Saturday, May 15, 2010

Freedom Memorial ride for Armed Forces Day


FREEDOM-MEMORIAL RIDE TO NATIONAL CEMETERY

05/15/2010 - 05/15/2010

Freedom - Memorial ride begins at Stormy Hill HD at 830-9am registration - FREE BREAKFAST BY MCDONALDS WITH OJ) LUNCH TICKET on May 15th Saturday - kick stands up at 9:30am sharp = POLICE ESCORTED to Bushnell Cemetery for a memorial and then on to Gator HD for lunch - refreshments - military speakers, Boy Scouts, lots of vendors, live band and more $10.00 driver $5.00 passenger (proceeds for Disabled American Veterans)




An honor for those serving

There is a definite need for Armed Forces Day. What isn't needed, or wanted, is for those honored by this celebration to become part of a better-known holiday observed later this month.

Armed Forces Day is not an American holiday. It is marked in 33 other countries, on a variety of dates. The U.S. has commemorated it on the third Saturday in May since 1949, usually within a couple of weeks of Memorial Day.

But while the latter pays homage to those who fought and died while serving in the military service, Armed Forces Day honors those who are currently part of the armed services: the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines or Coast Guard.

It is imperative to remember the importance of such a day, if only because those it honors are willing to risk their existance in defense of this country.
go here for more
http://www.dailycommercial.com/voices/story/0514ArmedForcesEdit

Medal of Honor Recipient Offers Lifetime of Service Joe Jackson

Medal of Honor Recipient Offers Lifetime of Service
NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams

Joe Jackson describes his 33 years of military service


An act of service, born of routine
Source: msnbc.com
Tags: msnbc video, routine, service
At 87 years old, Medal of Honor recipient Lt. Col. Joe M. Jackson hasn't let age slow him down. Every Monday for the past 18 years, the war hero helps to feed the needy. NBC's Christina Brown reports. (Nightly News)


Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

5th try to protect child custody for troops

5th try to protect child custody for troops

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Friday May 14, 2010 12:18:53 EDT

An Ohio congressman is hoping the fifth time is a charm in his efforts to give special child custody protection to service members.

Four times, the House of Representatives has passed legislation sponsored by Rep. Michael Turner, R-Ohio, to prevent past, present or future deployments from being used against a service member as the basis for determining or changing child custody arrangements.

Four times, Turner has run into opposition from the Senate Armed Services Committee and the Defense Department, and his legislation has been rejected.

Turner is back. On Wednesday, the military personnel subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee agreed to include his legislation in the 2011 defense authorization bill. He expects it will pass the committee, again, without any dissent and will also easily pass the House.

It remains unclear if anything has changed in the Senate or Defense Department that will end years of opposition.

Turner said his legislation is “straightforward” in trying to protect service members from losing custody of a child solely because of their military service. Fifteen states have laws that provide varying degrees of protection, he said, but there is no single standard, and nothing prevents an ex-spouse from jurisdiction-shopping to file for a change in custody in one of the states without any protections for a service member.
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5th try to protect child custody for troops

Army recalls 44,000 helmets

Army recalls 44,000 helmets

By Matthew Cox - Staff writer
Posted : Friday May 14, 2010 17:53:23 EDT

The Army is recalling 44,000 Advanced Combat Helmets amid concerns that they offer substandard ballistic protection.

All the helmets are made by ArmorSource LLC, formerly Rabintex USA LLC.

“There is evidence that ArmorSource and Rabintex ACHs were produced using unauthorized manufacturing practices, defective materials and improper quality procedures which could potentially reduce ballistic and fragmentation protection,” according to an All Army Activities message released May 14.

The Army-wide message orders an immediate inspection of all ACHs and the “immediate direct exchange of those ACHs manufactured by ArmorSource and Rabintex” through unit central issue facilities.
read more here
Army recalls 44000 helmets

Walk in memory of friend who committed suicide

Local woman participates in walk in memory of friend who committed suicide
Friday, May 14, 2010

By MICHAEL CLEVELAND

Correspondent


BEDFORD – Eleven years after a close friend committed suicide, Kimberly Paquette will walk 18 miles through the night in the hope that by doing so, she can stop others from dying by their own hands.

“It’s called the Out of the Darkness Walk,” Paquette said, “because quite literally, you’re walking overnight, walking out of the darkness of the night into the sunrise to bring attention to depression and suicide.”

She believes it might have been depression that led her friend Benjamen Bugden to kill himself, although she can’t be sure. She’d only known him for about three years and had only a vague idea of what his life was like before they met while both were in the Army at Fort Lewis, Wash.

“We were together my entire enlistment,” she said of the friend who died 11 years ago. “He was so funny.”

She and Bugden were in military intelligence, a small, close-knit unit.
read more here
Walk in memory of friend who committed suicide


Four years ago I made this video about coming out of the dark of PTSD. Four years later, they are still dying by their own hands because so little has been done to save them. They need to understand what PTSD is and what it does to change them so they will find hope of healing.

Fort Campbell thinking outside the box reduces suicides

This is what can be done when the military stops thinking inside the box repeating the same mistakes over and over again. They have reached out to the community around them for ideas to respond to combat trauma.

The rest of the population of this country has been doing this for years but the military has found too many excuses to avoid what other humans need. Responding to traumatic events in the civilian world is a common sense approach to bring survivors back into the "normal" world outside of the event. For combat forces, they are carrying around too many of those events on their shoulders and this makes sense!

Suicides down at Fort Campbell
BY JAKE LOWARY • THE LEAF-CHRONICLE • May 14, 2010
A year ago, the mood at Fort Campbell became eerily somber — the reality of the mental condition of many of its soldiers was at the forefront of media reports and Department of Defense scrutiny.

The installation, home of the heralded 101st Airborne Division, was leading the way, and not in a category any of its leaders wanted to be in; Fort Campbell led the Army in suicides with 11 so far that year.

The news is better today. Fort Campbell has had just four suicides this year, according to Joe Varney, suicide prevention manager at Fort Campbell.

The installation has deployed more staff and more resources and made a concerted effort to defeat a stigma attached to the treatment of depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. They credit those moves for the decrease.

On Tuesday and Wednesday, the installation hosted about 200 civilian professionals in the behavioral health field to discuss Army suicides and to brainstorm ideas on how to better address the problem and treat soldiers.

"That was the whole idea — to bring in people from the behavioral health realm that are civilians," said Tiffany Shaw, suicide prevention specialist at Fort Campbell.


Shaw said officials tossed around many ideas, some of which have already been put into practice, such as in-theater treatment following a traumatic event like an improvised-explosive device blast or death, which Shaw said was "fairly new."

"It's something they're working on, and so far it's a good thing," she said.

Mandatory annual testing of soldiers also was suggested, but that has not proven as effective when tested, Shaw said.

"All of the behavioral health people spent all their time doing evaluations and not providing care," she said.

read more here

Suicides down at Fort Campbell

Cops with PTSD:New Orleans Accused Police Commission Member

Dad: Accused Police Commission Member 'Heavily Medicated'
Governor's Appointee Accused Of Pulling Gun On Deputies, I-Team Reported Thursday

NEW ORLEANS -- A former member of the Louisiana State Police Commission accused of pointing a gun at two off-duty deputies shot and killed a man in 2001 and was being treated for post traumatic stress disorder, the WDSU I-Team reported Friday.

Seth Dawson is charged with aggravated assault on a peace officer with a firearm -- a felony -- and five misdemeanors stemming from an incident at Harrah's Casino Wednesday night.

Sources close to the investigation said Dawson tried to re-enter the casino after being removed by security and pulled a gun on two Orleans Parish Sheriff's deputies who were working private detail.
read more here
http://www.wdsu.com/mostpopular/23563278/detail.html

San Jose Veteran's Memorial damaged

San Jose: Veteran's Memorial damaged; vandalism suspected
By Mark Gomez


mgomez@mercurynews.com

Posted: 05/14/2010 01:50:03 PM PDT
Updated: 05/14/2010 09:59:14 PM PDT

San Jose officials think vandals are responsible for shattering an 8-foot-tall pane of glass that is part of the Veteran's Memorial — and the damage probably won't be repaired by Memorial Day.

