Sunday, March 27, 2011

Dogs help soldiers with PTSD get through post-war life

Aaron McCarty and Bella.
Dogs help soldiers with PTSD get through post-war life

Submitted by Carleen Johnson, KOMO Newsradio Reporter
Friday, March 25th, 12:22pm


The numbers of seriously injured servicemen and women coming back from the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan continue to climb.

Besides physical wounds, many return with severe post traumatic stress disorder that goes undiagnosed for months or even years. But there’s a new organization dedicated to helping these wounded warriors.

Soldier Aaron McCarthy was on patrol in Iraq several years ago when a roadside bomb exploded.

“Knocked me out of the turret and I jumped back in,” he says.

With his right arm torn up, a serious head injury and recovering at home, it finally hit him.

“I kinda lost it, you know” McCarthy says, “because, here I am, bulletproof, you know, I’m the…I’m the…I’m the NCO. I’m in charge of all of these soldiers. I’ve got, you know, all this responsibility, and…and for me, that…that…that really took the wind out of my sails.”

But the realization that it was post traumatic stress disorder and a brain injury that had changed him didn't come right away, as it doesn't for many wounded warriors.

“I’m OK, I’m taking a couple of pills and it’s OK with me,” said McCarthy about that denial.

Over time the nightmares, tremors and stress took a toll.
read more here
Dogs help soldiers with PTSD get through post-war life

War vet battles government for support

War vet battles government for support

SOCASTEE, SC (WMBF) – Inside a modest house in Socastee, SC, a veteran and his wife are in the battle of their lives.

They're trying to save their home, and their marriage.

Matthew Stoddard served overseas in Kyrgyszstan after 9/11 in support of America's war in Afghanistan. But, whatever happened over there may have followed Matthew home.

"He started changing," said his wife, April. "He would be angry. He would be hateful."

This veteran of the post-9/11 fight has post-traumatic stress disorder.

"The relationship he had with the kids started to be non-existent," April recalls. "He had alienated all of us. And I was afraid. I was seriously afraid."

She was scared their marriage would end, too. However, through the Veterans Administration, Matthew got medication and treatment.

April says he's doing better, but he's far from being healed.

"I'll just be sitting here and all of a sudden my shoulder will just start hurting," Matthew Stoddard recalls telling a doctor. "Or, I'll just move it…and I'm on my knees about ready to cry because of the pain."

The Stoddards say they have faced endless bureaucracy, sometimes out-and-out disrespect, and incompetence from the government as they've tried to get help.
read more here
War vet battles government for support

Homeless veterans still honored with military funeral

Homeless veterans still honored with military funeral
Mar 26, 2011 (KSWB-TV - McClatchy-Tribune Information Services via COMTEX) -- Balboa Park, Calif-- Two homeless veterans were buried in a full military service at Veterans Museum and Memorial Center at Balboa Park.

"We bring them in here and we adopt them into our family, then we bury them," said David Brown, a veteran and organizer of the monthly funerals.

Once a month, San Diego county veterans groups hold memorial services for indigent veterans. Saturday Edward Loux, who served in the US Army and Charles Schulken, who served in the US Navy, were laid to rest.

"It 's only right that we take care of our own, our own brothers and our sisters," said Thomas Mowery. Mowery served in the US Army 1980-83 and now volunteers as a pallbearer.

"These people dedicated their services to this country and they deserve our respect," said Mowery.
read more here
Homeless veterans still honored with military funeral

Local Veterans upset over Kilpatrick's Post Traumatic Stress Disorder diagnosis

What part of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder is not being understood here? PTSD only comes from a traumatic event.

Local Veterans upset over Kilpatrick's Post Traumatic Stress Disorder diagnosis
Many people were outraged when Kwame Kilpatrick's doctor says that the ex-mayor suffers from post- traumatic stress disorder.
click link to read more



$125 million resilience "training" uses troops as guinea pigs for research

Crying first thing on a Sunday morning is not a good way to start the day but while reading this, that is exactly what happened. I had a voice in my head crying out in anguish because of "training" the Marines gave him. Back then, it was called Battle Mind. This program was supposed to help them become resilient but it did more harm than good.

