Veterans Health & Care

Request Your DD Form 214 Online

Depleted Uranium Issues - Go to the D-U page

2007 'MUST READS'

Iraq Veterans Against The War: Guide For Veterans Resources

Veterans For America Guide

Veterans Administration Facilities: Locator & Directory

The complete inspection report on the VA - check your local facilities.

From the DAV - Legislative ACTION Center

http://www.dav.org/

EpluribusMedia: Latest Updates On PTSD

Stars & Stripes: Propranolo, New Hope For PTSD?

VETERAN'S NEWS - CURRENT TOPICS

Shelters take many vets of Iraq, Afghan wars while also housing those from earlier era

Press Release: http://www1.va.gov/opa/pressrel/pressrelease.cfm?id=1288

The Other War: Iraq Vets Bear Witness... The Nation

NEW UPDATES:

Homeless Veterans Programs: Bed Capacity, Service and Communication Gaps Challenge the Grant and Per Diem Program,

by Daniel Bertoni, director, education, workforce, and income security issues, before the Subcommittee on Health, House Committee on Veterans' Affairs. GAO-07-1265T, September 27.

http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-07-1265T

Highlights - http://www.gao.gov/highlights/d071265thigh.pdf


Harvard study - Long-Term Costs of Veterans Medical Care and Disability Benefits: Interview with Linda Blimes.

To see the video click on the link below and at the site click (underneath the title) either "Watch 128 Stream" or Watch 256 Stream." The video lasts 13 minutes. If you cannot see the video, the transcript is listed.Pentagon's promised fixes at Army medical center haven't materialized, congressional report finds.


Report Says Fixes Slow To Come at Walter Reed

By Steve Vogel
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, September 27, 2007; A01

More than half a year after disclosures of systemic problems at Walter Reed Army Medical Center and other military hospitals, the Pentagon's promised fixes are threatened by staff shortages and uncertainty about how best to improve long-term care for wounded troops, according to a congressional report issued yesterday. Army units developed to shepherd recovering soldiers lack enough nurses and social workers, and proposals to streamline the military's disability evaluation system and to provide "recovery coordinators" are behind schedule, according to the Government Accountability Office report. Members of a congressional oversight committee, discussing the report at a hearing yesterday, said the effort to reform the medical bureaucracy has itself become mired in bureaucracy.

"After so many promises but so little progress, we need to see more concrete results," said Rep. Thomas M. Davis III (Va.), the ranking Republican on the panel. His staff hears "appalling stories" every week from soldiers dealing with the disability process, he said, adding that "they're trapped in a system they don't understand and that doesn't understand them." "The pace of change is frustratingly slow," said Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.), chairman of the oversight committee. "Still the horror stories continue." Members of the House oversight subcommittee on national security laid the blame on the Defense Department, the Army and the Department of Veterans Affairs for what Rep. John F. Tierney (D-Mass.) termed an "utter lack of urgency."

The preliminary GAO report said the Army has taken steps to streamline its disability evaluation process, which determines whether soldiers are fit for duty and, if not, what disability payments they should receive. Nonetheless, the report noted, "Many challenges remain, and critical questions remain unanswered." For example, the Army has established "warrior transition units" at 32 installations around the country, with recovering soldiers assigned to a team of physicians, case managers and squad leaders. Whereas the unit at Walter Reed is almost fully staffed, more than half the units had less than 50 percent of workers in place by mid-September, the GAO found. Maj. Gen. Eric B. Schoomaker, the Walter Reed commander, told the subcommittee that the units have 65 percent of their manpower and should be fully staffed by January. In July, a presidential commission led by former senator Robert J. Dole and former health and human services secretary Donna E. Shalala recommended that "recovery coordinators" be assigned to shepherd each seriously wounded service member through medical care. A high-level oversight committee established by the Pentagon and the VA agreed to begin implementing the recommendation by mid-October. But the oversight committee has not determined how many recovery coordinators will be needed or how to decide which injured soldiers need them, the GAO found.

Moreover, the Dole-Shalala commission recommended that the recovery coordinators come from outside the Defense Department or the VA, suggesting instead the Public Health Service.The oversight committee has balked at the suggestion in favor of recovery coordinators supplied by the VA. But the GAO questioned the beleaguered VA's ability to handle the job, noting that it "may face significant human capital challenges in identifying and training individuals for these positions."A slew of commissions and task forces have agreed that at the heart of the bureaucratic maze is a system in which the military services and the VA evaluate injured service members. The often-conflicting evaluations leave many recovering soldiers in limbo for months or even years. A pilot program to establish asingle joint system was slated to begin Aug. 1. But the date slipped as the Pentagon and the VA reviewed options.

