Saturday, May 23, 2015

Open House at Lake Nona Orlando VA Hosptial

Today was the Open House for veterans and families at the Lake Nona VA in Orlando so that veterans could see their hospital. This hospital was built after hearing from veterans what they wanted.

The parking garage for veterans is attached to the hospital, so no getting caught in the rain or blistering heat.  There is a separate garage for employees.

There is a state of the art outpatient pharmacy with several windows instead of just two you're used to seeing at Lake Baldwin. They are geared to handle 1,600 prescriptions a day.

Coming in July is the Patriot Cafe projected to serve 3,000 a day. Plus there will be a Starbucks on the main floor.

Women veterans will have their own area on the 4th floor along with the library, auditorium, simulation labs, medical and educational services.

There will be two mental health units.

Everything other hospitals have, this one has it all but unlike other hospitals, this one is for veterans.
Florida Department Veterans Affairs
Radiology Department with several different X-Ray machines
MRI Suites
One with view of the stars
Another with view of the sky
Emergency Department
Nurses area
Emergency room
View from ICU
As the morning went on, more and more veterans came to see their hospital.
Mobile Veterans Center
According to the VA everything should be in place and fully operational by the end of this year but they have already moved in many different departments.  More coming soon.

Why Is Army Shutting Down River Hospital When It Works Wonders?

UPDATE
PTSD Program Will Continue At River Hospital - At Least For Now

‘It saved my life and my marriage’: Soldiers object to Army cutting River Hospital PTSD program
Watertown Daily Times
By ELI ANDERSON TIMES STAFF WRITER
PUBLISHED: SATURDAY, MAY 23, 2015
“Ever since I left the River Hospital, my life has turned around amazingly,” he said. “I would stand on top of a building and yell it for that place.”

ALEXANDRIA BAY — When Charles R. “Chuck” Wilkerson graduated from River Hospital’s Community Wellness Program in the summer of 2013, he was a changed man.

Mr. Wilkerson, who served in the 10th Mountain Division for 11 years, had spent about 100 days in the program to be treated for post-traumatic stress disorder. He said his healing process took slightly longer than those of others in the program, but his transformation was incredible.

“If it wasn’t for the River Hospital,” he said, “I would be dead today.”

On Thursday, River Hospital CEO Ben Moore III announced that the Army was pulling the program from the hospital to create a similar program on post at Fort Drum.

The announcement, which came in a letter from Fort Drum Medical Activity Commander Col. Matthew E. Mattner, shocked River Hospital officials, Mr. Wilkerson and other members of the program and community.

“How can they take away something that saves people’s lives?” Mr. Wilkerson said over the phone from his home in Lexington, Ky.

Mr. Wilkerson said the River Hospital program was able to provide him care that the Army could not.
The River Community Wellness Program, which is the only civilian institution in the country to offer an outpatient treatment program for soldiers with PTSD, came to River Hospital in February 2013 at the request of the Army.
read more here

Unban VA Doctors From Talking About Medical Marijuana

This is one more thing that needs to be fixed. VA doctors have said for years they would rather prescribe medical pot over most of the medications they are supposed to write for veterans but they can't even if it is legal in the state. They need their hands untied to help veterans feel better and be allowed to stop numbing them.
The Fight to Get Medical Marijuana to Veterans Just Got a Big Boost in the Senate
Policy.Mic
By Gregory Krieg
May 22, 2015

"Is medical marijuana right for me?"

American war veterans can ask that question, but doctors with the Department of Veterans Affairs are banned by the federal government from answering — even in states where the drug is legal. But that could soon change, thanks to a historic vote Thursday in the Senate Appropriations Committee.

By an 18-to-12 margin, senators approved an amendment to a massive military spending bill that would allow VA physicians to recommend the use of marijuana to treat post-traumatic stress disorder and other serious injuries and conditions.


According to the Hill, co-sponsors Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) and Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.) tacked the provision on to a $77.6 billion construction and veterans benefits bill. A similar measure was narrowly defeated in the House of Representatives on April 30. Negotiators from both chambers will have to hammer out a compromise to reconcile the difference.
read more here

PTSD on Trial: Iraq Veteran Gets 5 Years in Jail After Standoff?

Hamilton man suffering from PTSD gets five years in standoff that injured two 
Press Of Atlantic City
By LYNDA COHEN, Staff Writer
Posted: Friday, May 22, 2015

MAYS LANDING — A Hamilton Township man whose untreated post-traumatic stress disorder led to a standoff with police and the shooting of a patrol car was sentenced to five years in prison Friday.

