Tuesday, April 3, 2012

PTSD Peer to Peer Pilot Program named after PFC. Joseph Dwyer

Peer to Peer Pilot Program Targeted to Assist Veterans Suffering from PTSD and TBI

(Sayville, NY) Senator Lee M. Zeldin (R, C, I- Shirley) announced today that the New York State Senate, Assembly and Governor Andrew Cuomo, approved funding for the PFC Joseph Dwyer Program, a pilot program for four counties, including Suffolk County, to help returning veterans cope with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) by offering a Peer to Peer mentoring program.

Peer support establishes an intervention mechanism and reasonable means to provide assistance to those suffering from PTSD and TBI symptoms. In many instances, peers with the same combat and reintegration issues will benefit from joint participation in the same mentoring program.

PFC Dwyer enlisted in the Army within days of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. He served with courage and honor in Iraq, but returned home with PTSD.

On June 28, 2008, this illness took his life, leaving behind his wife, Matina, and their two year old daughter, Meagan. Senator Zeldin, who campaigned for election in 2010, then promised he would spearhead the creation of the PFC Joseph Dwyer Program. Immediately after taking office in 2011, Zeldin formed the Blue Ribbon John P. Jennings Veterans’ Advisory Panel to assist him in studying and crafting the framework of the PFC Joseph Dwyer Program.

read more here
Pfc. Joseph Dwyer to have street named after him
What Joe Dwyer's death can teach us

Monday, April 2, 2012

Military dogs saving lives on battlefield

Military dogs saving lives on battlefield, building special bonds with soldiers By Hugh Lessig, April 1, 2012 In 2007, Jonathan Bourgeois was on patrol in Iraq when heard the call. Get back. Up ahead, a military working dog had detected the scent of explosives. "That day, they saved my squad from being blown up," he said. Bourgeois, an Air Force staff sergeant, now works as a military dog handler at Langley Air Force Base in Hampton. He traces his passion for the fearless, four-legged warriors to that roadside conversion. "Ever since then," he said, "I've been hooked." read more here linked from Stars and Stripes

4 Bliss soldiers believed missing in N.M.

UPDATE
1 missing Bliss soldier contacts search crews
The Associated Press
Posted : Tuesday Apr 3, 2012
MOGOLLON, N.M. — New Mexico state police say one of the Fort Bliss soldiers believed to be missing after a weekend kayak trip has contacted search crews. Lt. Robert McDonald said Tuesday that Sgt. Nicholas Mummert walked out to searchers late Monday. read more here
4 Bliss soldiers believed missing in N.M.
The Associated Press
Posted : Monday Apr 2, 2012

MOGOLLON, N.M. — Officials at Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas, say a search has been launched for four soldiers and a civilian believed missing after a weekend kayak trip on Mogollon Creek in New Mexico’s Gila National Forest. Military officials say Spc. Alton Weber and Sgt. Nicholas Mummert were confirmed overdue Monday morning. Two other soldiers as well as a civilian, identified as Angelica Gonzalez from El Paso, are believed to be missing with the men. read more here

Memphis falls short on PTSD

Memphis falls short on PTSD
City policy does not recognize officer's psychological injury 
By Amos Maki
Posted April 2, 2012

Memphis Police Department officer Gabriel Lawson was one of dozens of officers who responded to a disturbance at the DoubleTree Hotel Downtown on July 3, 2011. Once inside, Lawson and others found fellow officer Timothy Warren had been shot. While still under fire from his shooter, the officers pulled the fatally wounded Warren from the line of fire and stayed with him until paramedics arrived.

