Saturday, April 29, 2017

Veteran Suicide Topic Not For Amateurs or Inept Reporters

Combat PTSD Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
April 29, 2017
"On average, 22 American veterans commit suicide every day. In 2014, more than 7,400 veterans took their own life. That’s about 18 percent of all suicides in America, however, veterans make up less than nine percent of the country’s population."
Yep that crap again, only this time it came from a reporter pushing another charity that claims to have the answers. "We give them their greatest weapon back-themselves on BayNet by Joy Shrum. So who messed up? The charity or the reporter? Should it matter? After all, when you read the rest of the article, it sounds like the reporter really cared about such a lengthy word count. The problem is, the reason for the story didn't seem to count enough to get it right.
Warfighter Advance is a local non-profit organization that is trying to steer away from the belief that post- traumatic stress (PTS) can only be treated through medical intervention. The program was developed by Mary Vieten, PhD, ABPP, CDR Medical Service Corps, USN (Ret) back in 2003. Dr. Vieten is a nationally recognized expert of post-traumatic stress and has worked with a range of military organizations. The idea behind Warfighter Advance is to address the needs of veterans or active duty service members who have been formally diagnosed, or are self-reporting, with PTS, anxiety, depression or substance abuse resulting from deployment-related trauma. 
Maybe this is working for some veterans, but the truth is, anything that makes them feel as if someone gives a damn works to help them a little. Even the stupid push-ups helps for a a few seconds when they do it and then walk away feeling as if they just contributed to something great than themselves. Yet at the end of the day, when they are alone with their thoughts, that warm and fuzzy feeling cannot overcome the sense of dread when they know they have to close their eyes and the nightly trip back into combat begins.

The reports from the VA make it clear that those being treated by the VA, in other words, medically, are less likely to commit suicide. Experts have been saying for the last 40 years that the mind-body and spiritual wounds need to be treated equally. So why eliminate anything from what has been proven to work?

The article mentions that, "It could be combat-related stress but a large number of veteran suicides are among those who spent little or no time fighting in recent wars." but fails to mention the fact that these "non deployed" received the exact same training as those who have gone into combat, not just once but many times. 

If Resilience training didn't even work for the ones who did not go, how the hell did they expect it to work on the others? Any clue? Do reporters have any clue? Doubtful since they also fail to mention that the number has remained a steady average of a little over one a day even though the number of enlisted members has gone down by the thousands.

That really should have been an important thing to mention but why take the time to learn about any of that to actually change anything when they can get away with a number that isn't real or even close to it?

The "22 a day" came from the VA Suicide Report of 2012 that held data from just 21 states. 
Further, this report contains information from the first 21 states to contribute data for this project and does not include some states, such as California and Texas, with larger Veteran populations. Information from these states has been received and will be included in future reports. 
The report also had this on page 18.
Estimates that the number of suicides among Veterans each day has increased, are based on information provided by 21 states and may not be generalizable to the larger Veteran population. 
And that was followed by this graph.



According to the followup report, putting the number at "20 a day" was from data collected up until 2014 and was released in 2016.

These are the key findings of that report. Key findings from this year’s report include:
In 2014, an average of 20 Veterans died by suicide each day. Six of the 20 were users of VHA services.

In 2014, Veterans accounted for 18 percent of all deaths by suicide among U.S. adults and constituted 8.5 percent of the U.S. adult population (ages 18+). In 2010, Veterans accounted for 20.2 percent of all deaths by suicide and represented 9.7 percent of the U.S. adult population.

The burden of suicide resulting from firearm injuries remains high. In 2014, about 67 percent of all Veteran deaths by suicide were the result of firearm injuries.

There is continued evidence of a high burden of suicide among middle-aged and older Veterans.

In 2014, about 65 percent of all Veterans who died by suicide were age 50 or older.

After adjusting for differences in age and gender, risk for suicide was 21 percent higher among Veterans when compared with U.S. civilian adults. (2014)

After adjusting for differences in age, risk for suicide was 18 percent higher among male Veterans when compared with U.S. civilian adult males. (2014)

After adjusting for differences in age, risk for suicide was 2.4 times higher among female Veterans when compared with U.S. civilian adult females. (2014)

In 2014, rates of suicide were highest among younger Veterans (ages 18–29) and lowest among older Veterans (ages 60+). Furthermore, rates of suicide among Veterans age 70 and older were lower than rates of suicide among civilians in the same age group.
Do these veterans really matter or not? Do we keep just accepting this miserable outcome of all these groups and "efforts" gaining the attention of inept reporting and stunts or do we demand accountability? 

Not caring about how it got this bad with hundreds of thousands of groups "doing something" is the biggest part of the problem. The thing about the chart proves nothing really changed but the worst thing is that there are now over 5 million less veterans in the country depending on us to get this right. Check the numbers for 1999 from the US Census and then check the numbers from 2015 and then ask yourself if you think veterans deserve better than what they've been getting from the rest of us.