Vincent Hamburg Sr., 31, at one time faced a charge of attempted murder for shooting at an unmanned police car during the incident that began late Nov. 14, 2013 at his father's Hamilton Township home.

The standoff began when he says he blacked out as a result of alcohol-treated anxiety brought on by his PTSD. His father and then-fiancee were assaulted in the incident.

After police were called, the two victims came outside, but Hamburg -- armed with a rifle owned by his father -- kept police at bay for hours. Just before surrendering, he shot into a police car that was parked in the driveway.
"My service in Iraq is a highlight in my life," Hamburg wrote in a letter to U.S. Rep. Frank LoBiondo about his PTSD. "I expected sad memories of lost comrade from a war setting, yet had no idea my service overseas would have a lifelong effect on my daily living. More importantly, I am sad at what my PTSD has done to the lives of those I care deeply for and am closest to in my life." read more here

Veteran Reminds Others No "Happy" Memorial Day

I’m a veteran and I hate ‘Happy Memorial Day.’ Here’s why.
Washington Post
By Jennie Haskamp
May 22, 2015
I’m frustrated by people all over the country who view the day as anything but a day to remember our WAR DEAD. I hate hearing “Happy Memorial Day.”

I have friends buried in a small corner of a rolling green field just down the road from the Pentagon. They’re permanently assigned to Section 60. For those of you unfamiliar with the term, it’s 14 acres in the southeast corner of Arlington National Cemetery that serves as a burial ground for many military personnel killed in Iraq and Afghanistan. There are fresh graves there.

I spent my formative years in combat boots and all of my friends are in the military, were in the military, or married into the military. I have several friends buried at Arlington, and know of dozens more men and women interred in that hallowed ground.

Section 60 is a place I visit often.

I toyed with the idea of making the trip south from New York City this weekend to spend some time, reflect and sit quietly but decided against it. Some friend, huh?
Nearly 150 years ago, Memorial Day— first called Decoration Day— was set aside to decorate the graves of the men who’d recently died in battle. America was still reeling from the Civil War when Gen. John Logan, national commander of the Grand Army of the Republic, issued a proclamation in 1868, according to a PBS account of his decision. “The 30th of May,” he declared, “would be an occasion to honor those who died in the conflict.”

Wednesday night, sitting in a pizza joint in the Bronx, watching the world go by, I was upset and couldn’t put my finger on why.

A friend said “Hey! Do you want to go to Fleet Week? It’s this weekend here in the city.”

What? No? Absolutely not. I don’t want to be in the midst of tens of thousands of people clamoring for a chance to look at a static display of Marine Corps and Navy equipment. I don’t want to see Marines and sailors dressed up, paraded around for community relations and recruiting purposes. I don’t want to watch any parades.

As I said it (barked it, really), my friend’s eyes widened and I recognized the frustration in my tone. I didn’t know why I was upset, at first. I paused, and while I was sitting there contemplating my outburst, I heard a commercial on the radio screaming through the tinny speakers.
“Beaches, beats and BBQs!” it said. “We’re your Memorial Day station with everything you need to kick off the summer in style!”
read more here
Wounded Times Shadow Salute

Friday, May 22, 2015

Staff Sgt. Cole Van Dorn Laid to Rest at Arlington

MARINE COLE VAN DORN BURIED AT ARLINGTON, FUELING PTSD FIGHT 
ABC 7 News
By Chuck Goudie
May 21, 2015

WASHINGTON (WLS) -- On Capitol Hill there is movement in both houses of congress on new legislation that would help thousands of service members suffering from PTSD - although it is too late for Marine veteran Cole Van Dorn, who was buried Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery.

In the shadow of the Pentagon, at this resting place for American heroes, a rifle salute to the latest serviceman who died while fighting a hidden enemy in a private war: PTSD.
read more here

WARNING I just put my Chaplain vest in the closet because of what I am going to write and not feeling very "Christian" at the moment. Don't worry because I'll pray to be forgiven and I am sure He'll understand why. The trouble is, no member of Congress will ever get a fucking clue!

The sadness that hits me hard this time of year just turned into full-blown-head-exploding-outrage!

I have been getting sadder around Memorial Day for over 3 decades because every year there are more and more graves filled by veterans who should be marching in parades, not being followed by cars in a funeral procession. The majority of the country is all about having fun but in the veterans community, it is all about what this day was intended to be. Remembering generations of those who paid the price for what we have the other days of the year.

Too many of us remember how many we lost to suicide since last Memorial Day. The rest of the country, if they pay attention at all, keep spouting off with a fictitious 22 a day when the rest of us are fully aware veterans are committing suicide double the civilian rate and even with that fact, we also know we will never, ever know exactly how many decided that one day was the best day to die after surviving combat. Did you get that? Did you notice that they did everything they could to survive combat, make it back home and then gave up? That should tell you something right there and for most of us, it was a message we got years ago.