Alexander Haydel of Cleveland, Miss., has been indicted on two counts of first-degree murder in the shootings, accused of killing his wife's former husband at the hotel before shooting the officer. Shortly after the shootout, which also left Arthur Warren -- who is unrelated to the fallen officer -- dead, Lawson began displaying signs of post-traumatic stress disorder, including flashbacks, nightmares, emotional detachment and insomnia. Lawson took an extended leave and sought medical help. read more here

Army veteran college student found dead

Army Veteran, Towson Student Found Dead
April 1, 2012
 TOWSON, Md.
(AP) — An Army veteran and Towson University student has died. Baltimore County police say Timothy Coyer, 27, was found dead by his roommates inside his apartment near campus Saturday afternoon. Although the cause and manner of death are not known, police say Coyer’s death was not a homicide. read more here

Tulsa Soldier Rebuilding Credit, Life After Burglary While Deployed

Tulsa Soldier Rebuilding Credit, Life After Burglary
Posted: Apr 02, 2012
Craig Day, News On 6
TULSA, Oklahoma - A soldier back on the Homefront from Afghanistan is trying to recover from being a crime victim. While he was deployed, someone cleaned out his storage unit, taking everything he owned.

Stealing is always wrong. Stealing from a deployed soldier, that's an outrage. While most soldiers with Oklahoma's 45th Infantry are readjusting to life back home, Greg Goodson is starting over. "It sucks, you know. You think you could come home and your stuff is all there, and it's not," Goodson said. A few days ago, Goodson was among a group of soldiers welcomed home after a yearlong deployment, most of it in Afghanistan. He returned knowing everything he owned was taken while he was away. "Some of the lowest people I could ever think of probably," said soldier Greg Goodson. read more here

Army General Martin Demsey talks about well being of soldiers and families

JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF CHAIRMAN STRESSES TRUST
 By: Dennis E. “Mac” McGowan, author of “The Living Diet: Conquer stress in your life now!”

The image of trust is fundamental in the relationship that exists between our men and women in uniform and their society, emphasized the Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman.

Speaking March 30 at the Mental and Physical Well-Being of Soldiers and their Families Conference in Washington, DC, U.S. Army General Martin Demsey said, “Very few of the problems that we’re facing are problems that we’re facing for the first time.”

The Defense Department and Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury hosted the Conference. Demsey pointed out the important role of the 750 military leaders and pay experts attending the conference. Their role included reviewing the required life skills, confidence building and hope that enhance the resilience of our military forces. “There is a band of trust promised” for both active duty and retired military, he said. “Each day is another opportunity that bonds us as a profession,” he added. Demsey continued, “If we lose that, it doesn’t matter how much money we throw at it.” General Demsey highlighted four focus areas.

 The first area was “achieving the objectives in our country’s current conflicts.” The military needs to “seek a deeper and richer understanding” of what has happened to our forces over the last 10 years. Secondly, he stated that the military needed to look into the future and “develop the Joint Force of 2020.” Demsey disclosed that his 37-year Army career began right after Vietnam.

He discussed the human conflict in our military services that occurred as a result of Vietnam. He mentioned that a major rethinking developed when the military “switched from a conscript to an all-volunteer military” force.

The next area of focus was the “profession of arms.” There was one word unique among all others – trust – that “separated our country from every other country in the world.” Demsey added that one significant goal of the conference participants was to generate proposals “to decide what we need to do and how best to do it. We need to remind ourselves that this is about people.” You want others to look back, in 10 years, and say about you: “That’s a country that got the people right.”

The final area that Demsey noted was the importance of “keeping faith with ourselves, our families and our commitments.” He associated this area with the trust this country promises for its military. The general encouraged attendees to “develop a list of priorities that produced benefits for families.” While he was a proponent of greater transparency for providing health care policy information to families, he acknowledged that goal was often “impeded by well meaning legislation that protected individual privacy.” His career convinced him that the resiliency of the military was due to it being a team sport. Activities at the ground level must be performed in the context of a team.

