Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Tammy Duckworth moving moutains out of the way


Illinois to screen Guard troops for brain injury, combat stress

By CARLA K. JOHNSON

CHICAGO - Illinois is the first state in the nation to launch a brain injury screening program for all its National Guard troops returning from combat and a 24-hour hot line to help veterans with battle-related stress.

The Illinois Warriors Assistance Program is designed to plug gaps at the federal level in care for soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, state Department of Veterans Affairs Director Tammy Duckworth said Tuesday.

The confidential hot line addresses the stigma that a veteran in crisis may want to avoid, Duckworth said.

"When he wakes up in the middle of the night, like I did for many nights, and you're shaking and it's 2 a.m., you can pick up that hot line and reach a clinician," she said.

Duckworth, an Iraq veteran who lost her legs in combat, and Gov. Rod Blagojevich launched the program Tuesday. The state has received phone calls from 27 other states interested in using the program as a model, she said.

The $8 million program will screen returning Guard troops for traumatic brain injury, known commonly as concussion, and post-traumatic stress disorder.

click post title for the rest

When Tammy Duckworth returned from Iraq to Illinois, she was still on a mission. This mission had her just as concerned for the welfare of her brothers and sisters in uniform. She decided to take on the status quo and make a real difference.

Since her voice was heard by Governor Blagojevich, Duckworth has been getting mountains out of the way of the wounded coming back. From PTSD to TBI, she has been a warrior in action. This kind of dedication is what it will take to actually become a grateful nation that does in fact take care of our wounded veterans.

She is doing it all right. From the emergency call in center, this provides anonymity to the veteran. They can call in the middle of the night because that's when it is the worst for the majority of them. They wake up from dreams as real as the event itself. It's all there from the sites, voices and other sounds, the smell and the fear all combined with the carnage they witnessed. Sometimes the dreams are even more devastating than the event. They are also afraid of being labeled "crazy" while often they will say "If anyone knew what was going on inside my head, they'd lock me up" simply because they don't understand this is all normal reactions to very abnormal events. On the other end of the phone they hear a calm, reassuring voice telling them it'll be ok. The next step is getting them the help they need.

This is what I've been doing for years. Out of the 25 years of veterans outreach, the last 10 have been online. They find me when they are close to suicide. I'm one person. I can't be there in the middle of the night for them. Often when I open up my emails their emails are buried in about a hundred others. By the time I read them, I say a prayer responding that they are still alive to answer. There have been times when they never responded to my reply. I often wonder what happened to them. When they do write back, it's a series of emails flying back and forth until I get them to know what PTSD, what is normal in all of this and try to get them to the point where they are ready to go for help.

It's hard to walk a fine line between needing to back off to give them time to digest what's happening and being concerned for their safety. When I don't hear from them for a day or so in this process, I usually type out a "just checking on you" short email. Once they get into the help they need, I usually don't hear from them after that but occasionally they'll email to let me know how it's going. It's a take a deep breath time at least six times a day.

This is why the call centers are vital to keeping them alive. To loose more after combat than we do during it, is pathetic. It is a statement that we as a nation have done very little when it comes to addressing the threat to their lives following them home. They are not "crazy" and most of them are not even addicted to the drugs and alcohol they use. For the most part they are trying to kill off the flashbacks and twitches. Once treatment begins, most never touch the stuff again. They are not criminals and don't like breaking the law, but with PTSD comes very irrational actions usually combined with seeking relief.

Most of the crimes we read in the paper can be connected with post combat stress. The tragic fact is if the help was available to all of them, especially considering they didn't have a criminal background, these crimes could have been prevented. This is not even discussing the problems associated with vaccinations they are given and some of the medication they are given to calm them down or help them sleep.

I was speaking with a VA Doctor today and we were discussing what his program does, while this lead into what is not being done. The VA centers need to be up and running across the nation. The VA and service organizations across the country need to begin to do support groups for the families to stop the family from falling apart during a time when the veteran is in the most need of their support and understanding.

I don't know how many times I've posted that had I not known what PTSD was, my husband and I would have divorced long ago. I had the tools to keep us together and get him the help he needed.

Duckworth and Illinois understands this. The question is, does the rest of the country understand it enough?

Keith Ryan Suicide In Pakistan worked for State Dept.

Home / Globe / Obituaries
Keith Ryan, at 37; attaché for US Customs in Pakistan
By Bryan Marquard
Globe Staff / January 29, 2008
Growing up in Hingham, Keith Ryan held his political beliefs so strongly that he seemed like a real-life version of a popular TV character who was considerably more conservative than everyone else in his household.