We've been listening to politicians and profiteers finagle these veterans out of their lives for far too long. It has been going on for as long as the Patriots took a stand against the best military in the world at the time, defeated them and then had to take care of their own wounded. None of them want you to remember that back then when the warfighters were paying the price with their minds because of combat, they were shot as cowards. Today politicians save the bullets and push veterans over the edge to kill themselves. Hey why bother to remind folks that the psychological price of serving was studied during every war and full blown research started over 40 years ago?

There is a special place in hell for all of them and for all the charities out there claiming they are taking care of veterans when clearly, most of them are taking care of themselves. There are some good ones and I am proudly associated in one way or another with them. Then there are the bottom dwellers screaming about "raising awareness" when they don't want anyone to be aware of the basic fact they never say what the fuck they are doing with the money or have to give one single, simple explanation as to why they haven't changed anything for anyone.

Ever wonder why these new groups pop up, get press attention and get swollen bank accounts instead of taking new ideas to older established groups? Here's a clue, they want to keep the money for themselves and have all the attention focused on them, not the veterans needing help.

Members of Congress have had the luxury of lazy reporters failing to ask them why things have gotten worse after decades of spending billions of dollars to make things better for veterans. They got to just blame the VA for the mess instead of having to answer for a single dime of feeding donors pockets with drugs instead of therapy and then their latest pull-the-wool shenanigans of letting veterans see outside doctors. Ya, right, that will work. Ever see a waiting line in an emergency room or long waits at a doctor's office? Ever see a hospital shut down?

The hospital I was born in and my daughter, was torn down. It is now a supermarket. Ever see a VA Hospital shut down?

Tomorrow is the opening of the new Lake Nona VA here in Florida. The groundbreaking was in 2008 and they handed out shovels as momentos. We didn't them considering all the crap we've all had to deal with all these years we needed this instead.

House and Senate members (but not their families) also are eligible to receive care at military hospitals. For outpatient care, there is no charge at the Washington, D.C., area hospitals (Walter Reed Army Medical Center and National Naval Medical Center). Inpatient care is billed at rates set by the Department of Defense. That was from AARP.

Politicians write the rules. They extended the time the troops can get free healthcare from the VA but didn't think to make sure they also hired enough doctors and nurses to take care of those entering in line behind combat wounded veterans.
Enhanced Eligibility For Health Care Benefits
Veterans who served in a theater of combat operations after November 11, 1998 are eligible for an extended period of eligibility for health care for 5 years post discharge.

Under the "Combat Veteran" authority, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) provides health care services and community living care for any condition possibly related to the Veterans’s service in the theater of operations and enrollment in Priority Group 6, unless eligible for enrollment in a higher priority group to:

Combat Veterans who were discharged or released from active service on or after January 28, 2003, are eligible to enroll in the VA health care system for 5 years from the date of discharge or release.

What they don't tell you is that older veterans were put to the back of the line as well and they are also the majority of the suicides. But hey, why remind anyone they suffered longer and waited longer for promised changes they fought for in the first place?

We are watching them not getting the help they need from politicians hoping we don't remember and from profiteers hoping we don't notice what they are not doing. We are watching them die remembering and noticing everything, but reporters can't even remember what they wrote last week about facts destroying what some yahoo just claimed and never nailing them on it.

Ever wonder what suicides of younger veterans does to older ones? It reminds them of all the bullshit they've heard over and over and over again followed by more and more empty speeches blaming everyone but themselves and not one single hearing asking for accountability from anyone other than who they think will make an easy target of the day.

Too bad it is all on record and everyone can read who did what and when they did it. We know about all the stupid questions being asked during "hearings" but not one question that made any difference to anyone.

The reports about medications replacing therapy have been out for years but nothing has changed. They keep talking about doing something but then the drug companies will lose money. Why bother to do what was proven to be the most effective, which is peer support and talk therapy? After all, why fund the best when the most expensive is acceptable?

The question is how long do they think it will take until they reach the "one too many" they keep talking about? How many more have to die before someone does something real to change all this?

This is what it all boils down to. Congress knew about all this but after hearings, nothing was really done to change the outcome.
VA doctors tell House lawmakers of pressure to prescribe veterans opiates
The Center for Investigative Reporting
By Aaron Glantz
Published: October 10, 2013

The hearing marked the first time VA officials have spoken publicly about the skyrocketing number of painkiller prescriptions since The Center for Investigative Reporting revealed the trend last month.