The shattered glass was reported Tuesday to the city's Office of Cultural Affairs, according to Jennifer Easton, a manager for public art. Easton said a big piece of metal was found near the shattered glass.

"We think it was probably vandalism," she said.

A city employee who noticed the broken glass Tuesday called San Jose police at 2:11 p.m., according to police spokesman Dirk Parsons. The broken glass was from a panel measuring about 8 feet by 4 feet, Parsons said. Police reported that the glass appears to have been broken by "an undisclosed hard object that was found at the scene." Police said they have no suspects and are investigating the case.

Easton estimated that a replacement will cost more than $15,000.
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Veterans Memorial damaged

Army veteran's walking sticks help wounded stand tall

ND couple honored for helping military veterans
By DAVE KOLPACK
Associated Press Writer , The Associated Press - MAYVILLE, N.D.

A North Dakota man who has crafted hundreds of walking sticks for wounded veterans says he's looking forward to the day when his services are no longer needed.

"The war's not going to be over," Dennis Enger said Friday after he and his wife were honored in a surprise ceremony at the Mayville VFW. "I wish it would be over tomorrow morning so I could quit. But I'll keep on."

Enger, a retired tree trimmer and Army veteran, started the project about four years ago as a way to help fellow soldiers. The first package to the Walter Reed Army Medical Center contained only three sticks, but he was so touched by the reaction from veterans and their families he kept on carving.

He has since finished about 400 sticks.

"They're known as Grandma and Grandpa Walking Stick out there at Walter Reed," said Dan Stenvold, of Park River, the president of the North Dakota Vietnam Veterans of America who has helped deliver the sticks to the Washington, D.C., hospital.
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ND couple honored for helping military veterans

Staten Islanders offer heartfelt salute to wounded warriors


Staten Island Advance/Jan Somma-Hammel
Motrorcyclists, 200 strong, escort wounded soldiers visiting from Water Reed Hospital in Washington along Korean War Veterans Memorial Parkway.

Staten Islanders offer heartfelt salute to wounded warriors
By Jeff Harrell
May 14, 2010, 10:48PM
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- It was impossible to miss the wounded war heroes today.

Behind an advance guard of 200 deafening choppers, their motorcade wended its way along Richmond Avenue past the Staten Island Mall, attended by fluttering flags and chants of "America rocks!"

It was a fitting New York City welcome for nine severely wounded veterans who ventured from Walter Reed Hospital in Washington, D.C., to visit the Island as guests of the Tamburri Post, American Veterans (AMVETS).

"It's very exciting. I got goosebumps," said Tamburri Post member Dennis McLoone of Westerleigh.

"I'm just proud, proud, proud of our guys doing a job nobody else would want," proclaimed Kathryn Fixsen of Eltingville. "It makes America what it is."
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Staten Islanders offer heartfelt salute to wounded warriors

Friday, May 14, 2010

When The Battle Comes Home Part Two

When The Battle Comes Home: A hotline counselor
Posted: May 13, 2010 - 3:46pm
Second of three parts

Sacrifices made by the military in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan already are out of sight for many Americans.

When the military return home, they often retreat even deeper into an invisible void.

Yet, the trauma experienced by repeated tours of combat can have a huge impact on the mental health of many soldiers, sailors and Marines, and not just those who have been in combat, either.

One witness to that trauma is Victor Montgomery, a counselor who has staffed a suicide hotline and heard the pain and anguish of both returned military, their friends and family.

He has heard the "frantic, crisis-induced phone calls."

"Extremely disturbing experiences that cause severe emotional shock confront many competent, healthy, stalwart honorable veterans," Montgomery writes in a book, Healing Suicidal Veterans. (See the interview with Montgomery on the opposite page).
read more here
When The Battle Comes Home

Pioneer PTSD professor one of Time's 100

'Time' 100 list honors Penn prof.

by Melanie Lei
Thursday, May 13, 2010 at 8:53 pm


When Penn professor of clinical psychology Edna Foa received an e-mail from Time magazine telling her that she was on this year’s 100 Most Influential People in the World list, she was surprised, to say the least.

“I thought that someone was pulling my leg,” she said.

Although she was a fairly frequent reader of Time, she had never bought a Time 100 issue. “I thought that it was mostly movie stars and basketball players and politicians.”

But according to her colleagues at the Center for the Treatment and Study of Anxiety — which Foa directs — the recognition is well deserved.

Thirty years ago, before the term post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was used in mental health discourse, Foa was wondering about how individuals processed disturbing and distressing events.

Her curiosity eventually led to groundbreaking therapy for PTSD patients in a treatment called prolonged exposure. The technique has two components: patients relive traumatic experiences in their imagination and expose themselves to real-life distressing situations. After repeated exposure, patients use emotional processing in order to desensitize their reactions of anxiety.

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is now using prolonged exposure to treat PTSD patients, thanks to Foa’s treatment program.
read more here
http://www.dailypennsylvanian.com/article/time-100-list-honors-penn-prof

Ajax and Philoctetes new use for old results

Project aims to connect with troops through tales of ancient warriors
By Seth Robbins, Stars and Stripes
European edition, Saturday, May 15, 2010

BAUMHOLDER, Germany - More than two millennia ago, the Greek dramatist Sophocles wrote of warriors scarred by battle: Ajax, so consumed by rage that he turns it on himself, and Philoctetes, maddened by isolation after being deserted by his fellow officers.

The Theater of War project has revived these ancient warriors for today’s troops, staging readings of "Ajax" and "Philoctetes" at more than 75 U.S. military sites.

The plays, which place the two title characters in the battles and bloodlettings of the mythic Trojan War, were chosen as a way to remind modern troops that their experiences are not new.

Sophocles had served as a commander of the armed forces, and possibly as a general in a campaign in the Samian war, which pitted Athens against the island of Samos. His plays, written at a time of constant warfare, were likely to have been seen by many with combat experience.

Though the works are rarely produced for today’s audiences because of their difficulty, Theater of War director Bryan Doerries said the troops relate to them instantly.
read more here
http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=69989

Elderly Bithlo man beaten to death after being mistaken for sex offender

Elderly Bithlo man beaten to death after being mistaken for sex offender
Deputies arrested Michael Garay, 32, in connection to the beating death of Hugh Edwards, an elderly Bithlo man.

By Bianca Prieto, Orlando Sentinel

12:30 a.m. EDT, May 14, 2010


An elderly Bithlo resident was beaten to death with a black Louisville Slugger baseball bat because the killer mistakenly thought the man was a sex offender, the Orange County Sheriff's Office said.

Deputies arrested 20-year-old Robert Pascale on Thursday on a charge of first-degree murder with a weapon after deputies with dogs tracked him to a muddy pond near Sixth Street in Bithlo, where he was hiding. Pascale was submerged in the water, only his face exposed.

The dead man, Hugh Edwards, 78, had no criminal history. It's unclear why anyone thought he was a sexual offender.

Details about Edwards' killing became public in the arrest report for Pascale's friend, 32-year-old Michael Garay, charged with accessory to murder.
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Elderly Bithlo man beaten to death

Army Suicide Data shows what they are doing is not working

There are some people shocked when I get upset because normally I am about as laid back as they come. What gets me to explode is a report like this.


Military News: Army Releases April Suicide Data
By Lieutenant Raymond E. Foster, LAPD (ret.)

