.

VA officials denied that patient care was diminished. They said unlicensed staff receive ample supervision and are on track to obtain their licenses. But none of the 22 psychologists at St. Petersburg's Bay Pines VA Medical Center, which also operates a posttraumatic stress clinic, are unlicensed. That's the way it should be. As a director of health policy for the Veterans of Foreign Wars said: "Experience counts." Advocates say trainees lack the specialized skills, work history and supervision needed to treat an especially vulnerable veterans population.
go here for the rest
http://www.sptimes.com/2007/12/13/Opinion/VA_owes_it_to_war_vet.shtml


As I said when this first came out, this is wrong. What's next? Asking the custodian to fill in at an empty desk so they can say they are fully staffed?