The (pixelated) things they carry.

VCS Advocate Chris Miller’s New Article from The Guardian

 

US soldiers wear the grey pixel pattern in action. Photograph: Ramon Espinosa/APUS soldiers wear the grey pixel pattern in action. Photograph: Ramon Espinosa/AP

Friday 13 July 2012

This is not the Army’s first uniform controversy, but given the costs we must ask: is camouflage still relevant to warfare?

It is ironic that something that is supposed to keep one from being seen is so instantly recognizable and can be the subject of so much debate.

US Army camouflage uniforms are iconic and instant reminders of our history. There is the khaki and green ofWWII; the olive drab of Korea and Vietnam; the woodlandcolor of the Cold War and Balkans; the ‘chocolate chip’ pattern of the Gulf War; the desert pattern of Afghanistan and Iraq; and the grey pixel pattern of today. One knows instantly what war and what decades they’re looking at. Soldiers young and old form lifelong attachments to the uniforms they served in.

After $5bn worth of testing and fielding and eight years of discussion and complaints from leaders in the field, the Army has decided to nix the pixels in the coming years in favor of a uniform similar to that currently worn in Afghanistan. As a veteran of combat in Iraq, I welcome the move. But one question that must be asked is if all this costly concern about camouflage really continues to be as relevant in modern combat.

The official nomenclature for the current color is “foliage”. Supposedly it was chosen in an attempt to find an all-purpose uniform for any terrain. Though predominantly grey in appearance, when viewed in a woodline at a distance the colors take on a hue of green combined with the shadows in vegetation. The grey and khaki colors also compare with shades of grey and brown in urban terrain. The khaki color also melds with brown rock or sand. Both colors compare with the skyline when silhouetted against the horizon.

The palette was motivated by the historic military tactic that attacks take place in the early grey of dawn. At least those are the claims made to support the pattern. From my experience, I found the woodland and desert patterns more effective. The pixel grey doesn’t work as effectively as the terrain-specific patterns. The success or failure of a mission and soldiers’ lives often depend upon stealth and it is easily understood why one would rather have a pattern made specifically for the environment over one that is all-purpose. I know many soldiers and veterans who agree, though some may find the new pixel pattern effective enough. The Army’s adoption in 2010 of a different brown and green non-pixel pattern called “MultiCam” for troops deployed to Afghanistan recognizes that there are shortcomings with the all-purpose grey pixel.

A large share of the fighting in Iraq took place in urban terrain in territory the enemy knew much better and where all US movements issued from large fortified camps and bases. A force that rides around in Humvees, Bradleys, and Abrams tanks sometimes accompanied by attack helicopters isn’t exactly hiding. Even in Afghanistan, where the fighting is in much more rural and remote terrain, the battle consists of trying to draw the enemy out of hiding among the local populace to be engaged. They usually know where our troops are well before we know where they are.

Camouflage, of course, is an important constant for the Army in the modern era. The 20th century saw the end to the old days of pitched battles between armies in colorful and often heavy wool uniforms. As science has progressed, so has the study of camouflage. Simply put, the job of a camo pattern is to break up the recognizable outline of the head, shoulders, torso, and legs of the human form. Solid green, tan, or white uniforms help soldiers blend in with terrain colors. Woodland and desert patterns mimic the shapes of features of the terrain and their shadows as well as their colors. Pixel patterns, rather than being color or shape focused, rely on the confusing effect they have on human eyesight. At a distance, the pixels simply become blotches of color. At least that is the argument made in their favor.

The problem with grading the effectiveness of camouflage patterns comes with finding the proper method to conduct the analysis. Scientific methods rely on the mechanics of how the human eye works, but this may produce a different result than sticking guys in the woods and trying to find them. The field method of testing is closer to the reality of the battlefield and fits with the Army’s “train as you fight” mantra. However, the science of sight seems to have won out with the grey pixel pattern. This also seems to be in keeping with the current trend toward a tech-heavy “modern” Army.

The all-purpose grey pixel uniform allowed units to automatically reorder replacement uniforms for soldiers after a field-life of six months. In 2003, my unit had to make due with only two sets of desert uniforms because they couldn’t be produced and fielded fast enough to meet the demand. They were also quickly and poorly made and didn’t stand up to the rigors of daily wear. By the time we returned from Iraq in 2004 some of our desert uniforms were threadbare and almost white in color, not to mention all the grease, dirt, and blood stains one picks up in combat. We would sweat so much in the desert heat that it would leave behind white rings of salt. Early on we all looked like old washer women, scrubbing uniforms with bars of soap in buckets and hanging them on windows to dry because we only had two of them.

As the US disengages militarily from Iraq and Afghanistan, new possible enemies and conflicts present new challenges. America is engaging foes largely from the air using drone strikes in places like Yemen and Pakistan. Future conflicts with possible foes in Asia may likely require greater control of the seas. Foes with modern military equipment have the capability to identify and engage targets in much the same way the US military does, using thermal imaging and night vision capable devices and weaponry. These technological capabilities may render even an excellent physical camouflage system irrelevant.

The Army is often slow to accept to change. But sometimes changes may not be for the better, as the grey pixel uniform saga has shown.

Posted in Gulf War Updates, Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , , | Comments Off on The (pixelated) things they carry.

Will PTSD By Any Other Name Bring More Troops to Treatment?

by Aaron Levin From PsychiatryOnline

While two generals and two psychiatrists disagree over diagnostic language, they do agree about the crucial need to get troops with posttraumatic stress disorder into care.

The general wants to change one word. The psychiatrist wants to keep things the way they are. A Canadian who sees both sides of the argument may offer a way of satisfying both.

Earlier this year, then-U.S. Army Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Peter Chiarelli notified APA that the Army wanted the term posttraumatic stress disorder changed to posttraumatic stress injury.

Gen. Peter Chiarelli (Ret.) argues that changing posttraumatic stress disorder to posttraumatic stress injury will reduce stigma and bring more affected U.S. troops into treatment.

Gen. Peter Chiarelli (Ret.) argues that changing posttraumatic stress disorder to posttraumatic stress injury will reduce stigma and bring more affected U.S. troops into treatment.

Gen. Peter Chiarelli (Ret.) argues that changing posttraumatic stress disorder to posttraumatic stress injury will reduce stigma and bring more affected U.S. troops into treatment.

David Hathcox

Part of Chiarelli’s job then was to lead the effort to reduce suicide in the U.S. Armed Forces and to expand access to mental health care for troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.

Moving combat-related stress reactions into the same category as bullet wounds would decrease stigma and lead more soldiers to accept treatment, said Chiarelli, now CEO of One Mind for Research, a neuroscience research advocacy organization. Stigma is a major barrier to seeking care, and a shift in terminology would lower that barrier, he said.

However, while “injury” might describe what happens to a soldier, the term was too imprecise for accurate diagnosis and treatment, responded Matthew Friedman, M.D., Ph.D., executive director of the Department of Veterans Affairs’ National Center for PTSD in White River Junction, Vt.

Chiarelli and Friedman appeared on a panel at APA’s 2012 annual meeting in Philadelphia in May, along with Gen. (Ret.) Romeo Dallaire of the Canadian Forces and Robert Ursano, M.D., chair of psychiatry at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Md.

“Everyone would agree that anyone who lives through a traumatic event experiences traumatic stress, but not all will develop PTSD,” said John Oldham, M.D., APA’s outgoing president, who chaired the session. “So we have to distinguish between those who will require treatment and those who don’t. Much more needs to be done—just changing language isn’t enough.”

“PTSD is PTSD,” said Friedman. “To change it to PTSI would reverse 32 years of research and not reduce stigma or increase treatment seeking.”

Wording is a serious issue, said Ursano.

The term used, however, also has to be applicable in nonmilitary events, such as the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the September 11 attacks, a Japanese tsunami, or cases of rape.

troops.png

Psychiatrists and military leaders at APA’s annual meeting discussed whether posttraumatic stress disorder should be renamed posttraumatic stress injury as a way to get mental health care to the increasing number of returning troops showing symptoms of the disorder. Proponents argue that making it equivalent to a bullet wound would lessen the stigma of getting care (see story at right).

AP Photo/Ted S. Warren

The problem is not just the stigma felt by soldiers but that held by their officers and their resistance to accepting any mental disorder or its consequence—depression, suicide, substance abuse, as well as PTSD—as a medical disorder, said Darrel Regier, M.D., M.P.H., director of APA’s Division of Research, vice chair of the DSM-5Task Force, and director of the American Psychiatric Institute for Research and Education.

Since a visible wound seems more culturally acceptable to service members, presenting objective evidence of posttraumatic injury might lessen the stigma attached to PTSD, suggested Chiarelli.

“When we can show soldiers what happens in the brain, they’ll come in for help,” he said. “Something that occurs in the brain is not something to be ashamed of.”

Scans of brain injuries might also convince officers that their troops were not malingering, he added.

However, current scanning technology is not yet ready for the clinic, Regier pointed out in a later interview with Psychiatric News.

“Scans show group differences for patients with and without PTSD, but they are not sensitive or specific enough to use for individual diagnosis,” he said.

Dallaire, now a member of the Canadian Senate, headed the United Nations military mission to Rwanda at the time of the genocide there in 1994, an experience that induced his own case of PTSD, he said. The increased deployments of Canadian troops to the war in Afghanistan and peacekeeping operations in Africa, Cambodia, and the Balkans had serious effects on soldiers and their families, he realized. The injuries they sustained to the mind were as real as physical wounds but did not get the same recognition, he said.

“We must render to the troops the sense that this injury was honorable and not a sickness,” said Dallaire. “The troops saw a ‘mental health problem’ as pejorative, so we had to restate the injury in language that they could understand and not feel stigmatized so they could get help.”