"We used to kid when he was in high school that it was like 'Family Ties' - he was Alex Keaton," said Mr. Ryan's father, Bob, a sports columnist for the Globe.

His political convictions brought Mr. Ryan into a career of federal service, which ultimately led to Pakistan, where he was an attaché for the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, based in Islamabad. Mr. Ryan apparently took his life, according to the US State Department, and was found yesterday in his Islamabad residence. He was 37 and was about to return home to visit his wife and three children in Silver Spring, Md.

"As anyone who has been confronted with the suicide of a family member can tell you, the only word to describe the sensation is devastated," Bob Ryan said. "We will always have questions."
click post title for the rest

Drum soldier dies after reporting chest pain

Drum soldier dies after reporting chest pain

Staff report
Posted : Tuesday Jan 29, 2008 16:35:53 EST

A 10th Mountain Division soldier died Jan. 28 after complaining of chest pains while on duty, according to a press release from Fort Drum, N.Y.

Sgt. 1st Class Ritchie A. Morgan, 41, was a food service noncommissioned officer assigned to 6th Squadron, 6th Cavalry Regiment, 10th Combat Aviation Brigade.

Morgan was taken to Guthrie Acute Care Clinic in Watertown, N.Y., after he complained of chest pains. Life-saving measures were performed there before he was transported to Samaritan Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead.

Morgan, a native of Murphysboro, Ill., joined the Army in September 1987. He served in Korea; Fort Carson, Colo.; Germany; Fort Stewart, Ga.; and Mission Viejo, Calif., before being assigned to Fort Drum in November 2003. His deployments include a six-month tour in Kuwait in 1998 and a six-month tour in Macedonia in 2001. Morgan is survived by his wife, who is at Fort Drum. The cause of death is under investigation.
go here for the rest
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/01/army_drumdeath_080129w/

PTSD:Dogs chase nightmares of war away

Dogs chase nightmares of war away
Story Highlights
Service dogs can help veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder

Dogs can sense and ease panic attacks, depression

Caring for animal forces patient to overcome social isolation

Small survey found less dependence on drugs after dogs arrived
By Joan Shim



(LifeWire) -- Jo Hanna Schaffer's dog is more than a best friend. The 67-year-old Vietnam veteran, a former Army medic, suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and three years ago, she decided to get a service dog, a Chihuahua named Cody. Cody barks if someone is approaching from behind and cuddles with her when she is depressed.


With Cindy, a Bernese mountain dog, by her side, retired Air Force Capt. Karen Alexander can leave her home without fear


"I never took a pill for PTSD that did as much for me as Cody has done," says the Billerica, Massachusetts, resident, who no longer takes medication for the disorder.

Schaffer is one of a growing number of veterans with PTSD who are turning to an alternative therapy: psychiatric service dogs.

Like guide dogs for the blind, psychiatric service dogs aid people with mental illnesses, from anxiety disorder to bipolar disorder to PTSD. The dogs are trained to know when their owners are depressed or having a panic attack, for example, and the animals might calm them down by curling up in their lap or giving a nudge. Watch dogs who help calm troops on frontlines of war »

For five years, Persian Gulf War veteran Karen Alexander, 52, of Pensacola, Florida, has relied on Cindy, a Bernese mountain dog that can sense when Alexander is having an anxiety attack.

"She'll come up and touch me, and that is enough of a stimulus to break the loop, bring me back to reality," says the retired Air Force captain. "Sometimes I'll scratch my hand until it's raw and won't realize until she comes up to me and brings me out. She's such a grounding influence for me."

More veterans diagnosed

The use of service dogs for mental illness has emerged in the past decade, says Dr. Joan Esnayra, founder and president of the Psychiatric Service Dog Society. Esnayra coined the term "psychiatric service dog" in 1997 and has worked with thousands of people who are using the animals. She estimates that the society's online community is adding more than 400 members each year.

http://www.cnn.com/2008/LIVING/personal/01/29/dogs.veterans/

Paul Sullivan and Veterans For Common Sense Fighting for Veterans


Jan. 29 Update: Wounded Warrior Bill Becomes Law; VCS Testifies on Feb. 7; and Bush Lies Started Iraq War


VCS sends you three important items in this week’s update: 1) The President signed the "Dignity for Wounded Warriors Act;" 2) VCS testifies next week before Congress about VA’s budget; and, 3) An enormous mountain of evidence shows conclusively that the President lied to start his failed Iraq War.


