Sunday, October 27, 2013

If one storm causes PTSD, why can't we understand hundreds of them?

If one storm causes PTSD, why can't we understand hundreds of them?
Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
October 27, 2013

I read a lot of mental health news reports, especially when the topic is the aftermath of trauma. The list of causes is long from weather events to abuse and crimes. I read them after 9-11 when survivors from the Towers as well as the people around the country were diagnosed with PTSD. Reading them about police officers, firefighters and emergency responders battling PTSD while still trying to save lives in our communities. Most of the time the reports I read are about our veterans and the troops risking their lives everyday.

There is a question no one seems to be asking. How can we understand PTSD from one weather event but we can't seem to understand when war fighters and first responders face hundreds of times with their lives on the line?

Is it because we expect them to be better than the rest of us? Well, for the most part, that is pretty obvious but then there are many average folks always showing up when people are in trouble and need help. We saw that in Boston after the bombing during the marathon. Some folks ran away as others ran toward the wounded. What makes them do it? What makes them willing to risk their lives when so many do not?
Survivors struggle with emotional toll of Hurricane Sandy
Press Of Atlantic City
By DONNA WEAVER Staff Writer
October 27, 2013

Ken Turner’s physical and mental health deteriorated in the days and months after Hurricane Sandy.

He knew something was wrong. He was anxious, fearful, and living with a constant sense of doom.

Watching, from his neighbor’s window, the water rush through his home was an image he couldn’t get out of his head. He began to forget things, and his speech was affected.

Earlier this year, Turner, 46, was diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. He smiles and refers to it as “Post Traumatic Sandy Disorder.” It didn’t help Turner’s condition that he had spinal surgery this past spring after an injury unrelated to the storm.

PTSD is a vestige of Hurricane Sandy that many people continue to live with. It is silent, and not visible the way destroyed homes are, so it has not gotten a great deal of focus in the media during the storm’s aftermath.

But it is real.

“I’m suffering with it. I see a psychiatrist every month for it. I had to get help,” Turner said.
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After 9-11 firefighters did what they do best. They rushed in to save lives, then stayed to recover as many as possible even though they didn't know if there would be another attack.


Everyone was changed after 9-11 because of the example they lived by.

Even after the bombing in Boston people showed up on the street in large groups to come together and share the sadness gaining strength from others.


For the responders it was not just one day from hell. It was another one followed by many more yet we cannot seem to understand how they would need more help healing.

For the war fighters, we seem to think they are trained to do their jobs so there should be no problems when they come home. After all, they are better than us. Tougher than us. But they are still human with all the same fears no matter what is asked of them and they manage to meet every challenge head on so we forget that part.

So how is it that we can understand the support average folks in our communities need from us but we can't seem to manage to understand how the responders putting themselves in danger for the rest of us need more from us?

VA didn't have funding for flu shots for homeless veterans

No flu shots
There were plans for free flu shots, but Veterans Administration hospitals in Milwaukee and North Chicago, Ill., backed out on Friday, said Derrell Greene, Kenosha County Veterans Services officer. He said at least several veterans walked out when they were told the shots wouldn’t be given.

“It was a big disappointment to us” that the hospitals didn’t participate, he said.

Hospital officials said they didn’t have the funding to take part, although the event was operated mostly by volunteers, Greene said.

Veterans get aid at Saturday event
Kenosha News
BY JOHN KREROWICZ
October 26, 2013

The choice for Edward Pavlovich is rent or an electric scooter.

The Racine resident, who served in the U.S. Army First Cavalry between 1973-75 at Fort Hood, attended the Homeless Stand Down and Veterans Benefits Expo at the Job Center, 8600 Sheridan Road, on Saturday hoping to find financial help for getting the $712 scooter.

He has a heart condition, a pacemaker and spine and leg problems.

“If I could walk everywhere all day, I would,” said Pavlovich, who is on Social Security disability. “But I can’t. I just hobble, and I’m in pain, and it’s miserable. I just don’t want to be cooped up at our apartment when my wife is not there.

“Maybe I’ll have to go without paying my rent in November and cut out some bills so I can pay for it.”

The Kenosha/Racine Veterans Services Office sponsored the annual event for all veterans and family members. It included free haircuts, legal assistance, job searches and information on education, the property tax credit, housing and aid to needy veterans.
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Agencies serving homeless veterans say it is difficult to count them

Agencies serving county’s homeless say population is difficult to count
Ocala Star Banner
By Andy Fillmore
Correspondent
Published: Saturday, October 26, 2013

The number of homeless veterans living in Marion County varies depending on who you ask.

Art Skelton, a veteran of the Vietnam War, disagrees with the figures published by the Marion County Homeless Council.

The council’s January “Point In Time” census indicates a total of 503 people countywide were considered homeless. Of those, 120, or 23 percent, served in the military.