Dallaire’s solution—now accepted by Canadian Forces—was to use “operational stress injury,” a term covering not just PTSD but other injuries to the mind, he said. The use of conventional diagnostic terms has not changed.

“That established a framework in which individuals could define themselves in an honorable position, seek support, and end the stigma from both the chain of command and from their peers,” said Dallaire.

Since 2008, Canada has awarded the Sacrifice Medal (equivalent to the Purple Heart) to soldiers with “mental disorders that are, based on a review by a qualified mental health practitioner, directly attributable to a hostile or perceived hostile action.”

Changing terminology is not enough, however. Changing military minds is another critical component.

“There is now a stigma in the chain of command if someone denigrates someone who’s been injured with PTSD or some other injury of the mind,” said Dallaire.

“The injury is not specific,” said Regier. “It’s what the injury did that produces the disorder, and it’s the consequence of the injury that needs to be accepted.”

PTSD is indeed a stress-related injury—like a broken ankle, concluded Ursano.

“What we call that stress-related injury is a separate question,” he said. “The diagnosis needs to direct care, and it needs to improve the patient’s health. How to get those who need care into effective care is the goal of everyone on the panel.

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Will PTSD By Any Other Name Bring More Troops to Treatment?

Army’s huge culture shift: No shame in mental health help

 

By Gail Sheehy, Special for USA TODAY

Daniel Rodriguez joined the Army when his home life collapsed. His parents split. His father dropped from a heart attack. He was 18 and on the runty side for a high school football player, but with a dream of playing at a Division I college.

  • Pvt. Daniel Rodriguez left Iraq with a traumatic brain injury and suffered from symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder after serving in Afghanistan.By Garrett Hubbard, for USA TODAY

    Pvt. Daniel Rodriguez left Iraq with a traumatic brain injury and suffered from symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder after serving in Afghanistan.

By Garrett Hubbard, for USA TODAY

Pvt. Daniel Rodriguez left Iraq with a traumatic brain injury and suffered from symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder after serving in Afghanistan.

Sponsored Links

Three weeks after burying his father, the angry teen made his way to an Army recruitment center. Like so many of today’s volunteers, he was looking for a new home, discipline and the directions for becoming a man.

But Iraq and Afghanistan are unique in America’s wars, clouding that traditional coming-of-age road map. The invisible wounds of post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and family breakup have soared for the military there, along with repeated redeployments and a 360-degree combat-alert range. The most glaring result is the 80{cd9ac3671b356cd86fdb96f1eda7eb3bb1367f54cff58cc36abbd73c33c82e1d} increase in suicides, averaging nearly one a day this year — the fastest pace in the nation’s decade of war. This is the second year in a row that more active-duty soldiers have been lost to self-inflicted death than to combat.

These appalling statistics have given the Army a new mission — to treat those invisible wounds of war beforesoldiers come home with their mental composure shattered.

Pvt. Rodriguez was a prime candidate to join the epidemic of military suicides. During 12 months of walking patrols in what he calls the “concrete jungle” of Baghdad during the surge of 2007, he dodged more than 1,000 roadside bombs. But he lost a dozen of his buddies. And in Afghanistan, he was thrown together in a remote outpost with Afghan soldiers who betrayed the Americans and sided with the Taliban.

Iraq left Rodriguez with a traumatic brain injury. Afghanistan left him with classic symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. He came home in the fall of 2010 to a jobless economy and night terrors.

Why didn’t Rodriguez become another grim statistic?

The answer may lie at his post in Colorado, Fort Carson, where a behavioral health strategy representing a huge cultural shift in the Army has won over the Pentagon.

Two years ago, Gen. George Casey, then Army chief of staff, admitted, “We were caught flat-footed as an institution” by the dramatic spike in suicides and mental breakdowns. He committed to a massive training effort to reverse things. It was Gen. Casey who urged me to check out the unique program being tested at Fort Carson.

About the writer: Gail Sheehy is a journalist, lecturer and the best-selling author of 16 books, including “Passages in Caregiving.”

This was a change in military thinking. “Up until a few years ago,” Brig. Gen. Jim Pasquarette, then post commander, had told me, admitting mental health issues in the ranks “would have reflected weakness on our whole brigade.”

Those long-held attitudes had brought shame to Fort Carson in 2007 when 14 soldiers from the 4th Combat Brigade, back from a brutal year in Iraq, went on a string of violent rampages around Colorado Springs. All were charged or convicted in 13 murders and manslaughters.

The disgraced post turned itself inside out to reverse the Army code of silence about mental illness. Maj. Chris Ivany, Fort Carson’s battalion psychiatrist, devised a new approach: Instead of waiting until traumatized soldiers came home from combat and sought release in high-risk behavior — spousal abuse, drunken driving, drugs or suicide — why not bring behavioral health care to the combat zone?

It was one of the bloodiest battles of the war in Afghanistan that helped to earn respect for Ivany’s approach from both the leadership and the infantrymen of Fort Carson.

‘Killing at point-blank range’

Just before dawn on Oct. 3, 2009, most of the soldiers of the 4th Combat Brigade were still asleep, huddled in a remote outpost in eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistani border. They were being fired upon almost daily by Taliban rebels.

Pvt. Daniel Rodriguez, 20, had been redeployed there after a hellish year in Iraq. He was up early, writing an e-mail when the first volley of rockets screamed into the compound. He sprinted 300 meters to his post in the mortar pit, but never had a chance to fire any mortars.

“The Taliban focused their fire on Afghan National Army (ANA) soldiers, as a weakness, and collapsed their position,” recalls Capt. Stony Portis, the 32-year-old troop commander. His men ran out to fight in boxers and body armor. Rodriguez saw his friend, Pvt. Kevin Thomson, dash for his observation post. Five minutes into the firefight, a bullet pierced Thomson’s head. He was dead before he hit the ground.

“We’ve got people inside our wire!!!” someone shouted. They were 60 men, surrounded from higher ground by 300 enemy fighters. . Most of the buildings were on fire. The only communications left with Bagram Air Base were by satellite radio.

“It came down to throwing hand grenades and killing at point-blank range,” Rodriguez remembers. Dodging AK fire and grenades, Rodriguez dragged his friend’s body back. “I just couldn’t get over the fact that my buddy was dead, and that they were going to get away with it.” The private had caught a bullet in his shoulder and shrapnel in both legs. “I hit that point where I knew I was going to die, and I was just going to kill as many of them before they killed me.”

Fifty soldiers formed a last nucleus of defense. They holed up in one barracks while others cut down trees to keep the last buildings from burning. “There was yelling and crying but also equanimity,” Portis learned, “a lot of self-composure because everyone realized what was at stake.”

Eight soldiers were killed. Twenty-two more were wounded. Survivors didn’t sleep for 48 hours as the battle continued. Air support was slow in coming. The first wave of helicopters was shot up so badly, the pilots had to fly back to the nearest base. At night, survivors plotted how to destroy anything of value left at the firebase.

On the third day, they were airlifted out to Forward Operating Base Bostick with nothing but the clothes on their backs. Several days later, the shaken survivors were met by a ginger-haired young woman from Dubuque with Iowa friendliness written all over her. She was not what they expected.

‘You want to get your feelings out’

“I’m Capt. Katie Kopp, the brigade psychologist,” was her typically friendly introduction. “I’m part of the combat stress team.”

A battle-hardened psychologist, Kopp is helicoptered from Bagram to remote outposts days after bloody battles. “Getting me to soldiers who have been affected is top priority,” she says.

Kopp dispels right away the image of a couch-bound shrink. With a year of combat exposure in Afghanistan behind her, she sits down with the men wearing the same shapeless camouflage suit and boots. She was so close to the men that she asked to be embedded with the same brigade for their redeployment on the border of Pakistan. Trained with a Ph.D. in psychology to debrief soldiers at risk for post-traumatic stress, she asks the men to join her in small group-therapy sessions.

Some of the soldiers connected with her right away, seeking her out to talk one-on-one. They were super-polite. Once they could tease her about her red hair or being a girl, she knew she was in.

But not everyone welcomed these early therapeutic sessions. Rodriguez says he gave Kopp the cold shoulder at first.

“I didn’t want to relive the experience. I still couldn’t believe it was real. We’d had no chance to soak it in.” He kept thinking, “She’s going to tell me why I’m having nightmares of killing somebody? You know, who are you? … You weren’t there. There’s not blood on your boots. You know, you’re not scarred. You don’t have shrapnel in your legs.”

Kopp was not surprised by this reaction.

“I don’t expect to be the first person they turn to after having a hard time,” she says. Instead, she urges soldiers first to seek “buddy aid” — to talk about what happened with their friends — and to focus not on their losses, but on their courage and teamwork.

“When all hell broke loose, you didn’t freeze. Fifty of you killed about 150 enemy fighters. And you made it out alive! You have a lot to be proud of,” she told them. (Forty valor awards were bestowed on the unit.)

For Rodriguez, it was a tough prescription. “You want to get your feelings out, but at the same time, you know they’re going to scar you for the rest of your life. It sent me on an emotional roller coaster. … My mentality was always to bottle it up, bottle it up.”

After the group session, Rodriguez vaguely remembers having one-on-one sessions with another professional.

“Those talks were helpful in kinda getting me to open up,” he told me. “But I still wanted to believe I was man enough to take all the pressures on my shoulders.”

One of those pressures, his hatred of the ANA, was sparked anew when Rodriguez and his buddies saw a searing video posted on YouTube by the Taliban a month after the siege.

