Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Vietnam Veteran with PTSD Missing in Los Angeles

Public’s Help Sought In Locating Missing 66-Year-Old Man With PTSD
CBS News
November 18, 2014
LOS ANGELES (CBSLA.com) — Authorities Tuesday asked for the public’s help in locating a missing 66-year-old Vietnam veteran.

Cecil Tyrone Whitson was last seen around 5:30 p.m. on Nov. 14 at 8th Street and Union Avenue in the city of Los Angeles.

Whitson, who was described as a Black man with brown/grey hair and brown eyes, has Dementia, diabetes, and PTSD, according to the LAPD.

Whitson is roughly 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighs 170 pounds.

Anyone with information as to Whitson’s whereabouts was asked to call (213) 996-1800 or (877) 527-3247 during non-business hours or on weekends.
check here for updates

House VA Committee May Block Veteran Ranking Seat?

UPDATE
Walz Abandons Bid for Top Veterans' Affairs Panel Slot
Time to get politics out of anything having to do with veterans. Why? Because when they were risking their lives, the only thing that mattered was each other. That is the way the elected officials responsible for ensuring they get what they need after service fix what is broken.

To put a veteran out of a seat at the table is plain wrong. This is a time when veterans need to be able to be the voices for other veterans. This isn't just any other committee. This is about our veterans!
Dem leadership fight frustrates veterans advocates
Marine Corps Times
By Leo Shane III
Staff Writer
November 19, 2014

Democratic leaders on Wednesday will vote to sideline the only Iraq War-era veteran on the House Veterans' Affairs Committee and stave off an internal power struggle, a move that has infuriated some veterans advocates.

Rep. Tim Walz, D-Minn., announced last week his plans to seek the ranking member seat on the committee, following the retirement of current ranking member Rep. Mike Michaud, D-Maine. Walz is a retired command sergeant major in the Army National Guard, the highest ranking enlisted soldier to ever serve in Congress.

But congressional seniority rules put Rep. Corrine Brown, D-Fla., in line for that post, and Walz's move has touched off behind-the-scenes fights over who will be a more credible minority party voice on the committee in the coming session.

Brown and members of the Congressional Black Caucus have bristled over suggestions that the 10-term congresswoman could be passed over for the ranking member post. But Michaud and several veterans groups have publicly backed Walz, citing his military knowledge and role as the committee's most experienced veteran.

Late Tuesday, members of the House Democratic Steering Committee moved up a vote on the issue to Wednesday morning, congressional staffers confirmed.
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What is the magic number for one too many suicides?

How many more Bills does Congress need to write before they actually understand they don't have a clue? How many more lives have to be lost while they just keep repeating the same mistakes over and over again? When will there actually come a number when that suicide was actually too many for them and they stop long enough to understand what they are doing to the troops and veterans?
DoD, VA suicide prevention efforts on Capitol Hill
Military Times
By Patricia Kime
Staff writer
November 18, 2014

A bipartisan group of senators introduced legislation Monday designed to improve access to mental health services for troops and veterans and strengthen the Defense and Veterans Affairs departments' suicide prevention efforts.

The Clay Hunt Suicide Prevention bill would require the Pentagon and VA to submit to an independent review of their suicide prevention programs.

It also would establish a website to provide consolidated information on mental health services available to veterans and seeks to improve VA's recruitment efforts for quality psychiatrists by establishing a student loan reimbursement program for doctors who sign on to work for VA for a number of years.

Clay Hunt was a former Marine who died in 2011 by suicide after having actively sought treatment for combat-related depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. Before his death, Hunt performed humanitarian work in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake and was a key member of a group of former military personnel who formed the disaster relief organization Team Rubicon.

Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz.; Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.; Richard Burr, R-N.C.; Roy Blunt, R-Mo.; Lisa Murkowski, R-Ark.; and Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., co-sponsored the bill to provide "additional resources for veterans who suffer from mental health disorders that place them on higher risk of suicide," according to a release
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Veteran in Miami Survived Standoff with SWAT Team

Army veteran barricades himself inside Miami Beach condo, threatens to commit suicide
Local 10 News
Published On: Nov 18 2014
Miami Beach police and its SWAT team were called to a condominium unit at the Cosmopolitan on Washington Avenue near First Street Tuesday morning, after reports of a disturbance between a man and his grandmother.

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Man taken into custody after barricading himself inside Miami Beach condo
Police, SWAT team called to Cosmopolitan building after Army veteran threatens to commit suicide
Author: Amanda Batchelor, Senior Digital Editor
Michael Seiden, Reporter
Published On: Nov 18 2014
MIAMI BEACH, Fla.
A man was taken into custody without incident Tuesday morning after barricading himself inside his home, police said.

Miami Beach police and its SWAT team were called to a condominium unit at the Cosmopolitan on Washington Avenue near First Street on Tuesday morning after reports of a disturbance between a man and his grandmother.

According to police, the grandmother left while her grandson barricaded himself inside the home.
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PTSD Army Veteran's Standoff Puts DOD on Trial in Oklahoma

There is a veteran facing charges after a hostage standoff. He was in the Army for 10 years and came home with PTSD. His family tried to get help for him and they grieve for the way things turned out. When he stands trial, the DOD yet again goes on trial for failing another soldier. #Powerpointcommandoes think they are doing something other than boring the hell out of the troops?
New Details Surrounding Norman Hostage Suspect's Defense
NEWS 9
BY JOLEEN CHANEY
Nov 14, 2014

CLEVELAND COUNTY, Oklahoma - The man who held three people hostage this week inside a Norman office building is being held without bond. His post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) took center stage in his defense. Friday afternoon Devin Rogers went before a judge for the criminal side of his behavior, but because of his mental condition, four attorneys have volunteered to represent him free of charge.

“As a group I think we decided to do it, because the story is just so heartbreaking,” attorney David Smith said.

For the innocent people involved as well as the guilty, but in no way does Devin Rogers' PTSD diagnosis mean he is off the hook for what he did.

“This is absolutely a cry for help, and that's what you heard from Jennifer who was in the room with him,” attorney Sam Talley said.
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This is why we are seeing so many coming home and not getting the help they need to heal. They didn't get it while they were still in to begin with.
Army Vet: Protocol On Soldiers' Mental Health A Factor In Norman Standoff
NEWS 9
BY JUSTIN DOUGHERTY
Nov 18, 2014

The Army also stated it's focused on, "Placement of (behavioral health) providers within Patient Centered Medical Homes, and a network of Embedded Behavioral Health clinics."

Davis just considers those outlets lengthy PowerPoint presentations.

"As a soldier, I can tell you 99% of them classes turn into a big joke," said Davis.

CLEVELAND COUNTY, Oklahoma - The suspect in the Norman hostage standoff, Devin Rogers, is accused of holding three people hostage for over four hours. But we now know Rogers is also a 10-year Army veteran who has been diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD); a mental health issue the Army calls an important factor in the case.

Rogers' family and friends have repeatedly told News 9 he hasn't received the help he needs. So we contacted the Army for a list of mental health services. However, one veteran News 9 spoke to called that list a joke.

"If you become a big problem we'll just let you miss a few things, count you AWOL and kick you out of the Army," said retired Army Sgt. Dave Davis.

An improvised explosive device (IED) has Davis physically confined to a wheelchair. But it's what he considers the Army's "lack of personal relationship" with its soldiers that has Davis frustrated.

"You can't throw money at a problem and expect it to go anyway," said Davis.