He was in his early 20's, back from Iraq for a couple of months. He was sitting outside the Orlando VA clinic with a buddy as they were filling out paperwork. We were talking and suddenly, he was crying. He was sorry to be crying in front of me. He said, "Ma'am you just don't understand. I'm a Marine. We're not supposed to cry." We talked for a while more and then he told me that he thought he failed to train right, so he "got" PTSD. He believed it was his fault.

This is what Battle Mind did. It began by telling them they could train their brains to prevent it. This sent a message to them that if they ended up with PTSD, it was because they didn't do it right.

No one told him that he trained to do his job in Iraq and did it right. No on told him that he didn't lack courage because no matter what kind of pain he was in, he still did his job, watched the backs of his friends and spent every day with honor. His first concern while deployed was for his buddies. When they were all out of danger, then he allowed himself to feel the pain he carried all that time.

There is so much being done under the claim of helping when the evidence has shown more harm than good being done. Losing more after combat proves the claims fall flat but the pain is very real. This report is about how steps taken to help them are doing more harm than good. God willing someone with the authority to do something about it will stop these kinds of programs and stop sacrificing their lives so a company can make money. They are doing "research" while calling it training. In other words, the troops have been used as guinea pigs instead of being helped to heal.






The Dark Side of "Comprehensive Soldier Fitness

By Roy Eidelson, Marc Pilisuk, and Stephen Soldz Posted by Stephen Soldz (about the submitter)

Why is the world's largest organization of psychologists so aggressively promoting a new, massive, and untested military program? The APA's enthusiasm for mandatory "resilience training" for all U.S. soldiers is troubling on many counts.

The January 2011 issue of the American Psychologist, the American Psychological Association's (APA) flagship journal, is devoted entirely to 13 articles that detail and celebrate the virtues of a new U.S. Army-APA collaboration. Built around positive psychology and with key contributions from former APA president Martin Seligman and his colleagues, Comprehensive Soldier Fitness (CSF) is a $125 million resilience training initiative designed to reduce and prevent the adverse psychological consequences of combat for our soldiers and veterans. While these are undoubtedly worthy aspirations, the special issue is nevertheless troubling in several important respects: the authors of the articles, all of whom are involved in the CSF program, offer very little discussion of conceptual and ethical considerations; the special issue does not provide a forum for any independent critical or cautionary voices whatsoever; and through this format, the APA itself has adopted a jingoistic cheerleading stance toward a research project about which many crucial questions should be posed. We discuss these and related concerns below.


Conceptual and Empirical Concerns

Although its advocates prefer to describe Comprehensive Soldier Fitness as a training program, it is indisputably a research project of enormous size and scope, one in which a million soldiers are required to participate. Reivich, Seligman, and McBride write in one of the special issue articles, "We hypothesize that these skills will enhance soldiers' ability to handle adversity, prevent depression and anxiety, prevent PTSD, and enhance overall well-being and performance" (p. 26, emphasis added). This is the very core of the entire CSF program, yet it is merely a hypothesis -- a tentative explanation or prediction that can only be confirmed through further research.

There seems to be reluctance and inconsistency among the CSF promoters in acknowledging that CSF is "research" and therefore should entail certain protections routinely granted to those who participate in research studies. Seligman explained to the APA's Monitor on Psychology, "This is the largest study -- 1.1 million soldiers -- psychology has ever been involved in" (a "study" is a common synonym for "research project"). Butwhen asked during an NPR interview whether CSF would be "the largest-ever experiment," Brig. Gen. Cornum, who oversees the program, responded, "Well, we're not describing it as an experiment. We're describing it as training." Despite the fact that CSF is incontrovertibly a research study, standard and important questions about experimental interventions like CSF are neither asked nor answered in the special issue. This neglect is all the more troubling given that the program is so massive and expensive, and the stakes are so high.