“Once they overran our base, we saw the ANA handing their AKs over to them and cheering them on, giving them the thumbs up,” Rodriguez told me. “I’m thinking, ‘My friends died on behalf of your cowardice? Why should I fight side by side with people so worthless they won’t even fight to save their country?’ ”

The hatred boiled up inside him. It soured into depression. Night terrors came on. Rodriguez wouldn’t sleep through the night for the next year.

‘Just grit it out’

Homecomings at Fort Carson used to mean soldiers hit the tarmac, turned in their weapons, picked up their pay and then went off on a month’s leave. They were expected to ratchet down from the hypervigilance of a shoot-first, perpetual war mentality and embrace the natural boredom of a sleepy mountain town. It was a transition that defied human behavior.

In June 2011, when Rodriquez was returning to Fort Carson, the reintegration was dramatically different. Each returnee was seen by a psychological professional; a full evaluation was completed by their commanders. Had they seen heavy combat? Any drug use? Had a buddy died? A divorce at home?

Soldiers coded “green” were good to go. The “reds” — 23 soldiers who were deemed unstable or without any support at home — were met at the tarmac, where a professional would speak with them.

The 400 to 500 others designated “amber” — with symptoms such as sleeplessness, depression, panic attacks, alcohol or substance abuse — were recommended for more consultations. Rodriguez was an amber.

“We do 12- to 15-month tours,” Rodriguez explained. “You come home after a year and haven’t had a sip of alcohol. Your tolerance is down. Your emotions are high. Your testosterone’s pumping from the warfare that you just saw. You put all of these boiling points in a person’s life … and it’s just like, chaos.”

Rodriguez picked his way carefully through the questioning. “Who will be at your house?” No one. “Are there any weapons in your home?” No, all his stuff was in storage. Any question where a “yes” might raise a red flag, he gave a no.

He flew home to Stafford, Va., to cocoon himself in the house where he grew up. Rodriguez said nothing to his sister about the night terrors. Two calls came in from the behavioral health team and he was given contact numbers if he needed to talk. He didn’t call.

Rodriguez was promoted to sergeant and decorated with three medals for valor. No one let him forget about post-traumatic stress disorder. “Everyone in the military now makes a big deal about it.” He knew he had the classic symptoms, but he told himself, “Just grit it out, day by day.”

Sitting on a couch and staring into space was the toughest part. He was enrolled in Germanna Community College, but classes wouldn’t start until January. The emotional overload crashed down. Visions of his father’s death bled into faces of the 20 buddies he lost in Iraq and the weight of eight body bags he helped to load on the plane in Afghanistan. He heard about a friend who killed himself. Another one overdosed and died.

The only way he could escape the night terrors was a grueling schedule of calisthenics. Six hours a day of one-arm push-ups, gravity-defying leaps, a 40-yard dash in 4.5 seconds, throwing a football while lying on his back to the top of a three-story wall. He is now 5-foot-8, 175 pounds, sheathed in muscle.

Last December, he posted a YouTube video to show how these moves can train even a small body to become a powerhouse on the football field. In February, he was called by the head coach at Clemson University, offering him the chance to earn a starting position. His scholastic record at Germanna recently earned him a letter of acceptance from the South Carolina college.

“It was tough for me to go to counseling,” Rodriguez told me last week. “But as I opened up more and more, it helped me to get my feelings out and understand it’s OK to talk about it to other people, my friends, my mom — don’t bottle it up.”

From stress to ‘post-traumatic growth’

“This soldier,” Kopp says, “is a prime example of the ultimate goal of Fort Carson’s behavioral health care approach — to replace post-traumatic stress with post-traumatic growth. … If you can ride out the roller coaster, it is really worth it in the end.”

The Fort Carson statistics support this conclusion. The number of behavioral health consults has more than doubled since 2009, from 44,000 to a projected 92,000 in 2012. High-risk behaviors have been cut in half. Suicides at Fort Carson are down to three this year. “More people are seeking or accepting treatment,” says Sam Preston, the division psychiatrist. “Taking the secrecy out of it makes it a normal part of recovery.”

The initiator, Ivany, has been called to the Pentagon to roll out a similar program to the 43 American brigades. Already, every brigade combat team in the Army has had an increase in the number of behavioral health care providers.

The leadership at Fort Carson talks today more like social workers than John Wayneclones. “What we’re seeing here is the stigma begins to vanish,” Maj. Preston says. “This is not a military problem, this is an American problem.”

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Army’s huge culture shift: No shame in mental health help

Will Veterans Lose if Mitt Romney Wins?

 

VCS Executive Director quoted extensively

_____________________________________

What would a Mitt Romney Administration really mean for America’s veterans?

On Tuesday, Romney named former President George H.W. Bush and former Sen. Bob Dole as honorary co-chairmen of his Veterans and Military Families for Romney. But perhaps more significantly, the group’s national co-chairs, who will advise Romney on veteran policy if he is elected, include James Nicholson, former secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) under President George W. Bush.

Some veterans advocates say Romney’s decision to tap Nicholson, who abruptly resigned from the VA in 2007 amid controversy, as well as Anthony Principi and James Peake, who also presided over the VA during George W. Bush’s two terms in the White House, could signal that Romney will embrace some of the policies of the Bush years, which were widely considered to be tough times for veterans.

“A Romney presidency would be a disaster for veterans, as evidenced by whom he’s chosen to advise him,” says Patrick Bellon, executive director of Veterans for Common Sense, a veterans’ advocacy organization. “I think these choices should give all Americans pause. How can voters support a candidate who is showing so clearly that he learned nothing from Bush’s failures? It would be a mistake to trust people like Nicholson who failed veterans in such epic fashion.”

Nicholson, a wealthy attorney, decorated Vietnam veteran and former chair of the Republican National Committee who served as VA Secretary from 2005 to 2007, said in a statement on Romney’s website, “Veterans have served our nation proudly for decades. They deserve not only our respect and admiration, but top quality care for the rest of their lives. Mitt Romney will work tirelessly to ensure that veterans and military families are always cared for. That is why I am proud to join him in his campaign to keep America strong and prosperous.”

But the “top quality care” to which Nicholson refers was reportedly hard to come by when he ran things. A cover story in Newsweek in March 2007 reported that the VA under Nicholson was an overloaded bureaucracy that was unprepared for the onslaught of troops returning from war and was failing America’s wounded.

USA Today reported that same year that the VA’s clinics and hospitals suffered from hundreds of problems, including worn carpet, damaged floor tiles, leaking roofs and cockroach infestations.

“Gov. Romney will bring a new approach to the White House and look for every way possible to help our veterans,” responds a campaign spokesman. “He cares deeply about veterans and takes this issue very seriously.”

While at the VA, Nicholson, who could not be reached for comment for this story,reportedly defended a budget measure that sought major cuts in staffing for VA health care, cut funding for nursing home care, and blocked four legislative measures aimed at streamlining the backlog of veterans benefit claims.

Nicholson, a devout Catholic who also served as President Bush’s ambassador to the Vatican, was also criticized after an electronic file stolen from the home of a VA analyst in May 2006 revealed Social Security numbers and other personal information for more than 2 million U.S. military personnel.

Nicholson told Congress that the VA would offer free ID theft protection for one year to those affected by the theft, but once the data was recovered, the VA reportedly rescinded the offer.

When Nicholson resigned, Paul Rieckhoff, executive director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, the largest group representing veterans of America’s two post-9/11 wars, said, “The VA under Secretary Nicholson has been woefully unprepared for the influx of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, consistently underestimating the number of new veterans who would seek care, and failing to spend the money Congress allotted to treat mental-health issues.”

In an interview with The Daily Beast, Ryan Williams, a spokesperson for Romney’s campaign, defended Romney’s choices for his new veterans panel. “We’re happy to have the support of people like Jim Nicholson, Anthony Principi and others,” Williams says. “But at the end of the day, Gov. Romney will bring a new approach to the White House and look for every way possible to help our veterans. He cares deeply about veterans and takes this issue very seriously.”

Williams emphasized that the biggest problem facing veterans is the economy, “which is not turning around. Young veterans are returning facing staggering numbers: 30 percent of male veterans face unemployment. Gov. Romney has laid out plans to reform the tax code and cut regulations to create jobs that will help these veterans get back to work.”

Virtually everyone interviewed for this story agreed that in addition to unemployment, there are still major problems facing veterans, namely the increasing backlog of VA benefits claims. Bellon insists that the Obama Administration is working hard to fix these problems, which, he says, “were caused by the very people who now sit on Romney’s veterans advisory board. Changing a monumental, unresponsive bureaucracy doesn’t happen quickly, but we’re on the right track.”

Williams strongly disagrees. “The benefits backlog has doubled under Obama to nearly a million,” he says. “Gov. Romney realizes we have an unacceptable bureaucracy at the VA, and as president he would reduce that backlog by eliminating bureaucracy and creating a reliable electronic claims process. He will modernize the VA.”

According to Bellon, electronic records have been in the works for years. “To take credit for this would be dishonest,” he says.

As for the backlog, Bellon says it is increasing because so many more troops are coming home. “Demand has increased,” he says. “I’m not saying there isn’t a lot more work to be done by President Obama at the VA, but President Bush totally neglected it, and Nicholson treated the VA like a private insurance company. He created a culture of denying veteran claims. I fear we’ll see this again if Romney is elected.”

In terms of addressing veteran unemployment, Obama has evidently sharpened his focus in recent months. In February, he unveiled a new $5 billion plan that the administration says will provide thousands of jobs to unemployed veterans. The president’s efforts seem to be paying off. While jobs overall remained stagnant in June, the unemployment rate for post-9/11 veterans dropped from 12.7 percent in May to 9.5 percent in June, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics report released this week.