Davis served for 19 years and retired in October. In addition to his physical ailments, Davis has also been diagnosed with PTSD, TBI, or traumatic brain injury, and other mental health issues.
read more here
News9.com - Oklahoma City, OK - News, Weather, Video and Sports |

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Experts Still Fail to Address What Works to Heal PTSD

So far, there doesn't seem much in terms of "helping" veterans. There is far too much talk of what goes wrong and too little of what goes right. They call it "managing" but they should be talking about healing and finding peace to live with a very huge part of your life. It can be done. It has been done. It happens a lot more than the tragic outcomes do.
At Dickinson, experts discuss helping veterans manage PTSD
The Sentinel
By Samantha Madison
November 18, 2014

CARLISLE — There are explosions everywhere — suicide bombers blowing up restaurants and markets, people being killed left and right.

You recognize the safest areas versus the ones that are dangerous, to sit in the right place when out in the open. You know how to cope, to work on as little sleep as humanly possible for fear of being next. You are never truly relaxed or safe, and that becomes your way of life.

Then, all of a sudden, you’re back in the safety of the United States, and family, friends and society expect that you’ll ease back into the swing of things as if you weren’t just in a country where people were constantly trying to kill you and your comrades.

“When you come home, the part of your brain that kicks off the panic button doesn’t know you’re home,” said David Wood, senior military correspondent for The Huffington Post. “The way I understand it, the way I’ve thought about it and the way guys have explained to me is, when that happens, you’ve got to burn off energy, so people get angry, they punch walls; they’ve got to burn off all of that adrenaline.”

Wood, who spoke on a post-traumatic stress disorder panel at Dickinson College on Veterans Day, has spent a large portion of his career covering a variety of military and national security issues in countries such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Bosnia, Soviet Russia, Cold War Germany and Somalia.
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They need to start addressing the reason PTSD picked on you. You were just able to feel things more strongly than others. Plus toss in the fact that you were probably the first one to help someone or the one they always turned to. In that case, it is pretty damn hard asking for help. If you are thinking you shouldn't need help, then think of the people you helped. Do you think less of them because they needed you? Then why think less of yourself if you need help from them?

Being stronger also means you have very strong emotions but those same emotions making you grieve come from the same place where you were able to be courageous. It is all still in there. You just need help getting stuff reconnected again.

Remember why you joined the military in the first place. Then remember the reason you were willing to lay down your own life if it came to it. That all came from love for those you served with. That love is stronger than any other type of love because it is never about yourself. It is always about others.

The trick is, finding a way to put yourself first while you heal so you can turn around and then help someone else.

Cards sent to Veterans waiting more than 30 days for care

VA Implements Second Phase of Choice Card Program
Cards sent to Veterans waiting more than 30 days for care
Washington, DC – The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) today announced that it began mailing Veterans Choice Cards on November 17 to Veterans currently waiting more than 30-days from their preferred date or the date that is medically determined by their physician for an appointment at a VA facility.
 “VA continues to focus on implementation of this new temporary benefit so that Veterans receive the timely quality care they need in a way that reduces confusion and inefficiencies,” said Secretary Robert A. McDonald, who penned an open letter to Veterans announcing the implementation of the Choice Card program.
The Choice Program is a new, temporary benefit that allows some Veterans to receive health care in their communities rather than waiting for a VA appointment or traveling to a VA facility. The first round of cards along with a letter explaining the program was issued on November 5 to Veterans who are eligible based on their place of residence. VA is now engaging in the next phase of its rollout –eligibility explanation letters are being sent to Veterans waiting more than 30 days from their preferred date to be seen or considered medically necessary by their physician.
To improve service delivery, VA has prioritized efforts to accelerate Veterans off of wait lists and into clinics through the Accelerated Care Initiative begun over the summer. Through this initiative, VA medical centers have increased access to care inside and outside of VA, added more clinic hours and work days, deployed mobile medical units and shared their best practices from VA’s high-performing facilities throughout the organization.
 Significant improvements have resulted nationally:
  • Scheduling more than 1.2 million more appointments in the past four months than in the same period last year. In total, VA medical centers have scheduled over 19 million Veteran appointments from June to October 1, 2014;
  • Reducing the national new patient Primary Care wait time by 18 percent;
  • Completing 98 percent of appointments within 30 days of the Veterans’ preferred date, or the date determined to be medically necessary by a physician;
  • Authorizing 1.1 million non-VA care authorizations, a 47-percent increase over the same period last year; and
  • Increasing the amount of time providers could deliver care to Veterans by increasing the amount of clinic hours in primary and specialty care and through adding weekend and evening clinics at our medical centers.
 VA is America’s largest integrated health care system with over 1,700 sites of care, serving approximately 9 million Veterans enrolled in health care services.  The Choice Program is part of the Veterans Access, Choice, and Accountability Act of 2014 (VACAA), enacted nearly three months ago, to enable VA to meet the demand for Veterans’ health care in the short-term.
 For more information about the Choice Program, call 1-866- 606-8198 or visithttp://www.va.gov/opa/choiceact/.