It is also important to note here two controversial aspects of the Comprehensive Soldier Fitness program that have already received attention from investigative journalists. First, Mark Benjamin has raised provocative questions, not yet fully answered, about the circumstances surrounding the huge, $31 million no-bid contract awarded to Seligman ("whose work formed the psychological underpinnings of the Bush administration's torture program") by the Department of Defense for his team's CSF involvement.
read more here
The Dark Side of "Comprehensive Soldier Fitness

The Marine above carried more pain than he needed to carry. Aside from the fact he was brave when he needed to be and human when he didn't need to be brave anymore, no one told him that the fact he cared so much, no matter what he was going through, showed great compassion. We talked about God and how all the evil done in this world can be allowed. No one told him that when he felt compassion in the middle of all that horror, God was right there because he was. The Chaplain he talked to while deployed told him that he was not a member of the "right" faith and he needed to convert. There was no mention of God's love, how to forgive and how to be forgiven. We fail them in so many ways, I think I need to go an cry a bit more after reading this report.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Why can't they see that God was there


Why is it that soldiers always seem to wonder where God is when they see the worst man is capable of? Understandable to be sure when they see so much death, destruction, misery and horror. Why can't they see that God was there, even with all of that, because they were there?

They manage to find so much compassion within themselves that a picture like the one above proves.

How can they endure so much yet still be able to care so much for a friend? They can because the love they had inside of them all along was stronger than anything else.

I was talking to a Vietnam veteran a few hours ago and he had the usual impression about coming home. He said all of his friends changed while he was gone. He didn't feel as if he fitted in anymore. I asked him if he thought his friends changed or if he was the one who changed. He said looking back he guessed he changed.

They leave the rest of us and go places none of us can really understand. They do things none of us will ever know. They return home to family and friends frozen in time, worrying about the same old tiny problems, the same drive to buy more things, go out and enjoy life while the veteran has taken a look at the other side of the world. His view has changed. He sees things differently and one thing he notices in the people in his life is they have no idea.

They have no patience for us not feeling like going into work because they spent a year of 24-7 risking their lives when they felt like it and when they didn't want to. One member of the family takes long showers when they were lucky if they had a few in the whole year. They can't stand greed when people have more than they need but won't share because they just left other people with very little but a huge desire to share what little they had with them.

There is so much more that we keep missing about them but I believe you get the point. They did not let go of the compassion they had for others no matter what they went through but we blame them when they don't snap out of it and go back to the way they were before. Maybe we should be wondering why we didn't change considering how much someone we cared about just went through. How can we hold the same set of values and hang onto petty complaints when they just got back from hell? Yet even in that hell called a war, they found people with compassion, mercy and love no matter what was happening there.

The Old Testament is filled with God's wrath but the New Testament is filled with His love. Some still cannot come to terms with what freewill is anymore than they can accept the evil man is capable of doing to others. They want to blame God, say He doesn't care, because that is easier than facing the truth that as long as there is someone caring about another person, He lives right there. God was there all along because they were there and still able to care.

Vietnam Vet’s Fight To Save America’s Military History

Vietnam Vet’s Fight To Save America’s Military History
Where is Toledo’s Missing History?
by Lou Hebert
A local military historian would like to know where all the artifacts have gone that used to be displayed at the Toledo Zoo? Nick Haupricht has been looking into the mystery of the missing artifacts for several years and says he has reason to believe that hundreds of items, including historic weapons, artworks, uniforms, badges and even cannons were stolen over the years and he’d like the Attorney General should launch an investigation. “Our history was stolen from us”.
read more here
Vietnam Vet’s Fight To Save America’s Military History

Suicide-Prevention Program Recommendations don't go far enough

Twenty-nine years ago, I was introduced to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, initiated into the Vietnam War by a 30 year old veteran. It was 11 years after he came back home part way. Aside from living with it, I've spent all these years tracking it. As an expert, I can tell you that we have never seen so many studies and attempts to help the veterans heal as we have today. While this fills me with great hope, it also serves as warnings because with all that is being done, there are still increased numbers of veterans reaching the point where they feel so much hopelessness, they are on the brink of suicide.

The Suicide Prevention Hotline received over 55,000 calls in the first year according to a report from SAMHSA, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services.

As of March 3, 2011 the Suicide Prevention Hotline numbers
To date, more than 379,000 callers have called the Veterans Suicide Prevention Hotline, and more than 200,000 of these callers have identified themselves as Veterans or family members or friends of Veterans. To date, the hotline has led to more than 13,000 rescues of actively suicidal Veterans.
Yet there are still 18 veterans a day committing suicide. What is even more troubling is the fact that until this month, the active duty military did not have access to suicide prevention.