Friday, April 28, 2017

Military Chaplain 100 Years of Serving

Military Chaplains Turn 100 Years Old as 'Attacks' on Service Rise
CBN News
04-27-2017

"Chaplains serve as a constant reminder to our troops that God is present with them, especially in a combat environment." Douglas Carver

This month marks the 100th anniversary of the United States' entry into World War I. It's also the 100th anniversary of when U.S. military chaplains made their mark in the U.S. Armed Services, according to Douglas Carver, former U.S. Army chief of chaplains.
Less than 150 chaplains served in the Army and National Guard when America entered the war against Germany.

That number grew to more than 2,300 by the end of WWI in 1918, and Carver says that rise secured the role of chaplains in today's Armed Services.

He calls chaplaincy the "ministry of presence."

"Chaplains serve as a constant reminder to our troops that God is present with them, especially in a combat environment," Carver, the executive director of chaplaincy for the North American Mission Board, wrote to Baptist Press.
read more here

Army Ranger Soldiers Deaths Possible Friendly Fire

Army Ranger from Kettering dies in Afghanistan anti-ISIS raid Pentagon says
Military investigates possible friendly fire
WCPO Staff
Apr 28, 2017

An Army Ranger from Ohio died in Afghanistan Thursday, the Pentagon said in a news release.
Sgt. Cameron H. Thomas, 23, of Kettering, was killed "supporting Operation Freedom's Sentinel" in Nangarhar Province, Afghanistan, according to a release from U.S. Army Special Operations Command.

Thomas and one other soldier, Joshua P. Rodgers, 22, of Bloomington, Ill., were killed as the result of "small arms fire while engaged in dismounted operations," the Pentagon said in a release. Both soldiers were stationed in Fort Benning, Georgia. A third soldier was wounded.
read more here

Homeless Veteran Sits in Jail Because No Room At State Hospital?

Homeless veteran in jail, no space at state psychiatric facility
ABC 12 News
By Terry Camp
Apr 27, 2017

SAGINAW (WJRT) - (04/27/17) - A homeless veteran has been found incompetent to stand trial after he was accused of carjacking a woman and smashing that car into a police car.
He remains in jail and his attorney says that's wrong, but he would like him to be put into a state psychiatric facility, but there are no beds available - a problem that a state official says is getting worse.

Willie Hill is an Army veteran who has a long criminal history. His last run-in with police was in October, when he drove the car he stole from a woman right into a Michigan State Police car. The trooper and Hill were not injured. A judge ordered a forensic exam for Hill.

“The forensic center did a psychological interview and found him to be incompetent to stand trial at this time,” said Jim Piazza, Hill’s attorney.

That means Hill should be sent to one of the state's five psychiatric hospitals for treatment.

“They have to make him competent within 15 months or the case is dismissed,” Piazza said.

A month after Hill was ruled incompetent to stand trial, he remains in the Saginaw County Jail because the state has no available space at its psychiatric centers.
read more here

Air Force Wife Not Jealous Hubby Has Another Love in His Life

Ohio Air Force Sgt. reunites with military dog after 3 years apart
FOX News
Cristina Corbin
Published April 28, 2017
The two last saw each other in 2014. The reunion last week was made possible by American Humane, a Washington-based nonprofit group, which funded the costs of bringing Emra home to retire on U.S. soil.
Wylie and Emra, pictured above, were reunited April 20 in Cincinnati.
(American Humane and Crown Media Family Networks/Brian Douglas)
For U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Adam Wylie, "Emra" -- the 9-year-old Belgian Malinois he was forced to leave behind in South Korea -- was more than a service dog.

The canine filled the void of family when Wylie, a 12-year veteran of the armed forces, was deployed from 2012 to 2014 in South Korea where he was stationed around Osan Air Base.

"She meant the world to me," Wylie, 33, told Fox News.

The two -- separated for three years -- were reunited April 20 in Cincinnati in a heartwarming reunion that at first seemed improbable. Emra had retired as a service dog due to old age and the beginnings of arthritis -- and was living thousands of miles away from her former handler.
read more here

Thursday, April 27, 2017

Two Service Members Killed in Afghanistan, One Wounded

2 US troops killed, 1 injured in eastern Afghanistan 
AP 
 Apr 27, 2017
The U.S. forces were accompanying Afghan troops on the raid when they came under attack by the Islamic State Khorasan group
WASHINGTON — Two American service members were killed and another received a minor injury during a ground assault against Islamic State fighters in Afghanistan Wednesday, according to the U.S. military.
The U.S. and Afghan troops had flown in by helicopter then advanced on foot. The raid was in Mohmand Valley, the same region where the U.S., two weeks ago, dropped what is called the "mother of all bombs" on an IS complex. read more here