Sean Payton Foundation Donated PTSD Service Dog and Love to Veteran

When we talk about PTSD service dogs, they give unconditional love and that, that is something you just can't forget.
Sean Payton meets service dog he donated to La. vet
WWLTV.com
Mike Hoss
Eyewitness News
November 17, 2014

NEW ORLEANS -- It's less than an hour before kickoff Sunday, and outside the Saints locker room military veteran Erick Scott and his service dog Gumbo are waiting for a very important hand shake and thank you with Saints head coach Sean Payton.

Gumbo is a rescue dog trained by K-9's for warriors to help veterans like Scott cope with post traumatic stress disorder.

Scott got Gumbo because of a donation by Payton's Foundation, and this weekend he got to say thank you in person.

"It's one thing to say thank you in an email," Scott said. "You can say thank you through posts and all that, but to actually then shake his hand, explain to him what it really means, not just what he's heard or what he thinks.
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PTSD Australian Veterans Not Being Helped to Heal

Territory PTSD sufferer says defence personnel suicides are under reported after another one of his mates dies
News.com Australia
NOVEMBER 18, 2014
“As a soldier you are ashamed and feel weak and like you don’t want to admit it to anyone, especially not your mates.

Veteran Craig West, who suffers post-traumatic stress disorder from his service in the army, has spoken out about the high suicide rates Source: News Corp Australia

A TERRITORY digger has claimed suicide deaths among young war veterans suffering post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are under reported because the issue is swept under the carpet in Australia.

Former soldier Craig West – who served in Timor in 2001 – said he has lost three veteran mates to suicide, the most recent two weeks ago.

Mr West, who suffers PTSD, said he “wasn’t surprised” when told the tragic news of his mate, who killed himself after a long battle with the disorder earlier this month.

“I knew how bad (his PTSD) was and how much he was struggling,” Mr West said.

“I got in contact with his family and people tried to help him but it was too late.”

Mr West said he knew of veterans who had attempted suicide and survived.

He said the problem was “a lot bigger than people think”.

“It’s not just the people who have committed suicide, it’s all the others out there who are still struggling,’’ he said.
The Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA) confirmed in a written statement to the NT News that it “does not record cause of death for all veteran clients”.
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Afghanistan Veteran Charged Leg at Starbucks

One more case of reporters making a difference.
Local 2 helps get power restored for veteran
Click2Houston News
Author: Keith Garvin, Anchor/Reporter
Published On: Nov 17 2014
"I've been going up to Starbucks to charge my leg," he said "and to friends' house to charge my leg."