The Veterans Jobs Corps initiative will reportedly give $166 million in grant money to communities that show a preference for hiring post-9/11 veterans for new law enforcement positions, and $320 million in grant money to fire departments who pledge to hire and train new veterans.

Obama, who’s called on Congress to act on the initiative, also recently announced a new “We Can’t Wait” initiative that will help thousands of service members with manufacturing and other high-demand skills receive civilian credentials and licenses.

Also, in just the last two months, more than 27,000 unemployed veterans have submitted applications for a new VA-funded skills-based program that pays veterans for up to a year of education toward an associate degree or a non-college-degree or certificate.

In addition to unemployment, another massive problem plaguing veterans are mental health issues such as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and suicide. The VA, which even veterans advocates who support Obama acknowledge is still a long way from adequately addressing the mental health crisis among veterans, just announced the hiring of 1,600 new mental health care workers.

These workers include psychiatrists, psychologists, mental health nurses and marriage and family therapists. An additional 300 people will be added to support this new clinical staff.

Michelle Obama and Jill Biden have also stepped up efforts in recent months to improve mental health care services for veterans as part of their Joining Forces program for military families, which was launched last year. In April, the first and second ladies announced an agreement with 150 nursing organizations and 500 nursing schools to educate nurses on combat-related injuries such as PTSD and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI).

In January, Mrs. Obama announced a similar pledge by 135 medical schools to educate future physicians and increase research for PTSD and TBI.

So how would Romney address the mental health situation among veterans? While Romney spokesman Williams says that Romney believes veterans “deserve a VA that is functional and that is actually meeting their needs,” he didn’t supply many specifics.

No one really knows yet just how Romney will change the VA. Last fall at a Veterans Day meeting with veterans in South Carolina, he said he thought that privatizing the VA might be a good idea.

At the meeting, Romney reportedly said, “Sometimes you wonder, would there be some way to introduce some private sector competition, somebody else that could come in and say, you know, each soldier gets X-thousand dollars attributed to them and then they can choose whether they want to go on the government system or the private system and then it follows them, like what happens with schools in Florida where they have a voucher that follows them. Who knows?”

Veterans organizations—even the typically conservative Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW)—lashed out at Romney’s privatization idea. VFW spokesman Jerry Newberry told Talking Points Memo at the time, “The VFW doesn’t support privatization of veterans health care. This is an issue that seems to come around every election cycle.”

Romney later backed off and insisted he did not actually have a proposal for privatizing the VA.

The latest polls show Romney with a substantial lead over Obama among veterans. In a May 29 Gallup Poll, veterans, who make up about 13 percent of the adult population and consist mostly of older men, supported Romney over Obama for president by 58 percent to 34 percent.

These veterans could be responding to Romney’s familiar Republican mantra that the Democratic incumbent is weakening the military (a claim Obama has rejected).

Williams tells The Daily Beast, “The president has proposed devastating defense cuts, but Gov. Romney disagrees with those cuts. Gov. Romney doesn’t believe we should reduce our military, he believes we need to strengthen it, with more ships, and by increasing the number of active duty troops by 100,000 over the next several years.”

Despite the poll numbers, some veterans don’t think Romney would be good for veterans. Howard Foard, 34, a first lieutenant in the Army who left active duty in 2002 with a 100 percent disability rating, only to be downgraded to zero percent by the VA, says, “Romney’s tough talk about the military, his saber rattling, reminds me of Bush, who never considered the impact wars and multiple deployments have on the troops. The VA was totally unprepared to take care of me when I came home.”

Foard adds, “Obama is more careful about putting troops in harm’s way, and he cares more about military families than Bush did; there are far more programs available now. I wonder if Romney even considers the unthinkable impact it will have on the overburdened VA if he adds thousands of troops and puts us into more wars.”

But Corey Samson, 28, a former Marine private first class who was deployed twice to Afghanistan and now lives near Los Angeles and is looking for a job, thinks Romney is the better choice.

“The president says he cares about military families, but he wants to drastically cut military spending. That doesn’t make any sense,” says Samson. “Romney, who’ll fix the economy, would be a much better president for all Americans, especially veterans. I think he truly cares about the military.”

In a statement this week announcing his veterans group, Romney said, “As president, I will be an advocate for veterans and their families and will always fight to ensure that they get the opportunities and care they have earned.”

Like The Daily Beast on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for updates all day long.

Jamie Reno, an award-winning correspondent for Newsweek for 17 years, has also written for The New York Times, Sports Illustrated, Rolling Stone, People,Men’s Journal, ESPN, Los Angeles Times, TV Guide, MSNBC, Newsmax,Entertainment Weekly, and USA Today. Reno, who’s won more than 85 writing awards, was the lead reporter on a Newsweek series on the 9/11 terrorist attacks that earned him and his colleagues the National Magazine Award for General Excellence, the highest award in magazine journalism. Reno, who’s also an acclaimed author, singer-songwriter, and 15-year cancer survivor, lives in San Diego with his wife, Gabriela, and their daughter, Mandy.

Posted in VA Claims Updates, VCS In The News, Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on Will Veterans Lose if Mitt Romney Wins?

Marine Corps to launch new holistic fitness program

By AMANDA WILCOX

The Daily News, Jacksonville, N.C. Published: July 5, 2012

The Marine Corps is implementing a new holistic fitness program designed to help warriors focus on whole body fitness. For regular individuals who want to test out their fitness program, you can follow myfitnesshub.com. Make sure you have your protective accessories during workouts.

The program, called the Marine Corps Fitness Improvement Tool (MCFIT) was spearheaded by Assistant Commandant of the Marine Corps Gen. Joseph Dunford. It is designed to help Marines recover from the stresses of combat in a healthy, holistic fashion, without the use of hormone injections.

The main reason stems from the fact that most health and fitness terms are used inconsistently and often refer to different concepts or notions. Subsequent to the 1996 report from the Surgeon General (Physical Activity and Health; a report of the Surgeon General), there was a move to try and address the alarming rise in obesity levels among the general public. Studies and initiatives required standardization among clinicians, health practitioners and fitness trainers to grapple with the task at hand. Click here if you want to get more about the trophy fitness professional personal trainers.

A healthy diet with guide of Shahnaz Indian Cuisine is the very basic thing that contributes to a healthy life. This includes considerations of proper eating habits, proper selection of nutritious foods, getting appropriate amount of food nutrients, maintaining and improving health and prevention of several diseases. Other individuals got the wrong thought of giving high regards to strict nutrition philosophies to stay in shape and neglect the food they really want to eat. Conversely, you don’t have to divest yourself from eating your favorite food to stay fit. Having a good and healthy diet is just a matter of getting enough amounts of nutrients that our body needs. These nutrients are commonly obtained from a wide variety of foods which only needs balance to achieve the right human nutrition.

Dietary fiber plays a very important role in human health. It stimulates our digestive system, controls contents in our gastrointestinal tract and modifies how nutrients are being absorbed within our body. Postbiotics is interconnected with dietr fiber that you can check. It could be obtained from several plants.

Psyllium Husk is a fiber extracted from the seed of a Psyllium plant. Basically, it is taken as a food supplements in a form of Sunergetic Products Psyllium Husk Capsules. It gives a lot of health benefits. As it contains carbohydrate, it effectively relieves constipation. Moreover, it is excellent in controlling weight and improves functions within our gastrointestinal tract. It is very effective for bowel problems. It gets along with water, absorbs toxins and makes bowels even and soft. It forms massive substance that stimulates peristalsis and relieves constipation. Psyllium Husk also promotes colon health. It has anti-inflammatory properties that makes well for cystitis and alleviate pains from hemorrhoids. Though its main application is to put off constipation and maintain a good colon health, Psyllium Husks are also good in maintaining blood pressure levels and healthy cholesterol levels. In some ways, it is also used in treating yeast infections and acne. Some indications include heart diseases, diabetes, urinary tract infections, dysentery, inflamed membranes, antherosclerosis and etc.

Psyllium Husks should be taken appropriately. You should not take it directly or swallow it alone as it may result to some digestive problems. It should be taken together with water, fruit juice, milk, soups or any healthy form of liquid that makes it soluble. It must be taken with enough liquid to avoid dehydration. If you take it before or after meals, it may obstruct digestion. Therefore, it should only be taken in between meals and only one capsule should be taken daily. When you are taking prescription drugs, Psyllium Husks must be taken after an hour so that it may not affect the effectiveness of the drug.

Psyllium seed husk is commonly known as Psyllium and others call it Ispaghula or Isabgol. These seeds are found on Plantago Ovata or Plantago Psyllium which is a native plant frequently found in India, Pakistan and some areas in the Middle East countries. It has been recognized as an excellent source of dietary fiber that makes it a choice of several fiber supplement producers that associates well to a healthy lifestyle. It provides the fiber we need for a healthy diet.

“From the command side this program will be extremely helpful in assessing overall unit fitness,” said Navy Lt. Lindsey Stoil, a medical planner with Combat Logistics Regiment 27, 2nd Marine Logistics Group. “Things might look good on the outside, but there might be an underlying problem across the unit.”

ADVERTISEMENT

The program includes two phases, the first of which is a paper-based survey designed to assess a Marine’s health, and the second is a web-based assessment. Phase 2 is still under development and is scheduled to launch at the end of this year. Participation in the program is completely anonymous.

The goal of the program is to analyze a Marine’s total fitness, to include mind, body, spirit and social fitness. Ideally, Marines should aim for fitness in all four aspects, according to the MCFIT Commander’s Guide.