Army Releases April Suicide Data
May 13, 2010 - The Army released suicide data today for the month of April. Among active-duty soldiers, there were ten potential suicides: one has been confirmed as suicide, and nine remain under investigation. For March, the Army reported 13 potential suicides among active-duty soldiers. Since the release of the report, four have been confirmed as suicides, and nine remain under investigation. During April 2010, among reserve soldiers who were not on active duty, there were five potential suicides. For March, among that same group, there were nine total suicides. Of those, three were confirmed as suicides and seven are pending determination of the manner of death.

The Army is also announcing updated numbers for 2009 to now reflect 163 active duty suicides. This adjustment is based on subsequent review of additional case information by the Armed Forces Medical Examiner, resulting in the re-characterization of 2 cases initially deemed to be accidental deaths, now confirmed as suicides, and one case, previously pending determination, now also confirmed as suicide.
click link above for more

After about 20,000 posts on this blog and my older one, sometimes I forget what I read, so I took a look back searching for a report I posted a couple years ago from the BBC. A reporter was with some of our troops in Afghanistan and they were talking about how worthless BattleMind was. While looking for it, I came across this post in 2007.
Thursday, August 09, 2007

Be Warned. PTSD rates will go a lot higher
As bad as the crisis seems right now, it's going to get a lot worse and this country, as well as all other nations involved in the two occupations, had better put in place emergency plans now. They have waited too long to act and any measures taken now are too slow in coming. They will not even be able to keep pace with those already experiencing traumatic symptoms. We cannot forget that those diagnosed are not all there is or all that will be. Vietnam should have been a lesson learned, but it wasn't.

PTSD is an anxiety disorder that develops in individuals who have experienced a traumatic event. The condition is typically characterized by a range of symptoms, including flashbacks, emotional numbness, depression, memory problems, and hyper-arousal. PTSD is a serious mental illness that without early identification and effective treatment, has the potential to be chronic, debilitating, and even lethal, with high rates of suicide.The diagnosis of PTSD was first coined to describe this set of symptoms in 1980, but it is a young disease in name only.

War veterans have experienced this disorder (often termed "shell-shock" or "war neurosis") throughout history, and the wars of the 21st century are reminding the world why. According to a 2004 study cited by the National Center for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, 94 percent of soldiers in Iraq are the victims of what is termed "small-arms fire"; 86 percent knew someone who was seriously injured or killed; and 51 percent had handled or uncovered human remains.These traumatic experiences combined with long or repeated deployments in a politically controversial war make servicemen and women in Iraq particularly vulnerable to PTSD. In fact, 12 percent to 20 percent of returning soldiers experience PTSD, compared to about 5 percent in the general population.FromPervasive wound of warSusan J. Blumenthal/ Elise SchlisselAugust 9, 2007 go here for the resthttp://washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070809/COMMENTARY/108090012


Prevalance of Post-traumatic stress disorder: 5.2 million adult Americans (NIMH); 3.6% adults (NIMH); about 30% of war veterans. Prevalance Rate: approx 1 in 52 or 1.91% or 5.2 million people in USA [about data Incidence (annual) of Post-traumatic stress disorder: 3.6% adults annually (NIMH) Incidence Rate: approx 1 in 27 or 3.60% or 9.8 million people in USA [about data] Incidence extrapolations for USA for Post-traumatic stress disorder: 9,791,999 per year, 815,999 per month, 188,307 per week, 26,827 per day, 1,117 per hour, 18 per minute, 0 per second.Prevalance of Post-traumatic stress disorder: PTSD affects about 5.2 million adult Americans. (Source: excerpt from Anxiety Disorders: NIMH) Incidence of Post-traumatic stress disorder: About 3.6 percent of U.S. adults ages 18 to 54 (5.2 million people) have PTSD during the course of a given year. (Source: excerpt from Facts about Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: NIMH

from September 1, 2000 JENNIFER TRAVIS LANGE, CAPT, MC, USA, CHRISTOPHER L. LANGE, CAPT, MC, USA, and REX B.G. CABALTICA, M.D.Eisenhower Army Medical Center, Fort Gordon, Georgia

ComorbidityUp to 80 percent of patients with PTSD have a comorbid psychologic disorder.7 Having had a psychiatric diagnosis before a trauma increases a person's risk for developing PTSD. Also, having PTSD increases the risk of later developing psychiatric problems.8 The most common diseases that occur with PTSD are major depression, dysthymia, generalized anxiety disorder, substance abuse, somatization, panic disorder, bipolar disorder, phobias and dissociative disorders.7 Any coexisting psychiatric conditions should be treated simultaneously with PTSD because the particular psychologic issues cannot be separated.

Detachment Reexperiencing the event

Event had emotional effects Avoidance

Month in duration

Sympathetic hyperactivity or hypervigilance



Now take a look at the warning attached to common medications used to treat PTSD and then think of the men and women being sent back into combat with these medications. Zoloft also comes with a warning of risk but no one is watching them when they are deployed.

Psychotherapy Medications are used to relieve the most distressing symptoms, allowing the patient to concentrate on psychotherapy.10 Any medication regimen should be part of a psychotherapeutic process. Attention to a range of issues, including the effects on the family, education about the disease and treatment options, is paramount.
BenzodiazepinesHistorically, benzodiazepines were the primary agent in PTSD treatment. Alprazolam (Xanax) and clonazepam (Klonopin) have been used extensively, but the efficacy of benzodiazepines against the major PTSD symptoms has not been proven in controlled studies. 10 These agents are effective against anxiety, insomnia and irritability, but they should be used with great caution because of the high frequency of comorbid substance dependence in patients with PTSD. Patients should be fully informed of the risks and benefits of these medications, including the risks of dependency and of withdrawal after abrupt discontinuation.go here for the resthttp://www.aafp.org/afp/20000901/1035.html

Comorbidity in medicine
In medicine, comorbidity describes the effect of all other diseases an individual patient might have other than the primary disease of interest. There is currently no accepted way to quantify such comorbidity.Many tests attempt to standardize the “weight” or value of comorbid conditions, whether they are secondary or tertiary illnesses. Each test attempts to consolidate each individual comorbid condition into a single, predictive variable that measures mortality or other outcomes. Researchers have "validated" such tests because of their predictive value, but no one test is as yet recognized as a standard.The term "comorbid" currently has two definitions: 1) to indicate a medical condition existing simultaneously but independently with another condition in a patient (this is the older and more "correct" definition) 2) to indicate a medical condition in a patient that causes, is caused by, or is otherwise related to another condition in the same patient (this is a newer, nonstandard definition and less well-accepted).http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comorbidity


Consider they are being redeployed into combat and then add this to it. It is also one of the reason the DOD and experts say the risk of developing PTSD is raised by 50% for each redeployment. We have some on their fifth tour.

Onset PTSD can develop at any age, including in childhood. Symptoms typically begin within three months of a traumatic event, although occasionally they do not begin until years later. Once PTSD occurs, the severity and duration of the illness varies. Some people recover within six months, while others may not do so for much longer.

Likelihood of Developing PTSD
People who have been abused as children or who have had other previous traumatic experiences are more likely to develop the disorder. Research is continuing to pinpoint other factors that may lead to PTSD.The following are also recent research findings:Some studies show that debriefing people very soon after a catastrophic event may reduce some of the symptoms of PTSD. A study of 12,000 schoolchildren who lived through a hurricane in Hawaii found that those who got counseling quickly were doing much better two years later than those who did not.

People with PTSD tend to have abnormal levels of key hormones involved in response to stress. Cortisol levels are lower than normal, and epinephrine and norepinephrine are higher than normal. Scientists have also found that people with this condition have alterations in the function of the thyroid and in neurotransmitter activity involving serotonin and opiates.When people are in danger, they produce high levels of natural opiates, which can temporarily mask pain. Scientists have found that people with PTSD continue to produce those higher levels even after the danger has passed. This may lead to the blunted emotions associated with the condition.It used to be believed that people who tend to dissociate themselves from a trauma were showing a healthy response, but now some researchers suspect that people who experience dissociation may be more prone to PTSD.Animal studies show that the hippocampus -- a part of the brain critical to emotion-laden memories -- appears to be smaller in cases of PTSD.