FORT BEND COUNTY, Texas
When we first met Thomas Davis on Monday evening, he literally was a man with no power.
read more here

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Monday, November 17, 2014

Driver with Cell Phone- Killed Iraq Veteran and Daughter Committed Suicide

Distracted driving tragedies hit family twice as daughter, 22, commits suicide seven years after surviving collision which killed her war veteran father
Maxine Zamora had survived after a distracted driver plowed into the car she was traveling in with her father Javier Zamora in 2007
The Iraq war veteran died en route to the hospital after suffering massive head trauma during the collision in California
Ms Zamora died from a gunshot wound to the head, authorities said
She leaves behind her husband Craig and two-year-old daughter Faith
Maxine's mother said: 'Maxine struggled through high school and through her marriage and even through her ''mommyhood'' with the loss of not having her daddy there'
Daily Mail
By LOUISE BOYLE FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 17 November 2014
Seven years after losing her veteran father, Javier Zamora, in a car crash in California, his daughter Maxine (pictured) committed suicide last month after never recovering emotionally from the trauma

A young married mother has taken her own life after struggling for years to come to terms with the death of her beloved war veteran father in a car crash.

Maxine Zamora, 22, died after shooting herself in the head at her Texas home on October 14, investigators said.

Ms Zamora survived in 2007 when a distracted driver plowed into the car she was traveling in with her father Javier Zamora. The Iraq war veteran, 40, died en route to the hospital after suffering massive head wounds during the collision in California.

The crash happened after a female driver took her eyes off the road as she tried to pick up her cell phone which had slid under a seat.
read more here

Congress Still Not Doing Their Jobs for Veterans and It Shows

REPEAT AFTER ME
THE JOB OF CONGRESS IS TO KNOW WHAT IS GOING ON IN THE DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS! They have committees in the House and subcommittees. They also have them in the Senate. For them to not know what has been going on means they WERE NOT DOING THEIR JOBS~

VA didn't track vacant medical jobs until this year
AZ Central
The Republic
Paul Giblin
November 16, 2014

The Department of Veterans Affairs' record-keeping processes were in such disarray in recent years that the agency didn't track its number of unfilled medical positions until June of this year, according to VA officials.

The VA's lax record-keeping occurred against a backdrop of year-over-year funding increases while VA administrators created secret lists of patients who languished for months waiting for medical appointments.

The disclosure came in response to a Freedom of Information Act request by The Arizona Republic seeking the number of medical vacancies nationally and at the three VA hospitals in Arizona.

Four months after the newspaper requested vacancy statistics dating back to 2010, Veterans Health Administration FOIA Officer Barbara Swailes responded that the information was unavailable.

"The VHA Central Office did not start collecting vacancy information until June 2014," she wrote in a letter earlier this month. The newspaper requested the information in July.

The VA started collecting the data only after a wide-ranging scandal involving the VA became the focus of national attention following congressional hearings and media coverage by The Republic and other news outlets.

Earlier this month, the VA released to The Republic records showing that on a national basis, the number of unfilled medical positions hit 31,006 on July 15, 2014. In Arizona, it was 997.

U.S. Rep. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., said she was unaware of the number until told by The Republic on Friday.

"Oh, my God. Thirty-one thousand vacant positions?" she said. "OK, now we know why they were so behind in treating people, right? They didn't have any staff. That is huge. That's huge."

U.S. Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., chairman of the House Veterans' Affairs Committee, had a similar reaction.
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THEY GET PAID TO KNOW WHAT IS GOING ON AND FIX IT!

Vietnam Veterans Carrying PTSD Torch For 40 Years

"You see these astronomical numbers where PTSD, mental illness, some of the serious problems we're having, they're just going up and up and up, said Sen. Tom Udall.

But there is another part of this potential disaster. One where we are playing catch-up.

30 percent of Vietnam vets will likely suffer from PTSD.

"The Vietnam generation? Those guys are my heroes.

Those are the guys I look up to because they've been carrying the torch for 40 plus years," said Jim.

"It started in about 1980 that the diagnosis was first recognized, so there didn't exist a diagnosis of PTSD before that," said Dr. Diane Castillo.