First, on Jan. 28, the "Dignified Treatment of Wounded Warriors Act" was signed into law by the President after intense advocacy work by veterans. VCS members worked very hard to pass the new law. VCS worked with two groups to make this happen: "Empowering Veterans" and "Veterans and Families for Military Progress." Now we need to make sure the law is followed.
Second, On Feb. 7, VCS will offer facts and common sense policy solutions when we testify before Congress.

VCS will ask that VA stop making veterans wait for medical care and disability benefits. Please send VCS your ideas on what we should tell Congress on Feb. 7: Paul@VeteransForCommonSense.org.


Third, a new report thoroughly documents how President George W. Bush repeatedly lied hundreds of times to start his lost Iraq War. In March 2003, VCS wrote the President and challenged his assertions.

We remain correct, and the President continues to be disastrously and completely wrong.


We fought and won the battle for the Wounded Warrior bill, we will be testifying before Congress again fighting for veterans, and we are challenging the many serious policy failures of the current administration. VCS needs your financial support to keep up the fight. We set a new record of $16,000 in donations last month, including one contribution for $10,000.


However, our January 2008 donations remain low.

Please honor Thomas Paine’s 271st Birthday today by donating to VCS so we can continue our publicity and policy efforts on issues we care about – veterans, national security, and civil liberties.


Your generous donation of $30 or $50 helps VCS with our on-going class action lawsuit against VA so that no veteran is forced to wait. With your help, we can hire more staff and win more victories for veterans.
Paul Sullivan

Executive DirectorVeterans for Common Sense

If I wasn't out of work, I'd give them a big fat donation! Their work is very important and expensive. They cannot work for free. Heck, at this point, I can't either, but this is not my job. It's my passion!

AKAKA AND SANDERS CALL FOR MORE PTSD CENTER FUNDING

DEMOCRATIC PRESS RELEASE

January 25, 2008

AKAKA AND SANDERS CALL FOR MORE PTSD CENTER FUNDING



WASHINGTON, D.C. -U.S. Senator Daniel K. Akaka (D-HI), Chairman of the Veterans' Affairs Committee, and Senator Bernard Sanders (I-VT), a member of the Committee, sent a letter this week urging the Department of Veterans Affairs to dedicate additional funding to the National Center for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (NCPTSD).

Congress last year passed an unprecedented budget increase for VA in Fiscal Year 2008 which included funds for the NCPTSD. In their letter to Secretary of Veterans Affairs James Peake, Senators Akaka and Sanders called for an additional $2 million for the NCPTSD above the previous year's funding level. The Center is a leader in research and education on PTSD, and provides clinical tools and guidance to clinicians around the country.


"The National Center for PTSD continues to make valuable contributions to the understanding and treatment of PTSD, and America's veterans are better off thanks to their work. Additional funding will enable them to address critical issues and facilitate better care for veterans. It is my hope that Secretary Peake will support the Center for PTSD with adequate funding in the years to come," said Chairman Akaka.

In recent years, the Center for PTSD has been called on to dramatically expand its mission and conduct research on a larger scale. At the same time, an increasing number of servicemembers are returning from Iraq and Afghanistan with PTSD. However, the Center's budget has increased by less than 10 percent in the past half-decade. Due to limited funding, the Center's capacity to continue its work is severely restricted, and staff levels have been reduced since 1999.

click here back to VAWatchdog for the rest

http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/scva08/scva012508-2.htm

29 Patients at Marion VA died because of substandard and questionable care

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Substandard care at a southern Illinois Veterans Affairs hospital may have contributed to 19 deaths over the past two years, a VA official said Monday as he apologized to affected families and pledged reform.

The hospital in Marion, Ill., initially drew scrutiny over deaths connected to a single surgeon, but two federal reports found fault with five other doctors.

The hospital undertook many surgeries that its staffing or lack of proper surgical expertise made it ill-equipped to handle, and hospital administrators were too slow to respond once problems surfaced, said Dr. Michael Kussman, U.S. veterans affairs undersecretary for health.

"I can't tell you how angry we all are and how frustrated we all are. Nothing angers me more than when we don't do the right thing," Kussman told reporters during a conference call after releasing findings of the VA's investigation and summarizing a separate inspector general's probe.


The VA will help affected families file administrative claims under the VA's disability compensation program, he said. Families also could sue.