"There are multiple instances when I have been coerced or even ordered to write for Schedule II narcotics when it was against my medical judgment," said Dr. Pamela Gray, a physician who formerly worked at the VA hospital in Hampton, Va.

Primary care doctors who don't want to prescribe large amounts of opiates may resign, do as they are told or be terminated, Gray said. Gray was fired.
read more of this report here

You can find more about what Congress had hoped we'd all forget with Veteran Suicides Apocalypse Now because it was all happening before the internet and the general public had the ability to learn.

They hoped we'd forget that the VA has 1,000 veterans a month attempting suicide, even though there is the Veterans Crisis Line taking in thousands of calls every month and there is an ever growing number outside the VA system they admit they have no clear count of.

Vietnam veterans were trained to fight and kill but no one ever claimed they were trained to heal afterwards. For Gulf War veterans, it is the same story but no one talks about them. For OEF and OIF veterans, they are triple their peer rate after they had been trained in "prevention" and given all the attention of the new charities only interested in them.

It happened before the DOD spent billions a year on "prevention" that didn't work as they refused to change anything. It happened before the umteenth chairity begged for your money but didn't think they had to explain what they were doing with the money.

It all happened long before this generation and that is the saddest part of all. It is all still happening.

Family Searching for Missing Fort Carson Soldier

Family asks for help in search for AWOL soldier 
KRDO News
Greg Miller, Multimedia Journalist
May 22, 2015

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.
A Chicago-area father is in Colorado Springs, desperately searching for his son.

Pvt. Daniel Domres is listed as AWOL from Fort Carson. His family is afraid his disappearance may be the result of a form of PTSD. And they're not the only ones with that concern.

“Just something happened, I don't know what it is” said Tom Domres, Daniel’s father. “I made a promise, said if something bad happens, I'd find him... that's why I'm here.”

Domres was stationed at Fort Carson after his nine-month tour in Afghanistan ended last year.

During his training and initial tour, he had a spotless record.

“He got along with leadership extremely well. They asked him to go Ranger 12 times asked him to go sniper scout,” Tom Domres said.

But then he deployed and the 20-year-old started acting differently.

“He withdrew from the guys in the unit,” he said. “He spent some time alone, there were a couple of incidents and I think he made some bad choices.”
read more here
video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

Florida Makes 5th Place State for Military Retirees

Analysis ranks best, worst states for military retirees
ABC News 10
By Brittney Petro
Published: May 22, 2015

A newly released analysis ranks “2015’s Best and Worst States for Military Retirees” based on a state’s ability to support retired veterans. WalletHub looked at 20 key factors when determining the rankings.

The three major categories in the ranking included economic environment, quality of life and healthcare. However, WalletHub took other factors into consideration as well, such as job opportunities, housing prices, veteran-owned businesses and veteran homelessness.

Top 5 States for Military Retirees:
1. Wyoming
2. Montana
3. South Dakota
4. Maine
5. Florida

read more here

"Paralyzed" Veteran Walks Again After Getting Free Home?

Homes for Our Troops questions veteran's paralysis after video 
KENS 5
Dillon Collier
May 20, 2015

Weeks after the couple moved into a home in rural Hays County, videos and pictures surfaced showing Justin walking on the property
DRIPPING SPRINGS -- A national non-profit that built a specially-adapted house in Dripping Springs for a wounded Army veteran is now 'weighing its options', after contrasting stories have emerged regarding the severity of the soldier's injuries.

Army Specialist Justin Perez-Gorda suffered a traumatic brain injury while serving in Afghanistan in January 2011.

For years, he and his wife claimed publicly he was paralyzed from the belly button down.

"He has permanent loss of use of both lower extremities. He's paralyzed from the belly button down," Josephine Perez-Gorda said during a taped video segment later used by Homes for Our Troops for fundraising efforts.
read more here

Students Sent to Detention Defending Flag Against Teacher

Teacher Accused of Stomping on American Flag in Front of Students
May 21, 2015
As seen on Fox and Friends

An Illinois town is in an uproar after a teacher allegedly stomped on a flag in front of his students.

Two parents of children at Martinsville High School were on “Fox and Friends” this morning to discuss the ordeal.

Gina Gibson said that the unnamed teacher was using the American flag as a pointer in the classroom, even though students objected to the flag being used in that manner.

She said the students cautioned the teacher not to let Old Glory touch the floor, and that’s when he stomped on the flag, telling his students that it was his right to do so.

Gibson said that some students – her son included – were sent to the office to be given detention for refusing to lift their heads off of their desks following the teacher's actions.
read more here