Michael L. Dominguez, a deputy undersecretary of defense, testified that a pilot program was approved this week but probably would not begin evaluating wounded soldiers until January. "We're seven months into this process, and we're just now getting off the ground," Tierney said. "Why has it taken so long? Dominguez responded that the Pentagon and the VA needed to exercise "due diligence" before plunging forward with fundamental changes. "It does take some time to develop those details," he said.

Members of the panel sharply criticized Walter Reed for the hospital's handling of the case of Staff Sgt. John Daniel Shannon, who testified before the panel in March about his more than two years spent navigating the disability system. The Washington Post reported this month that a paperwork glitch further delayed his retirement. Schoomaker said the problem has been resolved, but panel members described the episode as highly troubling, given the public prominence of Shannon's case.



Military.com | Law & Health Week | August 31, 2007
Controversy Swirls Around PTSD in Vietnam Vets

Controversy Builds About the Prevalence of PTSD in
Vietnam Veterans

Newswise - Controversy continues to swirl concerning
the findings of a landmark study that estimated the
percentage of Vietnam veterans suffering from
posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Traumatic stress experts have renewed a clash over the
results of the 1988 National Vietnam Veterans
Readjustment Study (NVVRS), which originally estimated
that 30.9 percent of veterans endure the effects of
PTSD during their lifetime, and that 15.2 percent
still suffered from PTSD more then ten years after the
war. The actual prevalence of PTSD in veterans is
vigorously debated among the field's leading
researchers, with long-lasting public policy
implications for veterans of all U.S. wars, including
the current conflict in Iraq.

New opinions by several parties involved are reported
in the August issue of the Journal of Traumatic
Stress, published by the International Society of
Traumatic Stress Studies (ISTSS).

PTSD News and Resources

Bruce P. Dohrenwend, PhD, of Columbia University, et
al. conducted a recent reanalysis of the NVVRS, which
found an 18.7 percent prevalence rate of lifetime
war-related PTSD and 9.2 percent of current PTSD at
the time of the study. The authors say that the
finding of lower rates is the result only of
differences in the definition of the disorder and does
not represent a significantly lower total number of
soldiers impacted.

The key finding of their study, according to
Dohrenwend et al., was that the NVVRS confirms a
"strong dose/response relationship between severity of
exposure to war-zone stressors and PTSD." The more
soldiers are exposed to the horrors of war, the more
likely they are to suffer from posttraumatic stress.

Richard J. McNally, PhD, of Harvard University, argues
that the original NVVRS and the more recent Dohrenwend
reanalysis overestimated the prevalence of PTSD in
veterans by using faulty criteria for diagnosing the
disorder. According to McNally, 5.4 percent of Vietnam
veterans showed clinically significant functional
impairment at the time of the NVVRS study.

"Eliminating cases who exhibit no functional
impairment is an important way to address a chief
concern of the NVVRS's critics," said McNally. "Not
all emotional changes wrought by serving in a war zone
are symptoms of disease or disorder."

A number of experts disagree with McNally's
interpretation of the data, including the original
authors of the NVVRS study. William E. Schlenger, PhD,
of Duke University Medical Center, et al., claim
McNally misrepresents the findings of Dohrenwend et
al.'s analysis.

"[McNally's] erroneous statements and
misrepresentations seem clearly to be not random,"
said Schlenger et al. "Instead, they appear to have
been crafted to support a specific bias that has
significant policy implications, i.e. that PTSD
prevalence among Vietnam veterans is a minor problem,
and the real problem is veterans faking combat
exposure and PTSD symptoms to qualify for
service-connected disability."

According to Dean Kilpatrick, PhD, of the National
Crime Victims Research and Treatment Center Medical
University, "In my view, the reexamination by
Dohrenwend and colleagues is a major contribution to
this public policy debate.It confirms that most
veterans of the Vietnam War were resilient, but that
an important subset continued to have PTSD over a
decade after the war was over."