...........The VA investigation found that at least nine deaths between October 2006 and March last year were "directly attributable" to substandard care at the Marion hospital, which serves veterans from southern Illinois, southwestern Indiana and western Kentucky.

Kussman declined to identify those cases by patient or doctor, though Rep. Jerry Costello, an Illinois Democrat, said those nine deaths were linked to two surgeons he did not name.

Of an additional 34 cases the VA investigated, 10 patients who died received questionable care that complicated their health, Kussman said. Investigators could not determine whether the care actually caused the deaths.
go here for the rest

http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2008-01-28-illinois-hospitaldeaths_N.htm?csp=15

This makes Bush's speech like a very bad B movie script.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Sgt. Tracy Renee Birkman's Father Angry

Virginia Sergeant, Mother Dies in Iraq
By Michael Laris and Meg Smith
Washington Post Staff Writers
Monday, January 28, 2008; 5:55 PM

Sgt. Tracy Renee Birkman, a mechanic and mother of three from the Roanoke area, died Friday after suffering non-combat-related injuries in Owesat, Iraq, according to military officials. The incident is under investigation, they said.

She is survived by her parents and three sons, all of New Castle, Va., according to officials from Fort Campbell, Ky., where her division, the 101st Airborne, is based.

Birkman's father, Jerald Griffith, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said his daughter was on her third deployment to Iraq.

"She's over there in a war we shouldn't even be involved in, on her third tour," Griffith said. He said he was angry with military officials for releasing information about his daughter's death, and with the media for its portrayal of soldiers such as himself.

"I didn't want it released. I am so [furious] about all this I can just scream," Griffith said. "I hate the media with just an unmitigated passion. You . . . lied about me when I was in Vietnam."

click post title

Non-combat:Sgt. Tracy Renee Birkman dies in Iraq

Soldier dies in Iraq of non-combat injuries

The Associated Press
Posted : Monday Jan 28, 2008 9:45:14 EST

FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. — A Fort Campbell-based soldier died Friday of non-combat injuries in Owesat, Iraq.

Sgt. Tracy Renee Birkman died, 41, of New Castle, Va., was assigned to the 626th Brigade Support Battalion, 3rd Brigade Combat Team of the 101st Airborne Division.

Also this weekend, two soldiers were killed in separate bombings in Baghdad, the military said Sunday.

A Multi-National Division-Baghdad soldier died Sunday after the soldier’s vehicle was struck by a roadside bomb in northeastern Baghdad, according to a statement.

Another soldier was killed Saturday by a bomb during a foot patrol near Kazimiyah, a predominantly Shiite neighborhood in northern Baghdad, the military said separately.

Identities were not released pending notification of relatives.

Homeless man named Perry and his gold coin offering

I'm sitting here in tears. Oldtimer Speaks Out has at least one story a week that does that to me.


Perry and his gold coin offering

One of these men, a homeless veteran is Perry. Perry has been described by Pat as “having an entourage of people swirling around him in his head always talking to him.” Perry came to our church among the first two to accept our invitation to visit. Pat and Scott picked him up. During one sermon our Pastor was talking about the woman who gave all she had, a penny, and what a wonderful thing that was.

Perry got up in the middle of the sermon and started for the pulpit. Scott caught up with him and asked what his intentions were. “I’m going to make an offering”. ”But wait, there is a time for that later”, said Scott. “But I want to give now!” So Perry took his Chucky Cheese gold token to the alter and placed it on the corner of the choir railing, and returned to his seat just beaming! Grinning from ear to ear. Gave all he had, real gold to him.

I don’t know what happened to Perry when the evictions came. I think that he had dissappeared. We know of one death, Dominic, and we know that there is likely more - I learned today that the medical examiner sent a homeless person to a funeral home near our church who was apparently found in the same lot we were serving, but Dominic had been found somewhere else.
go here for the rest
http://oldtimer.wordpress.com/2008/01/27/our-fight-for-the-homeless-some-stories/


The pastor was wrong because the woman didn't give one coin, but she gave two. That was all she had and it's been said this gesture is the basis for the saying "putting in my two cents" when we offer our opinion from all we have in our mind.

This would be a wonderful world if we all put in our two cents. When we take compassion on those who have less than us even though we have very little of our own, we prove that we are grateful even for crumbs. When we set ourselves aside for the sake of someone else, that is what Christ was talking about. It wasn't just being willing to lay down your physical life, but to be willing to set aside focus on your own life because someone else is in need. Some may just need a shoulder to cry on, when you are dealing with your own pain. Some may need clothing when you are trying to figure out how to afford to buy the new coat that's on sale and you really want it. You may remember a time in your life when you were eating cereal twice a day because it was a lean month of income but a huge month for bills. You carry on your back those tough days and feel compassion for someone else knowing how much it does hurt to be broke and in need.