Brain imaging studies indicate similar findings in humans. Scientists are investigating whether this is related to short-term memory problems. Changes in the hippocampus are thought to be responsible for intrusive memories and flashbacks that occur in people with this disorder.Research to understand the neurotransmitter system involved in memories of emotionally charged events may lead to discovery of drugs that, if given early, could block the development of PTSD symptoms.

Levels of CRF, or corticotropin releasing factor—the ignition switch in the human stress response—seem to be elevated in people with PTSD, which may account for the tendency to be easily startled. Because of this finding, scientists now want to determine whether drugs that reduce CRF activity are useful in treating the disorder.The content of this fact sheet was adapted from material published by the National Institute of Mental Health.go here for morehttp://www.mentalhealthamerica.net/go/ptsd


Also keep in mind that those who have been reported as "diagnosed" are only those with approved claims. If they are not given a "service connected" disability rating, they are not counted. None of the "personality disorder discharges" are counted in the number the government states. None of the 600,000 backlog of claims to be processed are counted in the numbers. None of those who are still trying to figure out what's wrong with them are counted. None of those who will develop PTSD in a year or more have been counted. If you think there is a problem now, you better fasten your seatbelts. It's going to be a downward spiral from here.



It's all there from three years ago. The medication warnings, redeployment warnings, the fact PTSD rates would to up, all there. The point is, we have increases in a bad way across the spectrum because no one in charge really listened to what the honest experts were predicting.


Battle Mind must be eliminated from what they are trying to do. There is no doubt in my mind that they really want to save the lives of the troops but they are the last to learn shooting with rubber bullets may be good for target practice but it in no way resembles or prepares them for the real thing. In other words, they are usually the last to learn what the rest of the country already knows. When it comes to PTSD, they are still shooting with blanks.

Afghan war suicide moves mother


An Air Force carry team carries a transfer case containing the remains of Airman 1st Class Austin H. Gates Benson on May 4 at Dover Air Force Base in Dover, Del. (AP photo)




Afghan war suicide moves mother
Hellertown airman killed himself. His mom vows to help stem rising rates.

By Veronica Torrejón

OF THE MORNING CALL

May 13, 2010


Days after Joie Gates learned that her son had killed himself in Afghanistan, she dashed off a letter to President Barack Obama.

It was an impassioned plea for him to take action to stem the number of military suicides, which last year exceeded the number of those who died in combat in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to a Congressional Quarterly report.

On Wednesday, after taking a week to consider her position and learn about efforts the military has undertaken to guard the mental health of troops, she penned another letter.

''What can I do to help you?'' she asked the president. ''How can we get to the bottom of why this is happening?''

Gates knows that her son, Airman 1st Class Austin H. Gates Benson, 19, of Hellertown, believed wholeheartedly in the good the U.S. military is doing in Afghanistan, but the horrors of war became too much for him. He shot himself May 3.

He was stationed at a remote combat outpost in Khyber, near the Pakistani border, where he was helping to establish communications.
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Afghan war suicide moves mother

'Surfing makes me feel like I'm flying'



'Surfing makes me feel like I'm flying'
Gulf War veteran Dana Cummings lost a leg in a car crash. He turned to surfing as physical therapy, loving the sense of freedom it gave him. Now he's helping others through the Association of Amputee Surfers, or AmpSurf. FULL STORY

Mental health disorders caused more hospitalizations than any other reason

Mental health hospitalizations up for troops

By Gregg Zoroya - USA Today
Posted : Friday May 14, 2010 7:57:17 EDT

WASHINGTON — Mental health disorders caused more hospitalizations among U.S. troops in 2009 than any other reason according to medical data released recently by the Pentagon. This historic high reflects the growing toll of nearly nine years of war.

Last year was the first in which hospitalizations for mental disorders outpaced those for injuries or pregnancies in the 15 years of tracking by the Pentagon's Medical Surveillance Monthly report.

Hospitalizations for mental disorders have increased significantly among troops since 2005, said Lt. Gen Eric Schoomaker, surgeon general for the Army. "War is difficult. It takes a toll," he said.

Mental health treatment expenses are helping drive up the overall cost of military health care, USA Today reported last month. Last week, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said in a speech that "health care costs are eating the Defense Department alive." Schoomaker said the Army's increased attention to mental health issues is another reason for the rise in hospital admittances.

In 2009, there were 17,538 hospitalizations for mental health issues throughout the military, the study shows. That compares to 17,354 for pregnancy and childbirth reasons, and 11,156 for injuries and battle wounds.
read more here
Mental health hospitalizations up for troops

Tampa veteran's hospital earns state honor

Tampa veteran's hospital earns state honor

By Joyce McKenzie The Tampa Tribune

Published: May 14, 2010

UNIVERSITY AREA - When put to the test at the state level, the management and staff at the James A. Haley Veterans' Hospital and Clinics have validated their worth.

One of the Department of Veterans Affairs biggest health care facilities has been named a recipient of the 2010 Governor's Sterling Award, an honor that for 18 years has acknowledged organizations and businesses throughout Florida that demonstrate excellence.

Officials from Haley, along with Orlando's Florida Hospital and South Miami Hospital, will be on hand to receive the award June 4 in Orlando. It's the first time in the award's history that the recipients all come from the health care industry.

Each of the honorees has gone through a rigorous process of on-site evaluations where Florida Sterling Council-appointed examiners rated them on the basis of knowledge, leadership, strategic planning, customer and market focus, results and analyses. Employees at all levels were interviewed.

Nancy Reissener, Haley's acting medical center director, is pleased to represent what she considers an outstanding team of colleagues.

"This award is in recognition of the quality of work, professionalism and dedication of the staff at James A. Haley Veterans' Hospital and Clinics," she said. "Our veterans deserve the best care anywhere and I am so proud of our employees who make this happen every day."
Sterling Award winners are meant to serve as role model organizations across the state and their business practices are intended to help other institutions elevate their performance and productivity levels.
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Tampa veterans hospital earns state honor

Military Sexual Trauma A Little Known Veteran Issue


Susan Kaplan for NPR
Rachel Caesar left the military after serving for 14 years. She suffered from military sexual trauma, but it took her a long time to admit it. According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, more than 48,000 female veterans screened positive for military sexual trauma just in 2008.




Military Sexual Trauma: A Little-Known Veteran Issue
by Susan Kaplan

text size A A A May 13, 2010
Rachel Caesar first tried to join the Army after she saw a recruitment insert in Jet magazine. She filled it out and sent it in. She was 8 years old.

It wasn't long before her mom's phone started ringing. Caesar's mom told the Army recruiter: "Maybe you'll see her in 10 years," according to Caesar today.

Sure enough, after Caesar graduated high school, she joined the Massachusetts Army National Guard. But her experience didn't live up to the dream she'd had of the Army as a kid.

'I Was Sexually Harassed'

In 1996, while on active duty in Korea, Caesar became pregnant. She says that after that, a noncommissioned officer sexually harassed her.
read more here


http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=126783956

Understanding what trauma does

Understanding what trauma does
by
Chaplain Kathie

NASA fuels space shuttle Atlantis for final voyage, afternoon flight to space station

MARCIA DUNN

AP Aerospace Writer

7:38 a.m. EDT, May 14, 2010


CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — NASA fueled space shuttle Atlantis on Friday for its final journey, a delivery trip to the International Space Station that will provide fresh batteries and extra room.

Atlantis was slated to blast off at 2:20 p.m. Everything was going well in the countdown and the weather was looking favorable. Forecasters were sticking with their 70 percent odds of good weather, but a NASA spokesman said that likely would improve as the morning wore on.