Despite disagreements on numbers and methods, the
experts concur that the government has a
responsibility to adequately treat veterans with PTSD.
"Regardless of [frequency], the central issue is
whether resources are sufficient to meet current
demand," said McNally. "The key question is, 'If a
veteran seeks mental health care, will that be able to
obtain prompt access to state-of-the-art,
evidence-based [care]?' If not, then we must increase
resources."

The International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies
is an international multidisciplinary, professional
membership organization that promotes advancement and
exchange of knowledge about severe stress and trauma.

Copyright 2007 Military.com. All opinions expressed in
this article are the author's and do not necessarily
reflect those of Military.com.


Dangers of Depleted Uranium: Do U.S. troops know about the dangers of Depleted Uranium? CNN's Greg Hunter reports.

[Part 1 - February 5] and [Part 2 - February 6] (not available at cnn.com)


Over the past six years, some 22,500 soldiers have been discharged on grounds of “personality disorder” – a condition that can be alleged to have existed prior to their tour of duty – thus absolving the Pentagon of its obligation to provide their medical care and pay their benefits.

In the Army's separations manual it's called Regulation 635-200, Chapter 5-13: "Separation Because of Personality Disorder." It's an alluring choice for a cash-strapped military because enacting it is quick and cheap. The Department of Veterans Affairs doesn't have to provide medical care to soldiers dismissed with personality disorder. That's because under Chapter 5-13, personality disorder is a pre-existing condition. The VA is only required to treat wounds sustained during service.

Soldiers discharged under 5-13 can't collect disability pay either. To receive those benefits, a soldier must be evaluated by a medical board, which must confirm that he is wounded and that his wounds stem from combat. The process takes several months, in contrast with a 5-13 discharge, which can be wrapped up in a few days.

If a soldier dismissed under 5-13 hasn't served out his contract, he has to give back a slice of his re-enlistment bonus as well. That amount is often larger than the soldier's final paycheck. As a result, on the day of their discharge, many injured vets learn that they owe the Army several thousand dollars.


How Specialist Town Lost His Benefits
by JOSHUA KORS

[from the April 9, 2007 issue: The Nation]

Jon Town has spent the last few years fighting two battles, one against his body, the other against the US Army. Both began in October 2004 in Ramadi, Iraq. He was standing in the doorway of his battalion's headquarters when a 107-millimeter rocket struck two feet above his head. The impact punched a piano-sized hole in the concrete facade, sparked a huge fireball and tossed the 25-year-old Army specialist to the floor, where he lay blacked out among the rubble.

"The next thing I remember is waking up on the ground." Men from his unit had gathered around his body and were screaming his name. "They started shaking me. But I was numb all over," he says. "And it's weird because... because for a few minutes you feel like you're not really there. I could see them, but I couldn't hear them. I couldn't hear anything. I started shaking because I thought I was dead."

Eventually the rocket shrapnel was removed from Town's neck and his ears stopped leaking blood. But his hearing never really recovered, and in many ways, neither has his life. A soldier honored twelve times during his seven years in uniform, Town has spent the last three struggling with deafness, memory failure and depression. By September 2006 he and the Army agreed he was no longer combat-ready.

But instead of sending Town to a medical board and discharging him because of his injuries, doctors at Fort Carson, Colorado, did something strange: They claimed Town's wounds were actually caused by a "personality disorder." Town was then booted from the Army and told that under a personality disorder discharge, he would never receive disability or medical benefits.

Town is not alone. A six-month investigation has uncovered multiple cases in which soldiers wounded in Iraq are suspiciously diagnosed as having a personality disorder, then prevented from collecting benefits. The conditions of their discharge have infuriated many in the military community, including the injured soldiers and their families, veterans' rights groups, even military officials required to process these dismissals.

They say the military is purposely misdiagnosing soldiers like Town and that it's doing so for one reason: to cheat them out of a lifetime of disability and medical benefits, thereby saving billions in expenses.


The Fine Print

In the Army's separations manual it's called Regulation 635-200, Chapter 5-13: "Separation Because of Personality Disorder." It's an alluring choice for a cash-strapped military because enacting it is quick and cheap. The Department of Veterans Affairs doesn't have to provide medical care to soldiers dismissed with personality disorder. That's because under Chapter 5-13, personality disorder is a pre-existing condition. The VA is only required to treat wounds sustained during service.