In response to a question, he commented that he was in favor of the different branches sharing generic data. However, he would not advocate joint medical sharing for all existing practices among the services. Demsey said, “The attribute that I have begun to value most is adaptability.” He was not convinced that “today’s attributes were appropriate for 2020.” The military’s biggest failure was in accurately predicting the way the military forces would be used in the future. Demsey believed that what made the military work was “the leader who can adapt.”

He talked about the significance of a leader taking something that was ill designed for the purpose intended, and successfully completing the mission. Demsey believed that if the military placed individuals in unfamiliar circumstances they would have the best chance for succeeding. Those enduring attributes – integrity, honor and courage – would rise to meet the challenges. Demsey concluded by emphasizing the importance of building adaptability in individuals by giving them the opportunity to face “change, failure and chaos” in the military’s training and education programs.

Two die in speedway motorcycle crash after Vietnam vet event

Two die in speedway motorcycle crash after Vietnam vet event
 By: Charlotte Observer
 McClatchy Tribune News Service
 Published: April 02, 2012
 CONCORD -- Two people died and one remained in critical condition late Sunday following a motorcycle wreck Saturday at Charlotte Motor Speedway. About 5 p.m., shortly after the day-long Vietnam Veterans Homecoming Celebration in Concord ended, two motorcycles crashed into each other on the speedway’s track, Concord police said. Three people were hurt in the collision, and all were rushed to area hospitals.

 Both drivers died a short time later, police said, and the third person remained hospitalized, police said. Concord police have not released the names of the three victims, although they said that none of them are from the Charlotte area. Adrian Parker, director of communications for the speedway, declined to release details of how the collision happened, saying that was part of the Concord police investigation. He also wouldn’t say whether the speedway would review its safety procedures or how it would plan to prevent similar incidents from happening in the future. read more here

Camp Lejeune Marines hurt after motorcycle crash

Camp Lejeune marine hospitalized after motorcycle crash with fellow marine By: ANDREA BLANFORD Eyewitness News 9 Published: April 01, 2012 JONES COUNTY,N.C. (WNCT) - A Camp Lejeune marine is recovering in the hospital this afternoon after his motorcycle collided with another marine's bike. Highway Patrol troopers tell us it happened just before 2-o'clock Sunday afternoon on Pole Pocosin Road in Jones County. read more here

Former Airman Sues US After Losing Legs to Botched Surgery

Former Airman Sues US After Losing Legs to Botched Surgery

April 02, 2012
Fort Worth Star-Telegram|by Chris Vaughn

FORT WORTH -- Retired Airman Colton Read and his wife sued the U.S. government for millions of dollars in federal court Friday, asserting that military surgeons botched a routine gallbladder procedure so badly that civilian doctors had to amputate his legs to save his life.

The 25-page lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Fort Worth by attorney Darrell Keith, paints a graphic picture of what went terribly awry in the operating room and intensive-care unit at David Grant Medical Center at Travis Air Force Base, Calif., on July 9, 2009.

Read was supposed to have his gallbladder removed before deploying overseas. Read, 23, an Arlington native, barely survived the laparoscopic surgery because one of the doctors lacerated his aorta at the beginning of the procedure. That set off a series of decisions that the lawsuit alleges were grossly negligent and delayed remedial action until Keith was transferred to a civilian hospital nine hours later. By then, his legs had been without blood flow for hours and had to be amputated. Read, medically retired by the Air Force just days ago, now lives in New Braunfels with his wife, Jessica, and their baby. read more here

Air Force Reserve Staff Sgt. Actress Veronica Simpson, turns personal PTSD story into film

Actress turns personal PTSD story into film
 By HOWARD ALTMAN
 The Tampa Tribune
 Published: April 02, 2012
When she is not wearing her uniform, Air Force Reserve staff Sgt. Veronica Simpson can often be found during her off hours acting in front of a camera. Most of the time, Simpson, currently a chaplain's assistant at MacDill Air Force Base, is playing a made-up character. She was a waitress in "Burn Notice,'' a medical technician on "The Glades'' and, in "Charlie's Angels,'' she played an assassin.