The launch team began pumping more than 500,000 gallons of fuel into Atlantis' massive external tank well before dawn, just as the six astronauts assigned to the mission woke up. The all-male crew downed a hearty breakfast: medium-rare steaks and French fries for three of them, a cheeseburger for another and sandwiches for the remaining two.

The 12-day mission is the last one for Atlantis, the fourth in NASA's line of space shuttles. Only two flights remain after this one, by Discovery and Endeavour. NASA hopes to end the 30-year program by the end of this year.
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NASA fuels space shuttle Atlantis for final voyage

NASA is getting ready to send the Atlantis shuttle up for the last time. Here in Florida each time the shuttle goes up, it's stunning, especially when one takes off at night. We can see it all the way over in the Orlando area even though it takes off from the east coast. There are times when we hold our breath because we remember the day when a shuttle exploded.

Challenger
The Challenger flew nine successful missions before that fateful day of the disaster in 1986.
Sharon Christa McAuliffe, the first teacher to fly in space.
Mission commander Francis R. Scobee; pilot Michael J. Smith; mission specialists Ronald E. McNair, Ellison S. Onizuka, and Judith A. Resnik; and payload specialists Gregory B. Jarvis.

I was still living in Massachusetts when it happened and I can remember what I was doing when the news broke on the radio. I was in MacDonald's ordering lunch at the drive-thru listening to WBZ radio. Even after all these years I am greatly sadden remembering that day when I was simply listening to the radio instead of being personally involved. I didn't have to be there to be touched by it. No one in the country had to be there to feel strong emotions.

Each time they come home, we remember this as we pray it does not happen again.

The Space Shuttle Columbia Disaster happend on Saturday 1st, February, 2003 and was the second Space Shuttle Disaster and the first shuttle lost on landing. There was shock around the world over the tragedy.


The memory comes back when triggered by similar events or anniversary dates.

It is the same way around the country when September rolls around again. We all remember what we were doing that morning when we first heard the news about a plane hitting the tower in New York. I was glued to the radio after my boss came into my office to tell me the news. One of my co-workers rushed home to get a portable TV so that we could find out what happened as soon as the other tower was hit. We were sure there would be more tragedy to follow.

Again, I wasn't living in New York. I was far away from the attack in Massachusetts. I didn't know anyone killed or anyone working in the towers. For the rest of the day and weeks after, just like everyone else, I took a personal interest in every bit of news coming out. A sadness comes over this nation every year remembering what happened that horrible day.

Something as simple as moving from one state to another can be traumatic. We moved from the city I had spent my entire life in to Florida in 2004. Needless to say since I could get lost getting out of a paper bag, it was terrible learning how to get around. My elderly Mom was still back in Massachusetts after she changed her mind about moving with us. The first meal I cooked, I packed up the left overs as always forgetting how far away I was from her. We had a good laugh over what I did but there was a sadness in me when I realized how far away from home I really was. Then came hurricane Charlie, Francis and Jeanne. Each year when hurricane season rolls around, I remember what it was like to live thru a hurricane like Charlie as if it was yesterday and my neighborhood was destroyed.

These are just triggered memories of unpleasant things. The events were shocking but they do not affect my daily life nor do they haunt my days unless something brings back the memory. The trigger sets off seconds or a minute or two of great sadness but then that sadness fades away.

People surviving traumatic events experience the same thing when the remember the death of someone they loved, an accident, a fire or a crime. For some it's triggered memories and not part of their daily lives. For others, the memory never dulls. The events have become a part of them so strongly they cannot move on.

When participating in traumatic events, instead of surviving them, exposing themselves to the events on a repeating basis, it can leave scars upon scars. This is what happens to men and women deployed into combat. It's not just one moment in time they have to be recovered by triggers. It is a series of them. Imagine a full year of tragedy and shock each building on the other events. Then imagine having a break between trauma and normalcy back home followed by re-exposure to more of the same. The traumatic events become more "normal" for them than uneventful days.

We can all understand what trauma does to them when we take a look at what it has done to us in our own lives. It is not so impossible to imagine what it would be like for us to have it never go away. Some need time to heal but others need help to recover from the events. We experience abnormal events all the time but for them, they experience horrors as active participants in them and their emotional wounding cuts deeper, takes a stronger hold, leaves a deeper scar and takes more effort to recover from. When they are changed by combat, we need to realize how much events in our own lives leave their mark and then we can use that same understanding to help them.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Fate or fluke? Air crash sole survivors

Ruben van Assouw will probably spend the rest of his life wondering why he survived and no one else did. Hopefully it will be a long happy life for him and the reason he survived will be made clear as he grows older.

The problem with stories like this is there is always someone wondering why other people died and they lived. Why did a tornado skip one house but wipe out the rest of the street or a hurricane cause a tree to crash into a house right after the people living there walked out of the room? Why does a car accident happen right after we were right there instead of when we were there. Surviving can be a blessing but there is always that question of "why" popping up all the time and then comes wondering if your survival meant that much in the long run.

Divine intervention? Luck? Guardian Angels? Karma? Why do some seriously ill people suddenly heal and others pass away seemingly too fast? Why does someone live through a plane crash when everyone else on the plane died? There are so many questions we may never know the answers to but each day there are chances to live our lives differently for having survived it and ended up saved.

Fate or fluke? Air crash sole survivors
By Barry Neild, CNN
May 13, 2010 8:13 p.m. EDT

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Dutch boy lone survivor after escaping air crash with broken bones
Only a few dozen people have become lone air crash survivors
Many survival stories reveal remarkable feats of endurance

(CNN) -- Some will see it as divine intervention, others a simple quirk of fate, fortune or physics, but one boy's cheating of death in an air crash in Libya this week adds another name to a small roll call of aviation disaster sole survivors.

The boy, identified as Ruben van Assouw, suffered multiple fractures in his lower limbs when the Afriqiyah Airways Airbus A330-200 crashed Tuesday at Tripoli International Airport killing 92 passengers and a crew of 11.

Details of how Assouw, a Dutch national, emerged alive from such an appalling disaster are not yet known, but his survival has already been called a "miracle" by Jerzy Buzek, president of the European Parliament.

Statistically improbable, the fact of his survival is also unlikely to shed any light on the mysterious factors that increase the chances of escaping alive from a plane wreck.
go here for more
Air crash sole survivors

12th Combat Aviation Brigade received German medals for bravery

14 soldiers receive German medals for bravery

By Deb Riechmann - The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday May 13, 2010 14:53:08 EDT

KABUL — Fourteen U.S. soldiers have received Germany’s Gold Cross Medal for their bravery in extracting wounded German soldiers from a firefight in northeast Afghanistan — the first time the award has been given to troops from another nation.

The members of the Army’s 12th Combat Aviation Brigade received the medals — one of Germany’s highest awards for valor — on Wednesday at a German base in Kunduz province.
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2010/05/ap_army_germany_gold_cross_051310/

Caregivers of veterans offered relief

Caregivers of veterans offered relief

MARTIN J. KIDSTON Helena Independent Record

HELENA — Mike Bolin’s slide into dementia was years in the making.

During his lectures at the Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, the Vietnam veteran and teacher began losing his words. It wouldn’t be long before Parkinson’s would set in. Dementia would follow, along with the hallucinations.

Now, 65, the winner of the Distinguished Flying Cross and retired military man has lost the ability to walk, to feed himself and to care for his most basic needs. As a result, his wife, Lynn, has made some dramatic changes to her life.

“I had to quit work in November when I couldn’t leave him alone anymore,” Lynn said.

“This happened fast. He’s young and we don’t know what the future holds.”

Mike eased in and out of sleep recently in a La-Z-Boy recliner at the Rocky Mountain Care Center in downtown Helena. When he stared across the room, his eyes fixed on nothing in particular. When he tried to talk, his words came randomly, as if he were dreaming.

Chances are, Lynn knows, that his condition will only get worse.

But, where Lynn once cared for Mike alone, she now relies upon a new service launched by the Veterans Administration at Fort Harrison to help carry the responsibility of providing around-the-clock care.