“The Marines in particular are trained to compartmentalize their emotions, which is completely necessary when they’re in a place of combat … but when they come home they need to adjust back to their normal life,” said Rachel Saboski, a psychiatrist at Naval Hospital Camp Lejeune.

The director of Mental Health at NHCL, psychiatrist Cmdr. Sawson Ghurani, said the program will help show Marines ways to feel better about themselves and about their health.

“By focusing on a healthy way of life, the Marines will be able to re-adjust better (after combat),” she said.

After Marines fill out Phase 1 of the assessment, responses will be collected by the commander who will use the data to categorize and color-code the fitness levels of each Marine and the unit overall. The color codes are green, yellow, orange and red with green representing the highest levels of total body fitness and red indicating a need for immediate help. MCFIT is designed solely to test a Marine’s mental, spiritual, physical and social healthnot to assess a commander’s leadership or performance.

“This survey will be another tool for a commander to see how well their unit is doing and if they need to address issues which might affect a large percentage of the unit,” Stoil said.

For more information on the program, visit bhin.usmc-mccs.org.

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , | Comments Off on Marine Corps to launch new holistic fitness program

Iraq, Afghanistan War Veterans Struggle With Combat Trauma

By David Wood

From the HuffingtonPost

 

HAVERHILLL, Mass. — Before her life fell apart, before suicide began to sound like sweet release, Natasha Young was a tough and spirited and proud Marine.

Straight off the hardscrabble streets of Lawrence, Mass., a ruined mill town ravaged by poverty and drugs, she loved the Marine Corps’ discipline, the hard work, the camaraderie, the honor of service to her country.

She went to war twice, the last time five years ago in western Iraq with a close-knit team of Marines who disabled IEDs, roadside bombs. It was nonstop work, dangerous, highly stressful and exhausting. Six of the Marines were killed in bomb blasts, each death a staggering gut-punch to the others. After they returned home the commander took his own life. Staff Sgt. Young broke down, too, spent physically, emotionally and mentally. Eventually, she was diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and, last October, was medically discharged from the Corps.

Having been a strong warrior, now she simply couldn’t function. “I was ashamed of myself,” she says in a whisper at her home in Haverhill, Mass.

Young is one of a generation of 2.4 million Americans who fought in Iraq or Afghanistan, many of whom are coming back profoundly changed by what combat veteran and author Karl Marlantes described as the “soul-battering experience” of war.

The shock of war, of course, is hardly new. But now the cascade of combat veterans from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars is forcing mental health practitioners to a new recognition: the effects of combat trauma extend far beyond the traditional and narrow clinical diagnoses of PTSD and traumatic brain injury (TBI). The current crop of veterans is at risk of a “downward spiral” that leads to depression, substance abuse and sometimes suicide, as Eric Shinseki, secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs, said in a recent speech.

Almost a quarter million Iraq or Afghanistan vets have been diagnosed with mental health injuries from combat service. Many more are not diagnosed, yet go on with their lives while experiencing short-term memory loss, headaches, insomnia, anger or numbness — conditions that can range from merely annoying to highly disruptive on the job and within the family. For some of them, hard work can temporarily mask these symptoms. But only temporarily.

“You can work through it [with therapy], or become a workaholic,” says Tom Berger, who still suffers nightmares from his time as a medical corpsman with the 3rd Marine Division during bloody Vietnam fighting in the late 1960s. “Left untreated, you reinforce the trauma, so it makes sense to keep that loaded .357 [revolver] next to you on the car seat,” adds Berger, who is a senior adviser on veterans health at Vietnam Veterans of America.

Those who go to war, it turns out, carry the traumatic after-effects longer and deeper than previously recognized — perhaps for a lifetime.

At the Army medical center at Fort Gordon, Ga., Dr. John L. Rigg, director of the Traumatic Brain Injury Program, is treating active-duty soldiers complaining of headaches, mood swings, anger, insomnia, and memory loss as many as five years after they experienced concussive blasts in combat. They’re still functioning, but they’re struggling. “They’re not getting better,” says Rigg. “In fact, they may be getting worse.”

With treatment, says Rigg, some can learn to manage.

“No one gets out unscathed,” says Col. Katherine Platoni, a senior Army combat trauma psychologist with two battlefield tours in Iraq and Afghanistan who has seen and felt the deepening effects of combat trauma.

Large-scale U.S. military action is finished in Iraq and scheduled to wind down in Afghanistan. In those places, as President Obama has noted, “the tide of war is receding.”

But at home, the tide of war is not receding for millions of veterans returning to a long, difficult and often dangerous transition back into civilian life, struggling to reconcile their searing combat experiences with a civilian society that largely disconnected itself from military service and now, according to polls, tired of war.

Like others leaving the ranks, Natasha Young’s struggles with her psychological and emotional storms were compounded by the sudden decompression from the intensity of combat service. No one back home in the civilian world understood what she had gone through, or what she was going through.

“Out here,” she says, “you realize how different you are from people who haven’t served.”

STRUGGLING WITH PTSD

Other veterans are encountering the same void that envelops Young.

How to explain to a civilian the fierce pride a warrior feels in having mustered the stamina, the professional skill and the courage to complete a second or third combat tour, in a war that seems to have no point and no end, where the enemy is frustratingly elusive but the blood and death are real and immediate?

How to explain why a combat veteran feels anxious in crowds, startles at the pop of a toy balloon, wrenches awake with night terrors?

How to express the rage and sorrow of survivor’s guilt — that a medical corpsman couldn’t save a wounded buddy, that a squad leader didn’t bring all his guys home safe?

How to share the agony of a Marine platoon leader who is severely injured and medevaced after an IED blast kills two of his men and abruptly removes him from the men he had vowed to protect?

Outside the Marine Corps, severed from others with the same experiences, Young unravelled. She was 31, a single mom, and sick. Her Harley gathered dust in the garage. She stopped writing poetry. “I couldn’t cope,” she says. “I felt so scared.

“I think my son kept me from clicking off ‘safe’ more times than I’d care to admit,” she confides, referring to the temptation to turn off her weapon’s safety mechanism and end her life.

Such combat trauma wounds are largely invisible — but the numbers are arresting. Roughly 2,413,000 young Americans have served in the Iraq or Afghanistan war, so far.

More than 600,000 of them may be struggling with PTSD and major depression. The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has formally diagnosed 207,161 Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans with PTSD. But experts believe many more are affected because of shortcomings and defects in screening and diagnosis.

recent study by the RAND Corp., a Pentagon-funded think tank, suggested how many undiagnosed veterans there might be. It estimated that some 14 percent — or about 337,820 — of post-9/11 veterans suffer from the headaches, sleeplessness, irritability, depression, rage and other symptoms of PTSD, whether or not they are formally diagnosed. An additional 14 percent suffer from major depression. The VA’sNational Center for PTSD confirmed the numbers as accurate.

In addition, some 40,000 veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan have been diagnosed with traumatic brain injury they received in combat. The condition involves a bruising of the brain caused by concussion or other head injury, according to the Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center. Many more veterans may be suffering without diagnosis or treatment, experts say. (Overall, the Defense Department has diagnosed 233,000 individual cases of TBI since 2000, the vast majority caused by training injuries or vehicle accidents, not combat.)

Head wounds were considered fatal until the 20th century and the arrival of better and faster medical care. As with PTSD, the diagnosis and treatment of TBI have improved significantly during the past decade.

Still, in a chilling reminder of war’s long-term effects, the VA reported that last year it treated 476,515 veterans for PTSD — most of them veterans of the Vietnam war almost 50 years ago. Tragically, the Vietnam generation of vets didn’t have access to the kinds of services now available through the VA.

While the Greek historian Herodotus mentioned the trauma of war 25 centuries ago in his account of the battle of Marathon, it wasn’t until 1980 that American psychiatry formally recognized and named the condition, describing PTSD as an injury caused by an outside stimulus rather than by an internal human weakness. More effective forms of treatment followed slowly.

Today, with rising veterans’ demands for mental health services, the VA is making a determined and costly effort to reach those who live in remote areas or who may be unaware of VA services. It has launched 70 mobile outreach vans to cruise the streets of cities and towns across the country. It’s also expanding its secure teleconferencing facilities and expects this year to provide 200,000 mental health consultations with veterans who lack easy access to its outpatient clinics or outreach vans. Since 2009, the VA’s mental health budget has increased 39 percent to almost $6 billion this year, and its mental health staff has grown by 41 percent.

Diagnosed or not, all veterans are eligible for mental health services. But the VA cannot require them to come in, as VA officials are quick to point out.

The pernicious effects of combat trauma are not confined to mental health issues, though. New research findings indicate that veterans who have PTSD are more vulnerable in their later years to diabetes, cardiovascular disease. One study of VA patients found that those with PTSD were twice as likely to develop dementia as veterans without PTSD.

“It’s a lifetime sentence,” said Rick Weidman, a combat medic with the Americal Division in Vietnam who still struggles with post-traumatic stress.

Some cut that lifetime short. More than 2,500 active-duty military personnel have committed suicide since 2001, according to Defense Department reports. So far this year, active-duty troops have taken their own lives at a rate of almost one per day.

Many more make the attempt. In its most recent analysis, the Pentagon reported that in 2010, 863 active-duty service men and women had attempted suicide; most, 60 percent, were under the age of 25. National Guard soldiers and reservists have an equally high suicide rate. Last year, 118 Army soldiers killed themselves while not on active duty, a number almost certainly under-reported.

Among veterans — those who have left military service entirely — the lure of suicide appears even stronger. The national veterans suicide crisis line (800-273-8255), operated by the VA, gets an average of 17,000 calls a day. The VA believes the suicide rate for all U.S. veterans is more than 500 per month.