Soldiers discharged under 5-13 can't collect disability pay either. To receive those benefits, a soldier must be evaluated by a medical board, which must confirm that he is wounded and that his wounds stem from combat. The process takes several months, in contrast with a 5-13 discharge, which can be wrapped up in a few days.

If a soldier dismissed under 5-13 hasn't served out his contract, he has to give back a slice of his re-enlistment bonus as well. That amount is often larger than the soldier's final paycheck. As a result, on the day of their discharge, many injured vets learn that they owe the Army several thousand dollars.

One military official says doctors at his base are doing more than withholding this information from wounded soldiers; they're actually telling them the opposite: that if they go along with a 5-13, they'll get to keep their bonus and receive disability and medical benefits. The official, who demanded anonymity, handles discharge papers at a prominent Army facility. He says the soldiers he works with know they don't have a personality disorder. "But the doctors are telling them, this will get you out quicker, and the VA will take care of you. To stay out of Iraq, a soldier will take that in a heartbeat. What they don't realize is, those things are lies. The soldiers, they don't read the fine print," he says. "They don't know to ask for a med board. They're taking the word of the doctors. Then they sit down with me and find out what a 5-13 really means--they're shocked."

Russell Terry, founder of the Iraq War Veterans Organization (IWVO), says he's watched this scenario play itself out many times. For more than a year, his veterans' rights group has been receiving calls from distraught soldiers discharged under Chapter 5-13. Most, he says, say their military doctors pushed the personality disorder diagnosis, strained to prove that their problems existed before their service in Iraq and refused to acknowledge evidence of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), traumatic brain injury and physical traumas, which would allow them to collect disability and medical benefits.

"These soldiers are coming home from Iraq with all kinds of problems," Terry says. "They go to the VA for treatment, and they're turned away. They're told, 'No, you have a pre-existing condition, something from childhood.'" That leap in logic boils Terry's blood. "Everybody receives a psychological screening when they join the military. What I want to know is, if all these soldiers really did have a severe pre-existing condition, how did they get into the military in the first place?"

Terry says that trying to reverse a 5-13 discharge is a frustrating process. A soldier has to claw through a thicket of paperwork, appeals panels and backstage political dealing, and even with the guidance of an experienced advocate, few are successful. "The 5-13," he says, "it's like a scarlet letter you can't get taken off."

In the last six years the Army has diagnosed and discharged more than 5,600 soldiers because of personality disorder, according to the Defense Department. And the numbers keep rising: 805 cases in 2001, 980 cases in 2003, 1,086 from January to November 2006. "It's getting worse and worse every day," says the official who handles discharge papers. "At my office the numbers started out normal. Now it's up to three or four soldiers each day. It's like, suddenly everybody has a personality disorder."

The reason is simple, he says. "They're saving a buck. And they're saving the VA money too. It's all about money."

Exactly how much money is difficult to calculate. Defense Department records show that across the entire armed forces, more than 22,500 soldiers have been dismissed due to personality disorder in the last six years. How much those soldiers would have collected in disability pay would have been determined by a medical board, which evaluates just how disabled a veteran is. A completely disabled soldier receives about $44,000 a year. In a recent study on the cost of veterans' benefits for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, Harvard professor Linda Bilmes estimates an average disability payout of $8,890 per year and a future life expectancy of forty years for soldiers returning from service.

Using those figures, by discharging soldiers under Chapter 5-13, the military could be saving upwards of $8 billion in disability pay. Add to that savings the cost of medical care over the soldiers' lifetimes. Bilmes estimates that each year the VA spends an average of $5,000 in medical care per veteran. Applying those numbers, by discharging 22,500 soldiers because of personality disorder, the military saves $4.5 billion in medical care over their lifetimes.

Town says Fort Carson psychologist Mark Wexler assured him that he would receive disability benefits, VA medical care and that he'd get to keep his bonus--good news he discussed with Christian Fields and Brandon Murray, two soldiers in his unit at Fort Carson. "We talked about it many times," Murray says. "Jon said the doctor there promised him benefits, and he was happy about it. Who wouldn't be?" Town shared that excitement with his wife, Kristy, shortly after his appointment with Wexler. "He said that Wexler had explained to him that he'd get to keep his benefits," Kristy says, "that the doctor had looked into it, and it was all coming with the chapter he was getting."