Known as the Non-Institutional Care program, the service offers relief to those who find themselves responsible for the ongoing and often constant care of an ailing veteran.
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Caregivers of veterans offered relief

Vietnam vet's widow is still waiting

Barbara Hollingsworth: Vietnam vet's widow is still waiting
By: Barbara Hollingsworth
Local Opinion Editor
May 11, 2010
If anybody deserves government health care, it's members of the armed services who literally put their lives on the line for their country. But the government's promise to take care of wounded and sick warriors has too often been an empty one. The Veterans Administration is notorious for red tape that keeps veterans from actually receiving the health benefits they were promised.

Here's just one example: For many years, the Navy provided sailors with government-subsidized cigarettes, which they could purchase for just five cents a carton. So seven months before Vietnam veteran Robert Krone died from end-stage lung disease on Aug. 20, 1998, the VA admitted that his emphysema "is not questioned as being service connected."

Eight months before his death -- and three weeks before the VA stopped accepting tobacco-related claims -- Krone got a call from a VA employee telling him that his tobacco claim had finally been approved and the check would be in the mail within 10 days. His wife, Bessie, who was caring for her terminally ill husband, dashed off a letter thanking former Montgomery Service Center manager Jack Downes and his staff.

Thirteen years later, the check has still not arrived.

Read more at the Washington Examiner: Vietnam vet's widow is still waiting

Army National Guard suicides increased 75 percent in 2009

When the battle comes home: Preventing suicides
Posted: May 11, 2010 - 3:21pm
First of three parts

There is something especially troubling about suicides in the armed forces.

Start with this statistic: More military personnel died by suicide in 2009 than in either of the wars in Afghanistan or Iraq, reports the Congressional Quarterly.

Rates are high for both active duty personnel and veterans.

- In fact, of the more than 30,000 suicides in the nation each year, fully 20 percent are by veterans, said Eric Shinseki, Veterans Affairs secretary.

- Army National Guard suicides increased 75 percent in 2009.

- An average of 18 veterans each day die by suicide.

Stemming the increase

When death comes from the soldier's own hand after returning home, it seems especially tragic.

"This is horrible. Every single loss is devastating," said Gen. Peter Chiarelli, Army vice chief of staff, in The Washington Post.
read more here
When the battle comes home Preventing suicides
Great information here



Fallen officers to be honored at national memorial

Fallen officers to be honored at national memorial

Submitted by Molly Shen on Thursday, May 13th, 07:38am


Family members, friends and fellow officers of six slain law enforcement officers from Western Washington are in Washington D.C. today for a ceremony honoring fallen officers from around the country.

The names of Seattle police Officer Timothy Brenton, Pierce County Deputy Kent Mundell and Lakewood officers Tina Griswold, Ronald Owens, Mark Renninger and Greg Richards were recently engraved on the National Law Enforcement Memorial wall.

A formal ceremony marking the addition of the six names and the names of other 318 other officers from across the U.S. will be held Thursday night. About 20,000 people are expected to attend the vigil.
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http://lakewood.komonews.com/content/fallen-officers-be-honored-national-memorial

Five to ten more years to add wounded, waiting and dying?

We can't take care of the wounded veterans we have now. Does anyone know what this will mean over the years considering Vietnam ended 35 years ago and Vietnam veterans are still seeking help for the first time?

Cartwright: Expect war for 5-10 more years

For the next “five to 10 years,” the U.S. military likely will remain engaged in the same kinds of conflicts it has been fighting since 2001, said Marine Corps Gen. James Cartwright.

170 Maine soldiers adopt dog named Honey

170 Maine soldiers adopt dog named Honey

The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday May 13, 2010 9:26:06 EDT

EDDINGTON, Maine — Maine Army National Guard's 1136th Transportation Company is shipping out this week for Afghanistan. But the soldiers are leaving behind something for their families.

The 170 soldiers adopted a four-legged friend named Honey while training at Fort Hood, Texas, and they chipped in to have the dog shipped to Maine.
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2010/05/ap_honey_dog_051310/

BBC looks at combat stress and alcohol abuse

Combat stress
Alcohol misuse is more common than post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among UK troops. A study in the Lancet suggests that the number of British troops suffering from PTSD has remained relatively low, despite the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

But the study found those who had returned from front-line duties were at much greater risk of alcohol abuse. The Ministry of Defence, which funded the independent research, says it takes issues of problem drinking very seriously and that counselling and welfare support is available.

Former members of the armed forces and their families have been telling the BBC News website about their experience of alcohol misuse.
go here for more
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/talking_point/8679831.stm

Vets help one of their own

Vets help one of their own
Dave Baity

GARDEN CITY BEACH -- When Ed Meek hired Mike Butryn, owner of Pristine Home Services, to do some work on the doublewide mobile home he and his wife, Alice, bought, he got more than he bargained for.

Butryn completed the work the two had agreed on, then went beyond the call of duty, Meek said.

After learning that Meek is a veteran of the Vietnam War, suffered disabilities from wounds he received while in service, and also was a prisoner of war, Butryn decided that Meek needed help to ready the mobile home so that he and his wife could move there by May 17.

So, Butryn, 68, an Air Force veteran who served in Thailand during the Vietnam era, rounded up some friends who'd also served in the military. Early Thursday morning, they arrived at Meek's new home in the Windjammer Mobile Home Village to give Meek a hand, free of charge.

Butryn also wants to expand on the idea. He hopes the service project completed by him; Bob Kaiser, a 66-year-old veteran who served in Korea during the Vietnam era; and Terry Wiebel, who served in the Navy during that era, will become a permanent thing and attract other volunteers.



Read more: Vets help one of their own

Little Girl Welcomes Soldier Father Home


Paige Bennethum's dad is back from Iraq. Credit: Abby Bennethum
Little Girl Welcomes Soldier Father Home
by Colleen Egan

Remember this photo of the adorable little girl who refused to let go of her daddy's hand before he left for Iraq?

The photo, which represents the true cost of war, quickly gained nationwide attention, NBC Philadelphia reports. But this story has a happy ending, now that Paige Bennethum's dad, Staff Sgt. Brett Bennethum, has returned from Iraq.

Death of Marine "self-inflicted gunshot wound"

Marine officials: MarSOC death likely a suicide

Staff report
Posted : Wednesday May 12, 2010 18:22:12 EDT

Naval Criminal Investigative Services is still investigating the death of a Marine assigned to Marine Corps Forces Special Operations Command, although the death appears to be a suicide, officials said.

Sgt. Thomas R. Bagosy, 25, died of a “self-inflicted gunshot wound,” according to a command news release issued Wednesday. His body was found Monday afternoon near the intersection of Cross Street and McHugh Boulevard aboard Camp Lejeune, N.C.

Bagosy, an automotive organizational mechanic from Newark, Del., enlisted in the Corps in 2004 and joined MarSOC in October 2008. He deployed to both Iraq and Afghanistan.

Four state-side Marines have died in the last week, including three at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Va. Lance Cpl. Kevin P. Grant of Harvey, Ill., was shot to death in base housing Sunday. Two other Marines died May 2: Staff Sgt. Nigel Castor, 32, was found dead in a home on base, although the cause of death is unknown; Lance Cpl. Lucas Gary Lowe, 20, was found dead near the Henderson Road railroad track crossing on base.

http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/2010/05/marine_deaths_051210w/

Documentary lets state's Vietnam vets open up


Journal Sentinel
Maj. Gen. Al Wilkening (left) watches as Brig. Gen. Kerry Denson, commander of the Wisconsin Army National Guard, shows his Vietnam battle scars to guardsmen in San Antonio. Denson, a Huey helicopter pilot who served two tours in Vietnam, is featured in “Wisconsin Vietnam War Stories.”