California Trying to Help Deported Veterans

California lawmakers consider legal aid for deported vets
KPCC 89.3
Dorian Merina
April 27, 2017
"When someone is willing to die for this country and give us everything that they have ... we just thought it was time to figure out a way to get them back home." Gonzalez Fletcher
U.S. Marine Corps veteran Antonio Romo holds a picture of himself from his days at boot camp, as he stands next to the U.S. border wall on the beach in Tijuana, Mexico. Romo is one of dozens of U.S. military veterans who were deported after criminal convictions and have fought for years to be allowed to return. GREGORY BULL/AP
The California legislature is considering a bill that would provide state-funded legal aid to deported military veterans. It has drawn bipartisan support and is headed for a possible vote on the Assembly floor next week.

The measure, AB 386, would commit the State Department of Social Services to contract directly or indirectly with a nonprofit legal group to provide assistance to immigrant veterans with green cards who have been deported following an honorable discharge.

"It's very hard once you've been deported to go into immigration court and argue your case to come back," said Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego), the bill's author.
read more here

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

13 Unclaimed Veterans to be buried with honors

Do you know them? Burial set for homeless veterans

Dallas

The 13 unclaimed veterans are identified as:
  • Army Specialist Joseph David Dobson, 84

  • Army Private Ned Carlston King, 56

  • Army Specialist Dennis Wayne Moore, 63

  • Marine Private Edward Charles Gipson, 60

  • Marine Private Grant Wells, Jr., 63

  • Navy Veteran Glenn Allen Gatton, 65

  • Navy Ensign Patrick Michael Kelly, 62

  • Navy Veteran Daniel Ray McKinley, 46

  • Navy Veteran Michael Snyder, 58

  • Navy Veteran Elbert Louis Wilson, 79

  • Air Force Staff Sergeant William Brugemann Beeson, 86

  • Air Force Master Sergeant Bobby Ray Gleason, 71

  • Air Force Veteran Jerry G. Marshall, 81

Soldier and Veteran Took Turns Shooting Her PTSD Service Dog!

UPDATE
Sad end to grisly episode: Ex-soldier who killed dog is found dead


Bail increased for veteran, soldier accused in execution of veteran’s PTSD therapy dog
Fayetteville Observer
By Monica Vendituoli Staff writer
April 25, 2017


The couple next tied Cam to a tree, the warrant said. Cam sat down and turned away from Rollins right before she shot him in the head. She then shot him a few more times, according to court documents.



Marinna Rollins told her Facebook friends on April 17 that she found a new home for her PTSD therapy dog, Cam.

Instead, she and her boyfriend, soldier Jarren Heng, are accused of shooting Cam multiple times with a rifle execution-style. Authorities said they filmed the incident.

“They can be heard on the tape laughing and giggling as the dog was being killed,” Cumberland County District Attorney Clark Reaves said at the couple’s first court appearance on Tuesday. “It was a therapy dog.”

Rollins, 23, and Heng, 25, both of the 5600 block of East Netherland Drive, have each been charged with cruelty to animals and conspiracy, arrest documents said.

Heng was arrested Monday evening and Rollins was arrested Tuesday afternoon. Arrest documents said Rollins attempted to avoid apprehension by the Sheriff’s Office.
read more here

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Marine Sgt. Major Accused in Attack at Portland Resteraunt

This is a veteran of multiple deployments. He is also a veteran with valor and rank. Pretty much sums up how good the "resilience" training is working on our service members. The DOD will never get that it is the biggest part of the problem.
Marine with PTSD accused in attack at Portland Iraqi restaurant
KGW
Mike Benner and Michael Rollins and Mike Benner
April 25, 2017


PORTLAND, Ore. -- The suspect in an attack in a Portland Iraqi restaurant is an active duty Marine who has been diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder.

Sergeant Major XXXXXXX, 40, served two tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to a Marine Corps biography.

He told jailers of the PTSD diagnosis but did not specify a date. He is taking Ritalin and Propranolol.

XXXXXXXX was initially accused of harassment and second-degree disorderly conduct and intimidation. He was booked and released.

The charge of second-degree intimidation, a hate crime under Oregon law, has been dropped. However, Portland police told KGW that the case has been assigned to a bias crime detective. Police also said they are aware of XXXXXXX military status and that it would have no bearing on their investigation.

The owners of the DarSalam restaurant in Northeast Portland said one of their servers was the victim of a racially motivated attack Friday evening.
He earned the prestigious Sergeant Major rank in November of 2015. He now serves as the XXXXXXXX Marines Battalion Sergeant Major.

His awards include Bronze Star Medal with combat ‘V’ for valor, the Meritorious Service Medal, the Navy Commendation Medal, the Combat Action Ribbon, and the Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal with one gold stars in lieu of second award.
read more here