Suicide hotline available for deployed soldiers

Even if it was possible to track all the suicides and attempted suicides, we'd never really know all of them. There are drug overdose deaths that are never really clear if they were accidental or suicide. Accidents are never really clear when they result in death. No one is checking on the incidents involving law enforcement when a veteran with PTSD is involved.

Why, after all these years did over 379,000 calls have to be made in the first place and why were over 200,000 of them from veterans? Why does it still reach that level of pain this keeps happening?

Because the programs they have in place are not working even though they are clearly helping some. What is missing? The families are. Their role in all of this is often overlooked and they are one of the most important resources.


It is troubling something like this is found on the National Suicide Prevention Hotline site.
The Lifeline is featured in Marvel comic
Captain America: A Little Help

"Super heroes fight a lot of battles, but there are few more important than combating suicide," said Tom Brevoort, Senior Vice-President of Publishing. "That’s why we're making Captain America: A Little Help available for free via our digital comics outlets. If even one person calls this number instead of doing something very tragic, we know that means we succeeded."

Suicide Prevention Lifeline.org page tells veterans to press 1 to talk. Yet on the same site, the same page, Captain America is right there at the bottom and he's battling a bunch of guys dressed in green. This is not a good idea no matter who it was intended for to show up on the same page telling veterans to seek help.

Without knowing what to do, families like mine did the best we could without any support or knowledge at all. Most of the mistakes made living with combat PTSD, were all made many years ago and we learned from them. We are yet one more untapped resource in helping the veterans heal because we live with it everyday. Many wives have been married for 30 or 40 years, keeping their veteran alive and raising their families with nothing to lean on other than love. I can tell you first hand, back when all this was new to me, I would have paid any price for the resources available today, especially the online support but too many do not take advantage of it. These are lifelines! They need to reach for them but their excuse is, they have enough to worry about so they discover PTSD when it is too late to avoid a lot of anguish.

Families can make it better when they understand but they are left out of the healing with mental health workers. They need to be included in the therapy as much as they need to be clued in.

These are the key recommendations Rand offered. Families are missing from the action.

Raising awareness and promoting self-care;
Identifying people at high risk, including screening for mental health problems;
Eliminating actual or perceived barriers to quality behavioral health care;
Providing high-quality mental health treatment and specific interventions focused on suicide when needed;
Restricting access to firearms and other lethal means, with attention to how lethal medications are packaged and how door hinges and shower rods are constructed; and
Responding appropriately when suicides occur.

While these are very important, they miss a big one and that is the family. Family can be relatives or it can be very close friends, because facing reality there are many serving without a strong family behind them. We see it when they come home from deployment. They get off the bus without a spouse to greet them, without Mom or Dad showing up to hug them, so they stand with their friends. Their friends are as close to family as there is.



Yet families are not the only problem. There have been suicide reports from across the country when the family knew what PTSD was, got the to go for help and offered all the support in the world, but it was still not enough. This suggests the programs offered to help them heal were not good enough. One more indication changes have to be made to make sure the programs live up to the challenge these veterans come home with.
Study Makes Suicide-Prevention Program Recommendations
By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service

HAMPTON, Va., March 25, 2011 – A new study commissioned by the Defense Department affirms many of the suicide-prevention efforts being made within DOD and the military services and recommends ways to strengthen them.

In preparing “The War Within: Suicide Prevention in the U.S. Military,” the Rand National Defense Research Institute examined data on military suicides, identified what scientific literature and leaders in the field consider the best prevention strategies and recommended ways to ensure existing programs reflect the state of the art, officials said.

“This is a very thorough effort,” Dr. Mark Barnes, director of the resilience and prevention directorate at the Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury, said of the report. “Rand interviewed each of the services and went outside the military to look at suicide-prevention practices and identified gaps for the way ahead [and] recommendations for the military suicide-prevention programs.”

The study’s findings track closely with those in the Defense Department’s own DOD Suicide Task Force Report, Barnes told military health care professionals attending the first Armed Forces Public Health Conference held here this week.

“There is no disagreement. They are very complimentary in what they are recommending,” he said. “So we have a nice resource here with quality information that our suicide-prevention folks can refer to as we move forward with the task force recommendations.”