Documentary lets state's Vietnam vets open up
Many had kept war stories to themselves
By Meg Jones of the Journal Sentinel
It was through Sue Haack's typewriter that many families learned of the deaths of their loved ones in Vietnam.

Assigned to U.S. Army Vietnam Headquarters in Long Binh, she arrived to the war in January 1969 and left one year and two days later. Sometimes she had to go to the morgue to help sort identifications before rolling a form letter into an old manual typewriter.

"All you had to do was put in the name and address. It was such a cold feeling. It was hell on earth," said Haack, 62, of Madison.

Haack didn't talk about her experiences in Vietnam as an enlisted soldier for 15 years after she returned home in 1970.

Wearing her uniform - the only clothes she had - on her journey back to Madison, she was kicked out of a taxicab and a stewardess refused to let her on a flight until the plane's captain intervened. Why talk about Vietnam when it seemed as if everyone was protesting the war, Haack figured.

Now, she and many other Wisconsin Vietnam veterans are getting a chance to speak about their experiences in a documentary that will be broadcast on Wisconsin Public Television this month. "Wisconsin Vietnam War Stories" will air in three one-hour segments May 24 to 26, the week after LZ Lambeau, a three-day event and welcome-home gathering at Lambeau Field in Green Bay.

In the documentary, she relates the fate of the soldier she replaced in casualty notifications - he committed suicide 10 days before the end of his tour. Though most of the names of the casualties were unknown to her, Haack handled letters to the families of five friends she met in Vietnam who died when their helicopter crashed.
read more here
http://www.jsonline.com/news/wisconsin/93645564.html

Medal of Honor Recipients Speak Out on PTSD

These men were awarded the highest honor for saving lives and they are still doing it. They are still saving lives by doing this!



Medal of Honor Recipients Speak Out
By Lina Bereskova
Epoch Times Staff
To reduce rising suicide rates in the military, American Medal of Honor recipients will launch the “Medal of Honor—Speak Out!” campaign to encourage soldiers to get help for post-traumatic stress (PTS). The heroes, who survived horrific experiences, recorded video messages.

Soldiers who suffer from PTS often do not seek help. A fear of looking weak or of hurting their military career held back 65 and 50 percent respectively from asking for help, according to the campaign.


go here for more








Sammy Davis




Medal of Honor Recipients Speak Out About PTS
Medal of Honor: Speak Out! PSA
:30 Second PSA
PSA: Army
PSA: Navy and Marine Corps
PSA: Air Force
Harvey "Barney" Barnum
Patrick Brady
Paul W. Bucha
Jon Cavaiani

The 28 participating Medal of Honor recipients are each featured in a short video clip personally urging service members to seek help through resources and services that were not available when they returned from war. For example, Jon Cavaiani tells troops he wishes the resources were available to him when he returned from the Vietnam War, because “it would have alleviated the problems I had later. The tools and resources to help are there. Make use of them. I did, much later, and it continues to help me stay strong.”

Cavaiani, a Special Forces staff sergeant, was held by the North Vietnamese as a prisoner of war for two years. He was wounded in the back and severely burned after his small contingent of American soldiers was attacked by an overwhelming enemy force in the spring of 1971.

Medal of Honor Speak Out on PTSD



Bruce Crandall
Sammy Davis
George "Bud" Day
Drew Dix
Roger Donlon
Walter Ehlers
James Fleming
Robert Foley
Harold Fritz
Thomas Hudner
Robert Ingram
Joe Jackson
Jack Jacobs
Thomas Kelley
Walter Marm
Robert Modrzejewski
Alfred Rascon
Jim Taylor
Brian Thacker
Michael E. Thornton & Thomas R. Norris
Leo Thorsness
Jay Vargas
Gary Wetzel
Hershel "Woody" Williams

National Military Appreciation Month

May is designated as National Military Appreciation Month and is an important month for those who serve. It is a positive way to recognize all of the men and women in all branches of the military: active duty, National Guard & Reserves, Veterans, Retirees and their family members. Their family members serve too and make many sacrifices.

Those who serve in the United States military services represent the highest caliber of professionalism and loyalty. We ask them to willingly risk their lives. May is the month to applaud them for their contributions and sacrifices. Let us remember all of those who serve, past and present and celebrate:
May 1st – Loyalty Day
May 7th – Military Spouse Appreciation Day
May 8th – VE Day
May 15th – Armed Forces Day
May 31st – Memorial Day
The next time you see a servicemember, whether it is a holiday or not, thank them for their service. It means a great deal to them. Here is a link to send the troops a message of thanks. Click here.

We live in the greatest country in the world. Americans may have different points of view, but at the end of the day, we are one nation.

GOD BLESS AMERICA AND OUR UNITED STATES ARMED FORCES!
Debbie GregoryCEO MilitaryConnection.com

PTSD: You're not Dinky Dau, you're CBC


PTSD: You're not Dinky Dau, you're CBC
by Chaplian Kathie

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder became the term used to label combat veterans changed by war. After that, therapists used the term to label all individuals changed by traumatic events, never acknowledging there are many different types of traumatic events.

People surviving natural disasters can find themselves changed afterward and they need help to overcome the shock and loss. They are not suffering the same way survivors of crimes do. For them, the shock of another person doing it to them is harder to overcome and being able to trust again is one of the hardest things to do. There is another type of PTSD and it involves careers. Emergency responders see the aftermath of the traumatic event others go through. Firefighters arrive after the fire has done damage to property but also after the people have been in a struggle between life and death, burned, and all too often, have succumbed. For them, the exposure to traumatic events hits them hard as the number of times increases.

Then there are the participants. The police and sheriff deputies, the highway patrol officers, risking their lives but all too often become part of the traumatic event itself. The number of events increases for them but so do the number of times their lives are on the line. For them they are changed by these events and they usually suffer a higher rate of PTSD and suicide. Divorce for them is higher than other occupations and so is the reliance on alcohol.

The highest occupation to set off PTSD is combat veterans. The exposure to traumatic events is astronomical. We can understand all of the above being changed by the events in their lives but when it comes to war veterans, we tend to minimize the difference when we should be focused on them more.

During the Vietnam War there were terms to label GI's changed by combat.

flaky
to be in a state of mental disarray, characterized by spaciness and various forms of unreasoning fear

DINKY DAU: Vietnamese term for "crazy" or "You're crazy."

FUBAR short for "Fucked Up Beyond All Repair" or "Recognition." To describe impossible situations, equipment, or persons as in, "It is (or they are) totally Fubar!"


Yet during WWII it was called "shell shock" and during Korea it was Section 8.

Section 8(military)
The term Section 8 refers to a discharge from the United States military for reason of being mentally unfit for service. This term was made popular by the television program M*A*S*H, in which a corporal in the US Army, Max Klinger, attempts for years to get a Section 8 discharge (usually by wearing women's clothing), in order to get out his tour of service of the Korean War.

In the 1950s, Section 8 discharges were commonly given to service members found guilty of "Sexual Perversion," especially for homosexuality — and it was classified as an undesirable discharge, depriving the soldier so discharged of veteran's benefits but not resulting in the loss of any citizenship rights, such as the right to vote.

Discharge under "Section 8" is no longer a military reality, as medical discharges for psychological/psychiatric reasons are now covered by a number of regulations. Perhaps the most commonly used of these is AR 635-200, Enlisted Administrative Separations. Chapter 5, paragraph 13 governs the separation of personnel medically diagnosed with a personality disorder.

The practice of discharging homosexual service members under Section 8 ceased after the "Don't ask, don't tell" Policy went into effect during the Clinton Administration; those found to be homosexual are now issued honorable discharges in most circumstances, under Chapter 15 of the above referenced publication.