But in November, while shooting a movie called "All Wars End,'' Simpson played a role that was all too real – the wife of a Marine with post traumatic stress disorder. It was a role, she said, that changed her life. That's because, in real life, Simpson, 32, is the wife of a former Marine with PTSD. One scene in particular, she said, led to an epiphany. Shot in an apartment in Miami, the scene involved Simpson's character arguing with her husband. "From that one little scene I got a glimpse of my own life," Simpson said. read more here

Marine shot, killed by friend

Marine shot, killed by friend
Posted on 04/02/2012
by Robert Kolarik

A 24-year-old U.S. Marine was shot and killed by a man San Antonio police identified as his friend, KSAT-TV is reporting. Two men and a woman were in an apartment in the 3300 block of Timber View on Sunday evening when one of the men apparently was playing with a 12-gauge shotgun and it was fired, the station reports. read more here

Veterans: Westover planes fouled with Agent Orange

Veterans: Westover planes fouled with Agent Orange
Published: Sunday, April 01, 2012
By Jeanette DeForge, The Republican
The Republican | John Suchocki CHICOPEE – Vietnam veteran Robert P. Patenaude with the Agent Orange spray plane he and others crewed during the war. The C 123 transport named "Patches" because of all the bullet holes it received is now in a container that can only be accessed with hazmat suits, according to Patenaude, who receives disability payments because of Agent Orange.
CHICOPEE — For nine years they flew in them, they fixed them and they treated patients in them. Now, three decades later, veterans of the 439th Tactical Airlift Wing at Westover Air Reserve Base believe those airplanes are responsible for making them sick. Unknown to the veterans, the C-123 Providers, which had previously flown in Vietnam, were contaminated with Agent Orange. “We have crew members who are sick. We have crew members who have died ... We have people who aren’t even sick yet,” said retired Air Force Major Wesley T. Carter, who served as an air medical technician and flight instructor and examiner with Westover’s 74th Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron for 20 years and flew in the C-123s from 1974 to 1980. While recovering from a heart attack last April, Carter was diagnosed with prostate cancer. Then he started hearing fellow crew members were also suffering from cancer, diabetes and heart disease.

Through word-of-mouth the group has compiled a list of 48 people who have diseases possibly linked to Agent Orange. red more here

Hero soldier's story not fully acknowledged

Hero soldier's story not fully acknowledged

Bravery, sacrifice by U.S. troops in Afghanistan called shining examples
New York Times Published
Saturday, March 31, 2012

KABUL, Afghanistan — The story of Specialist Dennis Weichel could easily be a counterpoint to the gruesome account of the U.S. soldier charged with 17 counts of murder in Kandahar on March 11. Weichel, who was 29, was killed while rescuing an Afghan child, but more than a week after that event the military here has yet to officially confirm what happened. Indeed, the initial details of the episode in northeastern Laghman province came not from military officials but from Afghan civilians and then fellow soldiers and friends in the United States.
Matiullah Khan, a vegetable seller and Zaiullah's uncle, said, "As you know, all five fingers on one hand are not equal, and it's the same with American soldiers." "What that soldier did in Kandahar was such a brutal act, no human could do what he did," he said, referring to the accusations against Staff Sgt. Robert Bales in the Kandahar killings. "This soldier, he looked at my nephew as a human being and endangered his life to save my nephew's life."

In a different mission of mercy, three days after the killings of which Bales is accused, medics at a combat outpost in southeastern Paktika province raced to save the life of Mateen, an 8-year-old boy wounded when his Taliban father's homemade bomb exploded. The emergency mission involved two medevac helicopter flights and medical treatment at three military aid stations and hospitals. The boy survived despite losing his eyes and suffering other injuries. With skin grafts and prosthetic eyes, doctors repaired as much of his face as they could. The military finally announced what had happened last week, once the boy had been returned to his family. read more here