For the homeless, especially the homeless veterans dealing with other issues, they live lives as outcasts. Their families have sent them away, refusing to take care of them, or they themselves decided they didn't deserve their families and vanished into a world of wondering.

When we see a homeless person the first thought that comes into our mind is to not look at them. If we turn our heads, they won't come close. They won't ask for money. Horror overcomes us if they dare approach. Why is that? Is it that we fear they will try to harm us or we may catch something from them? That's hardly likely. Are we afraid we may need the change in our pocket or that they will use the buck and half we give them to get drunk with? What business is that of our's? We won't know if they eat or not unless we take them the food or take them to the food.

What about clothing? Do we have a yard sale so we can make some money on what we no longer want to own? Or do we decide to donate the clothes we don't need to someone who does need them? I donate mine. The Vietnam Veterans just picked up bags of clothes that filled my closet I hardly ever wore. No, I didn't go through my closet with them in mind. I did it because I'm a slob when it comes to my closet. My bureau is virtually empty because I'm too lazy to put the clean clothes in draws. It's a lot easier to just stack them on a shelf in my closet. It was purely selfish because I got to the point where I couldn't find anything and didn't have room to hang anything up. So I packed up what I never get around to wearing and donated it to the vets. I figured the clothes weren't doing me any good and cleaning out my closet helped me to find some of the favorite pieces of clothing I haven't been able to find in months.

What about a kind word? Can we manage to say a kind word to a homeless person? Do we even know how they became homeless? We can assume they must deserve to be homeless and then we won't have to face the fact we provide clothing, footwear, shelter and meals to prisoners. We can assume they want to be homeless and then we won't have to face the fact that if they want to be homeless there has to be a reason behind it. Would you in your right mind ever seek to be without anything?

We humans decide who we will judge, who we will help and what we will do while most of the time it's purely out of self interest. Some people will act as if they are doing it for the sake of someone else when what they really want is for people to see them doing it. That is what we think isn't it when we see someone at a feeding table on Lake Eola in Orlando.

Last week this just came out from Local 6 News


Just released this morning

20,000 War Vets Living On Florida Streets; 1,400 In Central Florida

POSTED: 5:42 pm EST January 23, 2008

UPDATED: 10:58 pm EST January 23, 2008

ORLANDO, Fla. -- More than 20,000 military veterans in Florida are homeless, living in a kind of war zone they had never imaged -- on the streets and in the woods.

A former U.S. Marine named Pete who once lived in Cocoa Beach with a great view of the ocean is now one of Central Florida's 1,400 homeless.

Pete lives in the woods.

"I got a tent in the woods. I'm not going to a shelter," Pete said. "I'm a carpenter by trade and I just need to get back to work."


Now we can just ignore them, walk by them, avoid them, but they won't go away. As a matter of fact, if we ignore them they will increase in numbers. They already have. 20,000 homeless veterans in Florida when the last time I checked the numbers it was 14,000. We have 1,400 in Central Florida alone. The Dom in the VA center only has bed for 60. There are other beds scattered across the area but there are not enough of them. What we really have to be aware of is there are homeless the VA doesn't even know about.

One of their stories was posted on this blog because of a comment made by the wife of a disabled veteran who lost everything because he was wounded and cannot work but received a zero percent disability. They are living with a relative. We can only assume this is the case here in Orlando as well. While we may be horrified by the numbers we know about, we need to always retain the fact there are more.

I think having homeless people in this nation is a sin. While we can give huge tax breaks to oil companies sucking our wallets dry at the pump, breaks for businesses looking at the bonus money they make by laying people off, the result is suffering for the many for the sake of the few. Still even with this, my heart is tugged by the veterans. They were willing to lay down their lives for this country and we do owe them a debt of true gratitude. We owe them to not be homeless. I posted about this many times that if we can't even take care of them, the chance of the regular citizens to be taken care of is highly unlikely.

Next time there is a meeting you attend or you hear about a homeless person being blamed for their state, put in your own two cents and set the record straight. Maybe a homeless man like Perry will get you a gold coin in heaven for helping him when he was the least among us.

Kathie Costos
Namguardianangel@aol.com
www.Namguardianangel.org
www.Namguardianangel.blogspot.com
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