The Section 8 discharge sought after by Corporal Klinger in M*A*S*H differs from a real Section 8; Klinger is attracted to a Section 8 discharge because on the show, it is considered a medical discharge and not a dishonorable discharge. The Section 8 has also been referenced in the book (and later movie) Catch-22, in the movies Full Metal Jacket and Jarhead, and in an episode of Family Guy, in which Stewie briefly parodies the Klinger character. There is also a group of investigators identified as "section 8" in the movie Basic

With the term PTSD being used for one size fits all, it lumps in all events together as if someone with combat PTSD would respond the same way someone who survives a car accident would. They are not caused by the same events any more than they are affecting the lives with the same level of cuts.

Veterans were trained to use the weapons and they responded to orders and acronyms that made sense to them because their lives depended on knowing them. Right now they struggle with the term PTSD because it comes with a label of "disorder" making it for some just as bad as hearing they are DINKY DAU. The stigma lives on because they still have not been assured by commanders it does not make them weak or defective or worthless any more than it makes them a coward. There are still some people in this country looking at them as if they are faking, as the disgusting piece on AP suggested. Military PTSD Fraud

The stigma of PTSD is already set in and has not been removed after all these years. It suggests that they are responsible for having it. The truth is, had it not been for being sent into a war zone, they wouldn't have been changed or haunted by combat. Every combat veteran will tell you that no one walks away after it unchanged. Some are not as affected as others but then again, they don't enter into service with the same histories behind them. Some are more focused on themselves while others are more compassionate just as some are more courageous than others. The most courageous also happen to be the ones with the most compassion, able to set self-preservation aside for the sake of someone else.

They are the last to ask for help among the survivors of traumatic events yet they are the most deeply changed. There was a thought that linking all survivors of traumatic events together would humanize it but the problem with that is the approach to it has evolved into a one size fits all answer. The military has taken this one step too far and assumes the servicemen and women can train their brains to prevent it. This is part of the problem. Life prepares us for what we face and our histories come with us on the journey. You cannot prepare psychologically to take a life or watch a friend die. You can train ahead of time to have the ammunition ready to begin healing as soon as it's over.

LP Listening Position A 3-man post placed outside the barbwire surrounding a fire base. Each would lay out claymore mines; they would have 1 radio and take turns during the night listening and looking. They were the early warning for the troops inside the parimeter.


There needs to be an early warning for the troops after combat so they seek help right away instead of "waiting to get over it" and hoping they can drink it or drug it away.

There are many things that are possible in healing the warriors after combat and the sooner they happen, the more that can be reversed. With the wrong view of what PTSD is and what it does, time is lost and they pay the price. They are not defective any more than they are Section 8. The other side of this darkness is a stronger, more caring and dedicated soldier as well as citizen.

It's time for the military to stop treating them like everyone else. They were changed by combat.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Staff Sgt. Joe Biel center of motorcycle ride for PTSD

PTSD was once called Soldier's Heart and without knowing it, they couldn't have been closer to the truth. It because they can feel deeply, good and bad emotions, they end up carrying away the pain of others along with their own pain. Whenever you read stories like the following, keep in mind that for them, it is because they care so much, they carry so much more away.


Staff Sgt. Joe Biel stands next to a "buffalo," the primary vehicle his unit used to find improvised explosive devices in Iraq. Biel committed suicide in 2007 after returning to North Dakota following his second tour in Iraq. Special to The Forum


Bike ride to raise PTSD awareness
Staff Sgt. Joe Biel wasn’t the same after returning home from his second tour in Iraq, his friends said.
By: Heidi Shaffer, INFORUM


Staff Sgt. Joe Biel wasn’t the same after returning home from his second tour in Iraq, his friends said.

“I could definitely tell something wasn’t right,” said Spc. David Young, who served with Biel and lived with him in Devils Lake, N.D., after returning from Iraq.

Biel committed suicide in April 2007, and now his fellow North Dakota Guardsmen are sponsoring a motorcycle ride in his memory to raise awareness about post-traumatic stress disorder and suicide among veterans.

“With him, just like any other soldier, they’re not going to admit when they’re having negative thoughts, suicidal thoughts or struggling,” Young said.

The men served in the 164th Engineer Combat Battalion based out of Minot, N.D., a unit responsible for clearing roads and supply routes of improvised explosive devices.

Because of the combat the unit saw, no one was left untouched, physically or mentally, Young said.

“All of us have some on-going reminder of our deployment,” Young said. “Anyone who came back and said they didn’t have PTSD would be lying.”
read more here
http://www.inforum.com/event/article/id/278348/group/News/

Paul Sullivan, Veterans for Common Sense tries to give VA some facts

Vets group cites errors reported by VA IG

By Kelly Kennedy - Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday May 12, 2010 15:01:20 EDT

At a conference designed to help veterans service organizations better understand the issues their clients face, Paul Sullivan of Veterans for Common Sense tried to tie it up in a one-page document of new data from the Veterans Affairs Department:

After looking at eight Veterans Benefits Administration regional offices in 2009 and 2010, VA’s inspector general found a 28 percent error rate. In fact, the San Juan, Puerto Rico, overall error rate stood at 41 percent, while the Nashville office had made errors in 52 percent of its post-traumatic stress disorder cases. In Baltimore, 55 percent of cases of diabetes in connection with Agent Orange had errors, and in Roanoke, Va., 49 percent of traumatic brain injury cases had errors.

“VA has a very significant quality problem in adjudicating their claims,” Sullivan said. “VA’s own reports indict the place. VBA is the dam that holds veterans up from getting the medical care they need.”

Sullivan spoke on a panel that detailed what roadblocks remain as service members transition from active duty to veteran status. He said Congress has focused so much on VA health care that the administrative end has gotten lost in the shuffle. “Some of their computers are older than I am,” said Sullivan, who served in the 1991 Gulf War and who used to work for VA.
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Vets group cites errors reported by VA IG

Veterans Blast Georgia Bill to Put PTSD Diagnosis on Driver's Licenses

Like I said, if they really wanted to alert as well as honor, they should just offer them them the choice of putting Combat Veteran instead of doing this. The idea that they get pulled over by police is really out there. They don't get pulled over more than civilians. It is good for police to know they are facing an uncommon person when they are standing in front of a veteran and this way they get taken to the hospital if needed or to a veteran's court if necessary but what about when they have to use their license for identification using charge cards or cashing checks? Not a good move at all.

Veterans Blast Georgia Bill to Put PTSD Diagnosis on Driver's Licenses
By Joshua Rhett Miller
- FOXNews.com

Veterans groups are blasting Georgia lawmakers for passing legislation that would allow a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder to appear on driver's licenses.

Veterans groups are blasting Georgia lawmakers for passing legislation that would allow a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder to appear on driver's licenses.

The legislation, which awaits Gov. Sonny Purdue's signature, would permit servicemembers and veterans to request a PTSD denotation, which would appear on their driver's licenses as a specific health problem, much like poor eyesight.

PTSD is an anxiety disorder that can occur after a traumatic event, including sexual assault, physical assault and military combat. Symptoms include vivid flashbacks to the traumatic event, depression and substance abuse, among others. Up to 20 percent of veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars suffer from PTSD, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The bill would require a sworn statement from a physician verifying a diagnosis of PTSD and a waiver of liability for the release of the driver's medical information.

State Sen. Ron Ramsey, who co-sponsored the bill, says he sees no downside to the measure. In a statement to FoxNews.com, Ramsey, a Democrat, said the "completely voluntary" legislation may protect law enforcement officers and veterans from potentially dangerous situations.

"For example if a veteran suffering from PTSD was pulled over for a simple traffic violation, a designation on the license explaining the circumstances could inform an officer that the situation should be handled cautiously," the statement read. "If a veteran does not feel it is necessary to designate this on their license, then they do not have to. Again, it is entirely voluntary."
go here for more of this
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2010/05/12/law-label-veterans-damaged-license/

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Sunday, May 9, 2010

Georgia about to make PTSD even worse
“Why would I want to put out there on my license – hey, I’m a nut job,” said Marvin Myers, president of the Georgia Vietnam Veterans Alliance Inc.