Most of those who committed suicide had struggled alone and never got help. The VA’s Shinseki said recently that perhaps two out of three veterans who commit suicide were not enrolled in the VA’s health care system. Nor had they ever been diagnosed. “The majority,” the Pentagon reported, “did not have a known history of a behavioral health disorder” or treatment.

“We have underestimated the human costs of war, not just for the victims but for the warriors as well,” said Dr. David Spiegel, a neuropsychiatrist and director of Stanford University’s Center on Stress and Health. “War is an unnatural experience. It doesn’t surprise me that a substantial number of people are impaired.”

“I BELIEVE IN YOU”

The striking fact about today’s epidemic of war trauma is that it affects a self-selected population of Americans who have already demonstrated courage, grit and resolve by volunteering to serve in wartime.

Take Natasha Young. She grew up in a bleak neighborhood with a wandering, crack-addict father and a single mom on welfare who struggled with drugs. Natasha was a good student but got into her fair share of trouble.

When she was 17, she met a Marine Corps recruiter and her life changed.

“He represented everything I wanted for my life,” she says. “He said we expect you to work hard, show up on time, be a good human being, service to others, pay your bills, don’t drink and drive, don’t do drugs — all the things I would want for my child.”

What had been a dead-end future for her suddenly opened up with a steady paycheck, honorable work, perhaps even college.

“It was the first time in my young adult life someone said, ‘I think you can do this, I believe in you,’” she recalls. “For the first time in my life, someone said to me, ‘I see more in you than you ever saw in yourself.’ That really resonated with me because I wanted to make somebody proud, I wanted to be better than the opportunities I had at the time. I wanted to be great … I knew I was capable of it.”

She excelled in boot camp, won promotion after promotion. She was deployed to Okinawa when a call came from home: her mother was unable to care for her 6-year-old son and was giving Natasha custody. Natasha was 19 years old. She scraped together money for a plane ticket and flew home on emergency leave to complete the paperwork.

Just before she was scheduled to fly back to Okinawa, her father was beaten to death in a bar fight. Natasha was next of kin. The Marines extended her emergency leave so she could arrange the funeral. The Marine Corps League and the American Legion chipped in to replace her non-refundable plane ticket back to Okinawa. Family and friends looked after her brother until her overseas tour was over.

By the time she was assigned to the 2nd Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Company, at Camp LeJeune, N.C., the Marines had become her real family. In the year before she flew to Iraq, she got to know the EOD guys, their wives, their children. Facing the terrible risks of unstable explosives, they trained exhaustively and partied hard and grew emotionally close and tight — no secrets.

They arrived in western Iraq in 2007 to find a bloody terror of fighting, with an escalation of booby-trapped IEDs detonated by cellphones and garage-door openers. The blasts were erupting beneath soldiers and Marines, causing horrific injuries and death. That year, 764 Americans were killed in Iraq, mostly by IEDs.

Frantic calls to the bomb disposal teams, spread out over al-Anbar Province, came in every hour of every day of every week. Natasha was on the road making sure each team had the gear and supplies it needed. In a single day, April 27, the team lost two Marines, Sgt. Bill Callahan, 28, who left a wife and a 3-week-old son, and Sgt. Peter Woodall, 25, who was married with a 3-year-old son.

Amid the carnage, Natasha went numb. It was her job to gather the dead Marines’ personal effects, make sure letters got written home to the families and that nothing got sent home with blood on it “because of the biohazard.”

What was that like for her? Tears welled in her eyes as she felt again the shock and grief that she had stuffed deep inside five years ago. “At the time … I just … functioned,” she says. “I’d make a pot of coffee because I knew we’d be up for two or three days.”

Such enormous stress is the heart of war trauma — including PTSD and TBI – that causes physiological or neuro-chemical changes in the functioning of the brain, according to Rigg, the TBI director at Fort Gordon.

Many of the symptoms of post-traumatic stress — nervousness, insomnia, anxiety in crowds, jumping at a sudden loud noise — are primitive, involuntary instincts necessary to survival in a combat zone.

“I don’t use the term ‘post-traumatic stress disorder’ because I don’t consider it a disorder,” Rigg says. “I mean, you’re in a situation where people are trying to kill you!”

When the instinctive, unthinking part of the brain, the amygdala, senses danger, it reacts instantly with a flood of stress hormones that raise blood pressure and heart rate, dilate the eyes to sharpen sight, and squirt adrenalin into the bloodstream — the hyper-arousal that prepares the body for “fight or flight.”

That’s appropriate in combat. But back home, the brain may misinterpret danger signals: all strangers are not the enemy; trash along the Interstate probably doesn’t contain an IED; an explosion may be harmless fireworks, a bad dream may be just that.

Doesn’t matter: the amygdala still pumps out a flood of stress hormones that make the veteran uncomfortable and jittery, wide awake at night, anxious and prone to flashes of anger. This is a neuro-chemical mechanism, Rigg explains. And it’s involuntary: “People don’t decide — ‘Hey! I want to be stressed today.’ No — it’s the way we are wired.”

Traumatic brain injuries usually involve a concussion that bruises the frontal lobes of the brain and can cause confusion, temporary amnesia, and a range of other symptoms similar to PTSD — insomnia, irritability, anxiety or depression, headaches, memory loss — in large part because many TBI patients also have PTSD.

“Basically, the brain’s not working right,” says Dr. James Kelly, a neurologist and director of the Defense Department’s National Intrepid Center of Excellence for traumatic brain injury and psychological health.

“You can help people compensate and get better in some ways,” Kelly says. But in severe cases, in which sophisticated computerized tomography (CT) scans or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may detect damage to the frontal lobe or to tissue deep inside the brain, patients don’t recover fully, “typically not back to where they were before, ever, with that kind of injury.”

How common are such deep-brain injuries? “We don’t know,” Kelly says. Not every combat soldier receives a CT or MRI scan. “And the problem is if you don’t scan everybody, you don’t have a good way of knowing that.”

Recent experience has shown that even CT scans in military emergency rooms in Afghanistan may not detect microscopic damage to brain tissue, he said.

Detected or not, both forms of combat trauma can cause sexual dysfunction, adding to emotional distress and marital tensions, veterans say.

“The levels of shame and embarrassment are pretty stark for us,” said Ben Tupper, an Army major who came back from Afghanistan with “a raging case” of PTSD — and erectile dysfunction. “I eventually mustered up the courage to deal with it,” he said, and wrote about it for the online magazine Slate.

ANGRY WITH GOD

Current treatment for PTSD and TBI consists in part of teaching patients to manage stress.

At Fort Gordon, Rigg puts soldiers with mild traumatic brain injury through an intensive, three-week “functional recovery” program focused on coping strategies that include deep breathing, yoga, massage, meditation and mind-body relaxation exercises using bio-feedback. Deep breathing actually slows the cascade of stress hormones that trigger the “fight or flight” reflex. Massage eases tense muscles that cause headaches.

Rigg doesn’t prescribe drugs, which are often used elsewhere to dull the reactions of PTSD patients. “Medication doesn’t fix this stuff,” Rigg says. “It only relieves some of the symptoms.”

For patients with TBI, treatment is similar: “Our job is to help people find coping strategies, tolerate their limitations,” says Kelly. “The idea of getting better, in the sense of recovering back to who you were, is not commonly a reality for them.”

For a lot of veterans, he adds, “simply pointing out how they survived this long, with all the things that have happened to them — they have internal resilience they weren’t even aware of.” In many cases, he says, veterans “go on to really succeed in ways they hadn’t anticipated.”

Talking individually or in groups with a trained therapist can help a patient recall traumatic events with less emotion. Advanced techniques, such as cognitive behavioral therapy and exposure therapy, can help patients understand and cope with the sounds, smells, sights or memories that trigger stress reactions.

Through exposure to virtual reality programs, troops relive combat, a technique that has been shown to significantly desensitize them to the trauma they experienced and to minimize the hyper-arousal caused by the release of stress hormones.

But many therapists find such cookie-cutter approaches unworkable, says Platoni, the Army combat trauma psychologist and co-editor of a forthcoming book, “War Trauma and Its Wake.” Her book explores the broader impact of combat experience, which she believes includes issues of self-identity, alienation, disillusionment with the U.S. government and its leaders, and damage to religious and spiritual beliefs, or “moral injury.”

That term is a hot button for many Vietnam vets.

“A lot of guys come back angry with God — how could the God we understood and were raised to believe in let this war stuff go on?” says Weidman, who served with the Americal Division. “We witnessed and participated in so much horror, that was in such violence with the value structure in which we were raised. It’s a miracle people come back as together as they are. The whole concept of spiritual or moral pain goes beyond traditional psychotherapy.”

What worked for Natasha Young was talk, work, medication and a dog. She found a sympathetic counselor at the VA outpatient clinic in Lowell, Mass. “They believed in me,” says Young, “and they remind me that I’m human, that it’s okay to have bad days and good days, that there are things I can’t control.”

Through a veterans service organization, The Mission Continues, she was awarded a 26-week fellowship that pays her to work with veterans at the Northeast Outreach Center, which offers food, shelter, counseling and other services to New England veterans. “I like being around other veterans; a lot of them don’t have anybody else, and I get that,” she says.

Another non-profit organization, Patriot Rovers, provided her with a service dog, a yellow lab named Josh, who helps remind her to take her medication and guards her own personal space in crowds. She takes medication to help her sleep.

As she began to heal, Natasha enrolled in full-time coursework at Northern Essex Community College for an associates degree in counseling and social work; a four-year college is next.

“My dream job is to work for the VA, with women suffering from military sexual trauma,” she said.