“The numbers on homeless veterans are way wrong. Many vets live in the (Ocala National) Forest. I was living in the woods near Citra until the Veterans Administration got me in here because of the veteran program,” said Skelton, a Marine Corps veteran who is living at the Salvation Army Center of Hope.

Dan Horton, executive director of the Marion County Homeless Council, said the numbers of homeless overall are likely up to “double.”

The council’s information coordinator, Thom Thomas, who went into the field to make some of the counts, said the figures are probably low.

“For the in-town counts, we appreciate the help of the Ocala Police Department, but the homeless persons probably shied away from them,” Thomas said.
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Mowhawk Man Walking To Washington for PTSD Awareness

Mowhawk Man Walking To Washington for PTSD Awareness
WTRF News
By Jake Kauffman, Producer
Posted: Oct 27, 2013

An alarming rate of returning combat veterans are being diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, the number of cases diagnosed in the military has increased by 50% in the past year alone.

Two men, Larry Stimeling of the PTSD Awareness Society and his friend simply known as Mowhawk Man, are making their way across the part of the country with the highest veteran population in hopes of raising awareness on their way to Washington D.C.

Mohawk has been walking since October 19th to the nation's Capitol from Central Illinois and Larry has been behind him every step of the way in a car dedicated to a few of the people they know who suffered from PTSD.

Mohawk has been traveling the country, supporting the military for 24 years but after attending almost 800 veterans funerals, the growing majority due to Post Traumatic Stress disorder, Mohawk decided to start his latest walk to raise awareness.
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Community steps up for Marine's family in Kissimmee

Local Marine gets keys to mortgage-free home in Kissimmee
WFTV News 9
October 27, 2013

KISSIMMEE, Fla. — A local Marine and his family received a mortgage-free home in Kissimmee on Saturday.

USMC Cpl. Jeremy Kelley served in Iraq from 2005 to 2007 and suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder. During his service, Kelley received numerous medals of honor.

Kelley, his wife and two children were given the keys to the newly-renovated home on Maguire Drive in Kissimmee during an event Saturday morning. Several local officials were in attendance for the home-revealing ceremony.
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WWII Veteran killed in brutal attack, 4 barbaric teens charged

Lawrence E. ‘Shine' Thornton Killed: 4 Teens Arrested In WWII Vet's Death
Huffington Post
Posted: 10/27/2013

Four teens have been charged with capital murder after an 87-year-old WWII veteran died from injuries sustained during a brutal mugging.

The Delta Democrat Times reports that Lawrence E. Shine Thornton of Greenville, Miss., died two days after the October 18th mugging, allegedly at the hands of Terrance Morgan, 19; Edward Johnson,19; Leslie Litt, 18; and Geblonski Murray, 18.

Thornton was attacked in his own driveway, according to CNS News. The teens allegedly pushed him down on the ground and stole his wallet.
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Twisted news on military hate group labels

The groups identified in the instruction were not ‘extremist’ organizations as that term is defined in Army Regulation,” McHugh wrote in his memorandum.

So where did the Army instructors get their talking points?

“None of these slides were produced by the Army, but by soldiers who included information found during an Internet search,” Patterson told me.

The Army does not maintain or publish a list of organizations considered extremist; and after a similar incident earlier this year, commanders and other leaders were cautioned that they should not use lists of ‘extremists,’ ‘hate groups,’ ‘radical factions’ or the like compiled by any outside non-governmental groups or organizations for briefings, command presentations, or as a shortcut to determining if a group or activity is considered to be extremist.”

Army Warns Soldiers of Christian, Tea Party 'Threat'
Saturday, October 26, 2013
Soldiers at a pre-deployment briefing at Fort Hood say they were told evangelical Christians and Tea Party members were a threat to the nation, according to FOX News.

According to FOX journalist Todd Starnes, another soldier attending the briefing says they were told groups like the American Family Association were "tearing the country apart."

The soldiers were also reportedly told donating to such groups could lead to punishment under military code because some of them had been classified as hate groups.

So how is this a "mea culpa" if the Army did not order it?
Mea Culpa: Army Withdraws 'Hate Group' Label
CBNNews.com
Thursday, October 17, 2013

The U.S. Army issued a correction to a National Guard training camp after a recent briefing labeled a Christian group a hate group.

The incident took place at Camp Shelby in Hattiesburg, Miss.

The briefing included a slide presentation in which the American Family Association was listed with groups like the Ku Klux Klan and the Black Panthers.

But the Clarion-Ledger reports an Army investigation revealed that the soldier conducting the briefing had not thoroughly researched the AFA when he lumped it with actual hate groups.

Combat Wounded Kansas National Guardsman Faces Foreclosure

Iraq vet: Losing home ‘worse than getting blown up’
The Wichita Eagle
By Tim Potter
October 27, 2013

WELLINGTON — In 2007, Staff Sgt. Jerrod Hays lost nearly half of his face to a roadside bomb in Iraq.
Jerrod Hays of Wellington had nearly one half of his face blown away in Iraq when the armored Humvee he was riding in with three fellow soldiers got hit by explosions in an attack by the enemy, killing one and critically injuring the others in 2009. (Oct. 23, 2013) Mike Hutmacher/ The Wichita Eagle

Now, the 44-year-old Wellington man could lose his home to foreclosure.