Navy Capt. Paul Hammer, director of the Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury, called the Rand report an important tool in helping the Defense Department better confront an issue it takes “very seriously.”

“The Rand study helps us to identify areas that need improvement so that we can continue to provide the most comprehensive health care for our service members –- from the inside out,” he said.

The study, written for health policy officials and suicide-prevention program managers, recognized critical factors in a comprehensive prevention program. These include:
-- Raising awareness and promoting self-care;
-- Identifying people at high risk, including screening for mental health problems;
-- Eliminating actual or perceived barriers to quality behavioral health care;
-- Providing high-quality mental health treatment and specific interventions focused on suicide when needed;
-- Restricting access to firearms and other lethal means, with attention to how lethal medications are packaged and how door hinges and shower rods are constructed; and
-- Responding appropriately when suicides occur.
Evaluating the Defense Department’s suicide prevention programs, the study cited the potential benefit of a new DOD-wide surveillance program being used to track suicides and suicide attempts. The DOD Suicide Event Report replaced each service’s individual suicide-reporting system, Barnes explained, helping to ensure “apples to apples” comparisons as information is shared across the services.

“This is a data issue,” he said. “We need good data. The data informs us in how to be effective with prevention and health promotion. So we are continually improving our data systems.”

Rand also called for an evaluation of existing suicide prevention programs, along with a requirement that any new initiatives include an evaluation plan. Barnes acknowledged the challenge of assessing programs’ effectiveness, but called closer collaboration and information sharing across the Defense Department and services a positive step toward sharing best practices and determining what works.

The Rand study recognizes most military suicide-prevention programs’ focus on raising awareness, including telling people where to get help and helping them recognize peers in distress.

However, it emphasizes the importance of also teaching military members how to recognize their own problems and refer themselves if needed to a behavioral health professional or chaplain.

“Raising awareness and promoting self-care is something we do and we can do better,” Barnes said, noting the value of resilience campaigns. “The ideas is to give people skills,” and know how to recognize signs of risk in themselves as well as others, and to know what to do.

The report also identified the importance of partnerships between agencies and organizations responsible for mental health and substance use and other known risk factors for suicide.

“We do fairly well in terms of partnerships,” Barnes said. “One area we are looking at is, on an installation, how well do all the different partners work together in the suicide [prevention] mission? Because often times you have … one person who is the suicide prevention person on an installation. They are not going to be able to check in on everybody. It is really the whole installation that needs to be on board to be effective with this.”

The study also cited the need to ensure there’s no gap in services provided during military members’ transitions -- between military bases, between commands or between active and reserve status.

“Ensuring a continuity of services and care is really important,” Barnes said. “One of the times of increased vulnerability is during transitions. … And we need to be covering all the gaps like this proactively for our service members and their families.”

The study called for formal guidance for commanders so they know how to respond to suicide and suicide attempts. It recognized the lack of any direct policy within the services and the risks of handling these situations improperly.

“It is really about our leadership,” Barnes said. “We need to empower our leadership, because they set the example. They set the tone. So we have to give them the tools. We need to give them the information, the data, so they know what is going on, where we think is the right direction to go, and then get behind them.”

One more important factor in all of this is who was behind all of these programs starting in the first place. Vietnam veterans and their families pushed for help in the beginning. Still we wouldn't know as much as we do now about how huge the problem is had it not been for groups like Veterans For Common Sense and Paul Sullivan making sure they got the right information. They have been filing Freedom of Information Act requests for years to find out what the truth is and it has been pretty dark for the veterans behind the idyllic image of veterans joyous homecomings.

The VA and the DOD can come out with programs without providing any proof these programs work and the general public would take it at face value. The truth would be hidden behind the claims, as it had been until VCS fought to make sure the truth was told. The same truth hundreds of thousands of families live with year after year when the rest of the country has forgotten all about the battles they were sent to fight.

There is hope in all of this as long as the American people refuse to allow more to die when they come home from war than during it.
Demand answers from the media.

Why are so many still committing suicide when so many have been calling suicide prevention?
With all the programs millions of tax payer dollars fund, why aren't they working?
Why do veterans still feel on the brink of suicide they need to call for help?
With all the attempts to address the stigma, why are so many still afraid to ask for help?
Why are so many getting help still committing suicide?