In September 2011, she married Robert Alicea, a young man she’s known since childhood and who has remained a close friend through all her trials.

“He’s persistent, I’ll say that for him,” she says. And Natasha’s mom has fought off her addictions and accepted her son back into her legal custody.

The trauma still lurks, however, and Young, like so many veterans, keeps on the path with a frenetic work schedule: her full-time classes, her work at the veterans center, and caring for her son, who is now six. “I don’t know how to relax any more,” she admits.

Yet Young has no regrets about the trajectory of her life.

“Knowing my mistakes … I wouldn’t change anything,” she says. “My deployments, my failures, I wouldn’t change any of it.”

When a visitor remarks that her future looks pretty good, she pauses to reflect.

“I’m hoping. I have had a couple of bad patches but I’m back on track. Failure is not an option for me.”

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Iraq, Afghanistan War Veterans Struggle With Combat Trauma

Soldiers seeking routine medical care now get PTSD screening as well

 

By SETH ROBSON

Stars and Stripes Published: July 5, 2012

The Army is asking soldiers who go to the doctor for ailments such as back pain or colds to answer questions about depression and post-traumatic stress disorder in a bid to identify those who may need help.

About 63,000 soldiers out of 2 million screened during routine doctor appointments since 2007 have tested positive for previously unrecognized and untreated mental health problems, according to Col. Charles Engel, a Walter Reed National Military Medical Center doctor.

“The patients may be there for anything from a broken arm to an upper respiratory problem,” Engel told experts gathered at a recent meeting of the American Psychiatric Association. “Very seldom do people go to their primary care doctor just for stress or depression problems.”

Studies show that the average person with PTSD waits 12 years before being treated. As recently as 2004, only about a quarter of soldiers who were suffering from PTSD were getting specialized care, he said.

“We have a lot of people out there getting no care,” he said.

The program was started in 2007 by the Army Surgeon General, initially at 40 targeted primary care clinics. It now is offered at 88 out of 96 such clinics worldwide and the rest are to join the program this month, Engel said. Each month 100,000 soldiers are screened, he said.

Soldiers who go to the clinics for other health issues are asked to fill out a form with questions designed to identify people suffering from depression or PTSD, he said.

“Guys see these questions over and over again and, eventually, they decide to talk to somebody,” Engel said. “In most of these cases, the patients wouldn’t have said anything in a normal clinic encounter.”

In addition to the screening, the Army is providing mental health training for medical personnel and follow-up treatment for soldiers who test positive for depression and PTSD, Engel said.

Once patients are identified, and if they agree that their issues need to be addressed, doctors work with them to develop a treatment plan. Patients who don’t want to go to a mental health professional can be assigned a nurse trained to follow up with them and help manage their treatment, he said.

The nurses schedule appointments and track symptoms so that the most acute cases receive immediate attention. Patients’ care is reviewed after two months and their treatment is adjusted if there is no significant improvement, Engel said.

“The more times we follow up, the better we get,” he said. “By four to five follow-ups with the nurse, there is a clinically significant effect in their symptom severity.”

The program is seeing positive results, regardless of the type of treatment that patients opt for, which can range from medication to organized talk therapy to simple phone conversations with their nurse, he said.

“In the five years that we have been doing this, there have been only two suicides of patients who followed the program, and they were people who were not in follow-up at the time,” he said.

Fort Bliss, home to the 1st Armored Division, which has seen extensive service in Iraq and Afghanistan in recent years, has screened thousands of soldiers at its two clinics since 2008, according to Dr. Melissa Molina, a family practitioner at the Texas base.

“They are screened when they go for primary care visits for things like shoulder or neck pain,” she said. “We take away the stigma of soldiers having to go and see a psychologist or a behavioral health person.”

The first few times a soldier fills out the mental health questionnaire, they might not indicate that they have any problems, Molina said.

“They might lie. But if they are getting this paper all the time when they are coming to their doctor, they might eventually say: ‘I have issues,’ ” she said.

In one memorable case, Molina treated a lieutenant colonel for high blood pressure for a year before he opened up about mental health issues.

“He’d fill out that paper and it would always be negative, but one day my nurse came and told me he had answered positive to every question,” she said. “I talked to him and he said he had finally decided to admit that he was depressed.”

The officer, who had seen soldiers lose limbs in roadside bombings in Iraq, said he hid his problems because he was worried people would think he was crazy, Molina said.

“He went inside of himself,” she said. “Outwardly, he was this quiet, strong man, but inside, he was boiling over.”

Six weeks on antidepressants and regular calls to the nurse made a big difference, Molina said.

“He came to see me and he was a totally different person,” she said. “He said: ‘I feel good again. I’ve been playing ball with my kid. My family is so much happier because I feel better and don’t just want to go to bed when I get home. I’m not angry and yelling at them.’ ”

At Fort Bliss, nurses call their mental health patients every week or two, Molina said.

“It’s not as formal as having a relationship with a doctor,” she said. “This is a female nurse who will almost act like their mother, and a lot of times they need that.”

In one instance, a soldier called his nurse and told her he was walking down train tracks and thinking about suicide. The nurse called the Military Police, who took the soldier to a hospital, Molina said.

Only about 20 percent to 25 percent of soldiers suffering from PTSD will achieve complete remission of symptoms while they are in the program, although many will see less severe symptoms following treatment, Engel said.

However, studies show it is best to start treating the problems early, and that is something that the screening program will help facilitate, he said.

Early treatment for soldiers suffering from mental health problems reduces the cost of dealing with related symptoms such as back pain, accidents and emergency room visits from hazardous drinking, he said.

Data from the program also shows that the more patients interact with the nurses, the more improvement they show in their PTSD and depression symptoms, Engel said.

The Army expects to expand availability of the program to include all family members in the military health system over the next year, he said.

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Soldiers seeking routine medical care now get PTSD screening as well

70 years gone, Montford Point Marines get their due

70 years gone, Montford Marines get their dueOnly about 120 of the nearly 20,000 African Americans who trained at the segregated Montford Point in Camp Lejeune are still alive. They will be honored with the Congressional Gold medal. | Shawn Rocco/Raleigh News and Observer/MCT

MORE ON THIS STORY

By Franco Ordonez | McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — Soon after finishing boot camp at Montford Point in 1949, John Phoenix joined other new Marines on a visit to nearby Jacksonville, N.C. Dressed in their newly pressed khaki uniforms, they proudly strolled off the train. They’d taken only a few steps when they were confronted by a large sign.

The roughly 10- by 8-foot, black and white billboard with big block letters clarified any misconceptions the new Marines might have. The color of their uniforms didn’t supersede the color of their skin.

“No blacks on this side of town,” it read.

The reception wasn’t much warmer at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, N.C., where the 19-year-old high school track star and other black recruits were placed in a segregated camp. They were trained harder and worked longer hours than their white counterparts. Phoenix never once met a black officer.

“We went through hell and brimstone at Montford Point,” he said. “It was no playpen there.”

Phoenix, who’s now 83, served 22 years in the Marines, including combat in Korea and Vietnam, before retiring and settling in Burlington, N.C. He never really got over those feelings of not being fully a part of the Corps. Until now.

Seventy years after African-Americans broke the military’s final color barrier, Phoenix and other surviving members of the Montford Point Marines will gather Wednesday on Capitol Hill to receive the Congressional Gold Medal, the nation’s highest civilian honor.

More than 400 Montford Marines, including more than 30 from North Carolina, are expected to attend the ceremony, where they’ll each receive a replica of the medal. They’ll be good company: George Washington, Mother Teresa, the Wright brothers and Thomas Edison also earned the honor.

From 1942 to 1949, nearly 20,000 African-Americans went to Montford Point, a blacks-only boot camp at Camp Lejeune. Most soon were shipped off to war, with the majority heading to the Pacific theater during World War II. They served as members of the 51st and 52nd defense battalions in support roles for white troops. Others, like Phoenix, also served in Korea and Vietnam.

 

These trailblazers finally will receive the recognition they deserve, said Sen. Kay Hagan, the Greensboro, N.C., Democrat who led a bipartisan effort to grant the Montford Point Marines the honor.

“When this took place, these Marines were not allowed on the base at Camp Lejeune without a white escort, and yet they served side by side in our military,” she said.

Sen. Richard Burr, a Winston Salem, N.C., Republican, said the Montford Point Marines led the way for future generations of African-Americans who’d risen to the highest levels of our military’s leadership.

“Their bravery, service and sacrifice should serve as an example of patriotism and loyalty despite the significant challenges they faced,” said Burr, who introduced a resolution to establish “Montford Point Marines Day” and was a co-sponsor of Hagan’s bill.

 

The Marines were the last branch of the military to allow blacks to join when President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued an executive order in 1941. It was met with strong opposition.

“If it were a question of having a Marine Corps of 5,000 whites or 250,000 Negroes, I would rather have the whites,” the then-Marine Corps commandant, Maj. Gen. Thomas Holcomb, said at the time.

 

Most of the Montford Point Marines have since died. Only about 500 of them are known to be alive, including 39 from North Carolina. But they’re dying rapidly. Three North Carolina members have died since Congress announced the award last November. Their family members will make the trip on their behalf.

John Thompson, 86, volunteered to join the Marines in 1943 after graduating from George Washington Carver High School in Kannapolis, N.C., near Charlotte. A fan of history, he’d read stories about the Marines being “an elite group of fighting men.”

“I thought I could do that,” he said. “And they had beautiful uniforms.”

While black recruits were barred from training with whites at Camp Lejeune, Thompson said the hardest part was the discrimination from civilians for whom he’d later go to war and protect.