“This,” Hays said of the prospect of losing his home, “is worse than getting blown up.”

In the attack south of Baghdad, he lost much of his lower jawbone, 22 teeth, a third of his tongue and one and a half fingers. He nearly lost his right arm and lost movement in a wrist. He lost the ability to see normally: He has to wear sunglasses outside and he has trouble seeing at night. Shrapnel remains peppered into his body. He suffers chronic pain.

Some of the damage is painful in a different way: He feels self-conscious about his facial scars.

“I still feel the stares,” he said.

He has grown a goatee over skin that the emergency room team saved after his jawbone was blown away. The goatee helps to hide the scars.

Because of his appearance, he is reluctant to venture from Wellington or Anthony, the towns where people know him best and he feels most comfortable.

In his kitchen the other day, he looked at a picture of himself in uniform before the blast changed his face. He had a handsome jawline.

“That ol’ boy is dead,” he said, peering at his pre-blast face. “He’s dead as a hammer.”
He had been a supervisor. He served in the Kansas National Guard for 26 years before retiring in August at the rank of sergeant first class. He led soldiers.

He said he and his wife, Nancy, take most of the blame for their mortgage trouble. They began missing mortgage payments a couple years ago. He said they always wanted to pay their bills, that they tried to catch up, make things right with the lender, but couldn’t.

The couple says his wounds have left him unable to work. She spends so much time helping him – “Nancy’s a better soldier than I am,” he says – she is unemployed.

Now, they are doggedly trying to modify their loan so they can hold onto the home where Cocoa, their pet Chihuahua, is buried in the back yard. Hays said the dog saved him and his family by boosting their spirits as he tried to recover. Cocoa would gently lick his scars. To Hays, the little dog also deserved a Purple Heart.

They said it could be too late to save the house, that they could lose their home any day. To their knowledge, no foreclosure day has been set. They don’t know how soon it could happen.

They didn’t talk publicly about their predicament until an Eagle reporter approached them, after indirectly hearing of their trouble. The reporter asked them to share their story.
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UK Military family stays strong with love

War hero burned in Afghanistan: 'Birthmark threatened to disfigure my newborn baby's face'
The Mirror UK
By Sarah Arnold
27 Oct 2013

Martyn Compton was horrifically injured by a Taliban bomb seven years ago and has endured an incredible 500 operations

Lance Corporal Martyn Compton has suffered more than most people could ever imagine.

Seven years ago he was horrifically injured by a Taliban bomb. Since then he has endured an incredible 500 operations.

Four years ago, he and his wife Michelle – who has remained steadfastly at his side throughout his terrible ordeal – thought they had finally turned a corner when they were happily anticipating the birth of twins.

But, tragically, it was not to be. Michelle went into labour at 22 weeks pregnant and lost the babies they had so longed for.

The following year, they finally started a family when their son Archie, now three, was born.

And when last year Michelle gave birth to their baby girl Coral, they felt that at last their life was complete.

But just a week later their happiness turned to dismay as a ruby birthmark began to appear on Coral’s face.

It ­threatened to close her eye and led to part of her lip being damaged.

Martyn said: “Coral was born perfect. A few hours later I noticed what looked like a bruise on her head.

"A few days later the birthmark appeared and started to rapidly spread. I have just endured my 500th operation.

"The thought of my beautiful baby girl going through any of the pain I’ve suffered was unbearable.

“Our initial reaction was, ‘Why us?’ after everything we’d already gone through.

"But then Michelle said, ‘She’s a fighter just like her daddy so she’ll pull through’. And thankfully it’s looking like she will.”
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Vietnam vet, wife help new generation of veterans

Vietnam vet, wife help new generation of veterans
Times Online
By Rachel Morgan
Posted: Saturday, October 26, 2013

AMBRIDGE -- Rich and Connie McCracken will mark their 46th wedding anniversary in December. But life hasn’t always been a celebration for this Ambridge couple.

Rich served as an Army corporal with the 5th Special Forces, 1st Group in Vietnam from 1968-69, while his wife was home with their first child, born just five days before he left. Rich returned home one month after his daughter’s first birthday.

And Connie was ready for their new life to start.

“I had all these plans for us, how our life was going to be,” she said.

But for Rich, who suffered from anxiety, depression, flashbacks, isolation and addiction, moving on wasn’t easy.

“When I came home, I gravitated (toward) alcohol to kind of suppress my thoughts,” he said. “I thought that I was crazy, that I was literally crazy. And I didn’t want to tell anybody. I thought it was just me, the war did this to me and nobody else and I’m just this way.”
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