War continues for veteran's suffering from PTSD
KOB Eyewitness News 4
By: Tessa Mentus
Created: 11/16/2014

If you could look into the future, you'd probably make some changes to prepare for what's coming. We have that luxury right now, but this isn't about winning the lottery, finding that perfect person or choosing the right job. It's about our real American heroes and what we're doing to get them out of the path of a perfect storm.

The call to serve has no sound, but Jim Stanek heard it. He heard it through the sirens, the screams and the deafening sound of our hearts breaking on Sept. 11, 2001.

"I was a, uh, iron worker, and a volunteer fireman in New York City," said Jim. "You know I think the recruiters saw me coming a mile away because I walked in and said I want to be on the first thing smoking overseas."

Stanek didn't have to wait long before he got his way. He headed to iraq, as part of the army's airborne infantry.

"I got to put on a uniform, I got to serve my country, I got to wear an American flag on my uniform," Jim said.

And he did that for three tours, until a hand injury turned into a much more permanent and painful diagnosis.

Jim got to the hospital, dropped in a think tank and was told he had chronic severe PTSD and a mild traumatic brain injury.

Jim never knows when that monster will take over. One time it did and it looked a lot like a scene from a movie that showcased the unpredictable battles with PTSD.
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Veteran Suicides Double Civilian Deaths in Minnesota

Despite efforts, veteran suicides remain alarming
St. Cloud Times
Kirsti Marohn
November 16, 2014

The statistics are jarring, and they don't seem to be changing.

An estimated 22 veterans take their own lives every day in the United States, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

In Minnesota, it's a similar pattern. A St. Cloud Times analysis of death records found that 102 people who had served in the armed forces killed themselves in Minnesota in 2013.

Veterans in Minnesota are dying by suicide at a rate more than double that of the general population — an estimated 30 per 100,000 last year, compared to 12.5 per 100,000 in the general population.

While there have been numerous cases of veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan taking their own lives in recent years, it's not just recently deployed veterans who are dying by suicide.

In fact, the largest number of suicide deaths are older men, said Dan Reidenberg, executive director of Suicide Awareness Voices of Education, a national nonprofit based in Bloomington.

The vast majority of veterans who commit suicide are older than 55 years, Reidenberg said. Many have had lengthy battles with post-traumatic stress, substance abuse, anxiety or other problems, he said.
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Sunday, November 16, 2014

Twisted VA Disability System Due For Change

The only thing that is for sure is that unless members of congress actually do something to fix the problems, they will just keep happening. The House of Representatives First Veterans Affairs Committee was in 1946. Think they've had long enough to get the job done for the sake of our veterans?
Disability system for veterans strays far from its official purpose
Los Angeles Times (MCT)
By Alan Zarembo
Published: November 16, 2014

The room fell silent for seven minutes as Illinois Rep. Tammy Duckworth upbraided a government contractor.

"Shame on you," the congresswoman scolded Braulio Castillo at an oversight hearing in Washington, D.C., last year, accusing the business owner of gaming the veterans disability system.

Castillo had filed a claim with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs after learning that a disability rating would give his technology company preferential standing for federal contracts.

His disability: A foot injury suffered playing football at the U.S. Military Preparatory Academy in 1984.

Though the injury didn't prevent him from going on to play quarterback at the University of San Diego, the VA rated him 30% disabled — good for $450 a month, tax-free.

Duckworth, an Army veteran who lost both legs in Iraq in 2004 when her helicopter was shot down, noted that her severely damaged right arm was rated only 20%.

"You, who never picked up a weapon in defense of this great nation, very cynically took advantage of the system," she said. "You broke the faith with this nation."

Duckworth directed her ire at Castillo, but the real culprit was the broad eligibility criteria of the disability system itself. The contractor had played by the rules for benefits and, as many Washington lawmakers know, those benefits cover ailments from sports injuries to bullet wounds, resulting in disability payouts that totaled $58 billion this fiscal year — up from $49 billion last year.
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