“If I wanted to see a movie, I couldn’t go to the movie theater. If I wanted to eat at a certain restaurant, I couldn’t eat there. If I rode on the bus, I had to go all the way to the back,” he said. “Even if I had my uniform on.”

When Clero Florence was drafted in 1943, the officer at the Fort Bragg processing center asked him what arm of the service the Burlington teenager wanted to join. Florence, who had an older brother in the Army, said the Army. The officer looked at Florence’s paperwork. He stamped “Marines.”

“I figured he didn’t hear what I said, so I said it again,” Florence recalled. “He just waved me on and said, ‘Next.’ That’s how I got into the Marine Corps.”

Florence, 88, said the only time he didn’t feel discrimination was on the battlefield. He spent 18 months in Guam during World War II, where he helped transport ammunition to white troops and repair damaged tanks and planes. All he wanted to do was survive.

“The whole time I figured I wasn’t going to come back anyway,” he said. “You had bombs falling all around you. You didn’t know what was going to happen.”

The military made them stronger, more disciplined men, Florence and Thompson said. They survived the rigors of boot camp, war and segregation because of the military training and looking to one another for support.

“We had nobody else to relate to,” Phoenix said. “That was the big problem. We had no black officers. We had no black sergeant majors, no black sergeants, that we could relate to. And that made things difficult.”

The Marines are paying for every surviving member and a guest to come to Washington for the congressional ceremony at the U.S. Capitol. Buses have been reserved from almost every tour company around the city. Dozens of wheelchairs have been ordered, and most every handicap-accessible hotel room in the city is booked.

 

Gen. James Amos, the commandant of the Marine Corps, said it was time that the Montford Point Marines were properly written into the 236-year history of the Corps. He’s ordered new recruits and senior officers to learn about their first African-American members.

 

“Every Marine, from private to general, will know the history of those men who crossed the threshold to fight not only the enemy they were soon to know overseas, but the enemy of racism and segregation in their own country,” Amos said last summer at a gathering of Montford Point Marines.

 

For years, Phoenix had been frustrated that the Marines had failed to confront the racism of their past.

Like the Army’s Buffalo Soldiers or the Army Air Corps’ Tuskegee Airmen, he said, it took far too long to recognize and honor the sacrifices of African-Americans who paved the way for future generations. But now that the Montford Point Marines are being recognized, he said he finally felt as if he could put his own frustrations and insecurities about not being accepted behind him as well.

“So when this come about we were finally able to get some relief,” he said. “The truth will set you free.”

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged | Comments Off on 70 years gone, Montford Point Marines get their due

Mental health group urges increased assistance for military, families


By Farah Mohamed | McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — A new report by the National Alliance on Mental Illness said the government needs to fill the gaps in mental health coverage for America’s soldiers and veterans, who – along with their families – face high rates of mental illness.

“Parity for Patriots,” released Thursday, focuses on holes in the mental health care system, as well as on military suicide, the stigma associated with such ailments and on the delay in implementing mental health parity legislation.

“Once the war is over, people tend to forget veterans’ needs,” said Bob Carolla, director of media relations at the alliance. “We want to make sure ongoing mental health needs aren’t forgotten.”

The National Alliance on Mental Illness, which advocates for services, treatment and research on mental health disorders, said that such disorders “affect one in five active-duty service members and are the most common cause of hospitalization.”

The rate also applies to military spouses and children, groups that the alliance said are often overlooked in mental health care treatment.

More than half of active-duty military members are married and 44 percent have children, the report said. About 76,000 service members are single parents, and in about 41,000 cases, both parents are in the military.

Of 776,000 children with active-duty parents, one-third with at least one parent deployed have faced psychological challenges, including depression and behavioral disorders, according to a study by the Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine cited in the report. A study by the New England Journal of Medicine, also cited in the report, found that this rate intensifies with longer or multiple deployments.

Further, a separate study by the New England Journal of Medicine of more than 250,000 military spouses showed that more than a third of them were diagnosed with at least one mental disorder, the report said.

For service members and veterans, the report said the “hidden wounds” of war were equally disturbing: An active-duty service member commits suicide every 36 hours, the report said, and a veteran commits suicide every 80 minutes.

The report said mental health care services are available to soldiers and veterans from the Department of Defense both overseas and stateside, as well as from the Department of Veterans Affairs and the civilian health system. But navigating between the different systems is synonymous with navigating through “rocky terrain,” the report said.

Legislation from 2008 mandates that employer-sponsored group health insurance plans treat mental illness and substance abuse disorders the same way they treat medical disorders. But the report said successful implementation of the so-called “parity” law has been slow.

With service members, veterans and families fearful of retributions for requesting mental health care, timely treatment and equitable insurance coverage is vital, the report says.

The alliance urged the Pentagon and the VA to “eradicate barriers to mental health care and increase service capacity through use of technology and local care,” and it suggested steps necessary to do so.

 

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , | Comments Off on Mental health group urges increased assistance for military, families

A matter of degrees: VA finally opens doors to licensed counselors

By LEO SHANE III Stars and Stripes Published: June 27, 2012 Image_28191493.jpg

WASHINGTON — John Emmons works as a mental health specialist for the Army in Afghanistan, but he can’t get a job doing the same work for the Department of Veterans Affairs back home.

“It’s frustrating, because I’ve been doing this work for 20 years,” the licensed professional counselor and Army contractor said. “I’ve been doing it for almost a year in Afghanistan, but the VA has been closed to me.”

Until last month, the department had no official standards or policies for hiring licensed professional counselors, a sizable subset of America’s mental health industry.

VA officials in recent years have lamented the nationwide shortage in mental health specialists, and blamed that in part for their own struggles to fully staff veterans care offices. Even as wait times for appointments have steadily climbed from weeks to months, licensed professional counselors remained willing but largely unable to help.

The VA has almost 1,500 vacancies nationwide for mental health specialists. Emmons has extensive experience handling cases of combat-related depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, and though he has a master’s degree in psychology, VA hiring officials wouldn’t even consider him for most positions without an advanced degree in social work.

Both social workers and licensed professional counselors have similar schooling, credentials and treatment techniques, but of the two, only social workers are authorized to administer psychological tests and diagnose illness.

Art Terrazas, spokesman for the American Counseling Association, said LPCs often have more private practice experience, while social workers typically do more clinical work in hospitals.

In 2006, Congress approved the use of LPCs and licensed marriage therapists as mental health specialists within the VA’s health care programs. It took nearly six years for the VA to produce an 11-page addendum to the department’s qualification standards handbook — covering things like credentials, pay, advancement standards and licensing procedures — along with establishing a professional standards board to handle employment and promotion reviews.

Critics grumbled that the process plodded unnecessarily, noting that draft standards have been under review since September 2010. Dr. Bradley Karlin, the VA’s national mental health director for psychotherapy and psychogeriatics, insisted that the process was as speedy as possible while still being thorough. He pointed out that approving chiropractors for practice in VA programs took just as long.

“Now that we have that done, we can start to facilitate the hiring of these folks,” he said. “In terms of our core services, it shouldn’t be about who has what discipline. It should be about getting the right highly skilled provider to the veterans.”

The VA employs nearly 21,000 mental health staffers across the country. The majority are nurses, psychiatrists and psychologists. About 9,000 of them have degrees in social work and handle a range of counseling and therapy services, as well as patient assessments and care logistics.

Dr. Mary Schohn, director of the VA’s office of mental health operations, said the goal is to “have on board a full range of disciplines, to ensure veterans’ health and well-being.”

Terrazas called that a positive development, but he noted that, even with new policies in place, department hiring officials haven’t specified precisely how many open jobs will be available to LPCs.

This week, USAJobs.gov, the federal government’s official online jobs site, had more than 650 VA mental health positions open to applicants with social work experience and degrees. Only seven listings called for licensed professional counselors.

“Most of that hiring is still done at the local level,” Terrazas said. “If they only want to hire social workers, then that’s all they’ll hire.”

Schohn said officials don’t want to specify exactly who or how many specialists of a specific background should be hired, because it could hamstring local hospital and clinic efforts to get the best personnel in place.

VA officials have said they’ll target LPCs as they try to fill 1,600 new mental health positions that will be created in the department over the next year, as well as the 1,500 existing openings.

Earlier this month, they announced an “aggressive national recruitment program to implement the hiring process quickly” and to target specialists of all backgrounds, especially those in rural or underserved areas.

“The VA could use these [licensed professional counselors] in a number of roles, but instead they’ve just been dragging their feet,” Terrazas said. “We have people who are willing to step up to the plate and help.”

Myrna Solganick, an LPC, said she has been looking for the last decade to find an opening to work with veterans.

She currently treats substance abusers through a private practice near Madison, Wis., and sexual trauma victims through a local crisis center. She worked as a specialist for VA re-adjustment programs, helping provide new veterans with, among other things, information on employment services and basic benefits.

“I have 35 years’ experience dealing with mental health care, but when I go back [to the VA] the only jobs open to me are those same re-adjustment services,” she said. “So I gave up. Why they’re recruiting from only one pool of applicants is beyond me.”

Terrazas said that’s a story he has heard over and over again.

“I don’t think it’s malicious,” he said. “I think they just don’t understand the profession.”

He said many management jobs open to social workers might not be suited for those without clinical supervisory experience. Counseling jobs, group therapy work, care planning positions and a host of other openings should be.

Emmons said he’ll return to the U.S. later this year, and plans to look again for openings to continue his work with combat veterans. He hopes the changes promised by VA leadership will happen before then.

“If they do, that would be a great step forward,” he said. “But we’ll have to see if they actually open up the hiring or not.”

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , , | Comments Off on A matter of degrees: VA finally opens doors to licensed counselors