There are very serious questions needing to be asked, but the media doesn't seem interested enough in asking or they lack a clear understanding to even know how serious all of this is. Make sure they discover what the reality is for too many when they come home before it is too late for too many more.

Man convicted for hammer death of Iraqi veteran Trevor Neiman

UPDATE

Man gets 81 years for veteran's murder


Man convicted for hammer death of Iraqi veteran

The Associated Press
Posted: 03/25/2011 11:32:47 PM PDT
Updated: 03/25/2011 11:33:09 PM PDT

VICTORVILLE, Calif.—A man accused of bludgeoning an Iraq War veteran to death with a hammer in an unprovoked attack was convicted of first-degree murder.

A San Bernardino County jury took about a half-hour this week to convict Johnny Acosta. The 46-year-old Hesperia man has two previous felony convictions and faces 81 years to life when he is sentenced on Tuesday. He was not eligible for the death penalty.
Acosta was convicted in the death of Trevor Neiman, 25.
read more here
Man convicted for hammer death of Iraqi veteran

Iraq veteran is killed while installing cable TV
The former Marine, who survived three overseas tours, is fatally beaten with a hammer in Victorville in what authorities say was an unprovoked attack.
November 11, 2009
Nicole Santa Cruz and Richard Winton
As a Marine, Trevor Neiman survived three tours of duty in Iraq, where he patrolled the deadly streets of Fallouja and lost some of his best friends.

A knife attack at his Phelan home in May left the muscular man with a punctured lung, broken ribs and a ghastly head wound.

But that didn't stop him from following in his father's footsteps and becoming a cable TV installer. On Monday, Neiman, 25, went to a Victorville home. While he was inside, a man grabbed a hammer and fatally beat him.

"There was no exchange of words. There was nothing that occurred before the unprovoked attack," said Jody Miller, a spokeswoman for the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department. Paramedics rushed Neiman to Victor Valley Community Hospital, where he died of his injuries.

Authorities identified the alleged attacker as Johnny Acosta, 45, of Hesperia, a relative of the homeowners. Acosta fled the home after the 4:30 p.m. attack, but later surrendered to detectives without a struggle. He was booked on suspicion of murder and was being held without bail at West Valley Detention Center. Acosta is scheduled to appear in a Victorville court Thursday.

The motive for the attack remains unclear, Miller said.
read more here

Iraq veteran is killed while installing cable TV

Friday, March 25, 2011

Staff Sgt. James Wilson, Marine, Cop, National Guardsman, died

When they die during combat, we say "Fallen" and when they die as cops, it becomes "in the line of duty" but when they die by their own hands after surviving all of it, we don't seem to have the right words to use.

Puzzled friends grieve for soldier-cop who took his life after crash
Published: Tuesday, March 22, 2011
By MATTHEW KEMENY, The Patriot-News

Like many in the military, Staff Sgt. James Wilson had a tough exterior.

He had a take-no-crap attitude, was always focused on his next mission and when you gave him a job to do, he did it right the first time.


But those who knew the 42-year-old Highspire man well said Wilson also had a lighter side. He loved to make people laugh, played practical jokes and often could find humor in serious situations.

Most of all, though, Wilson was emotionally grounded, his friends said, which is why everyone seems baffled that he would take his own life.

Wilson, a part-time Highspire police officer, shot himself in the head Sunday night after he crashed his Jeep on South Eisenhower Boulevard in Lower Swatara Twp., police said. A member of the Pennsylvania Army National Guard’s Company C, 1st Battalion, 110th Infantry, Wilson had returned from Afghanistan in November after being stationed there about nine months.

Wilson survived the crash, the police chief said, but died from the gunshot wound. A witness who walked up to the Jeep about 8:30 witnessed the shooting, Chief Richard Wiley said.

From 2005 to 2009, more than 1,100 service members took their own lives, an average of one suicide every 36 hours.

Wilson’s friends weren’t aware of any personal problems he might have had. He joined the Marines after he turned 18 and had previously been deployed to Iraq with the 56th Striker Brigade before he was sent to Afghanistan in February 2010.
read more here
Puzzled friends grieve for soldier-cop