In fact, Town would not get disability pay or receive long-term VA medical care. And he would have to give back the bulk of his $15,000 bonus. Returning that money meant Town would leave Fort Carson less than empty-handed: He now owed the Army more than $3,000. "We had this on our heads the whole way, driving home to Ohio," says Town. Wexler made him promises, he says, about what would happen if he went along with the diagnosis. "The final day, we find out, none of it was true. It was a total shock. I felt like I'd been betrayed by the Army."

Wexler denies discussing benefits with Town. In a statement, the psychologist writes, "I have never discussed benefits with my patients as that is not my area of expertise. The only thing I said to Spc. Town was that the Chapter 5-13 is an honorable discharge.... I assure you, after over 15 years in my position, both as active duty and now civilian, I don't presume to know all the details about benefits and therefore do not discuss them with my patients."

Wexler's boss, Col. Steven Knorr, chief of the Department of Behavioral Health at Evans Army Hospital, declined to speak about Town's case. When asked if doctors at Fort Carson were assuring patients set for a 5-13 discharge that they'll receive disability benefits and keep their bonuses, Knorr said, "I don't believe they're doing that."


Not the Man He Used to Be

Interviews with soldiers diagnosed with personality disorder suggest that the military is using the psychological condition as a catch-all diagnosis, encompassing symptoms as diverse as deafness, headaches and schizophrenic delusions. That flies in the face of the Army's own regulations.

According to those regulations, to be classified a personality disorder, a soldier's symptoms had to exist before he joined the military. And they have to match the "personality disorder" described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, the national standard for psychiatric diagnosis. Town's case provides a clear window into how these personality disorder diagnoses are being used because even a cursory examination of his case casts grave doubt as to whether he fits either criterion.

Town's wife, for one, laughs in disbelief at the idea that her husband was suffering from hearing loss before he headed to Iraq. But since returning, she says, he can't watch TV unless the volume is full-blast, can't use the phone unless its volume is set to high. Medical papers from Fort Carson list Town as having no health problems before serving in Iraq; after, a Fort Carson audiologist documents "functional (non-organic) hearing loss." Town says his right ear, his "good" ear, has lost 50 percent of its hearing; his left is still essentially useless.

He is more disturbed by how his memory has eroded. Since the rocket blast, he has struggled to retain new information. "Like, I'll be driving places, and then I totally forget where I'm going," he says. "Numbers, names, dates--unless I knew them before, I pretty much don't remember." When Town returned to his desk job at Fort Carson, he found himself straining to recall the Army's regulations. "People were like, 'What are you, dumb?' And I'm like, 'No, I'm probably smarter than you. I just can't remember stuff,'" he says, his melancholy suddenly replaced by anger. "They don't understand--I got hit by a rocket."

Those bursts of rage mark the biggest change, says Kristy Town. She says the man she married four years ago was "a real goofball. He'd do funny voices and faces--a great Jim Carrey imitation. When the kids would get a boo-boo, he'd fall on the ground and pretend he got a boo-boo too." Now, she says, "his emotions are all over the place. He'll get so angry at things, and it's not toward anybody. It's toward himself. He blames himself for everything." He has a hard time sleeping and doesn't spend as much time as he used to with the kids. "They get rowdy when they play, and he just has to be alone. It's almost like his nerves can't handle it."

Kristy begins to cry, pauses, before forcing herself to continue. She's been watching him when he's alone, she says. "He kind of... zones out, almost like he's in a daze."

In May 2006 Town tried to electrocute himself, dropping his wife's hair dryer into the bathtub. The dryer short-circuited before it could electrify the water. Fort Carson officials put Town in an off-post hospital that specializes in suicidal depression. Town had been promoted to corporal after returning from Iraq; he was stripped of that rank and reduced back to specialist. "When he came back, I tried to be the same," Kristy says. "He just can't. He's definitely not the man he used to be."

Town says his dreams have changed too. They keep taking him back to Ramadi, to the death of a good friend who'd been too near an explosion, taken too much shrapnel to the face. In his dreams Town returns there night after night to soak up the blood.

He stops his description for a rare moment of levity. "Sleep didn't use to be like that," he says. "I used to sleep just fine."

How the Army determined then that Town's behavioral problems existed before his military service is unclear. Wexler, the Fort Carson psychologist who made the diagnosis, didn't interview any of Town's family or friends. It's unclear whether he even questioned Town's fellow soldiers in 2-17 Field Artillery, men like Fields, Murray and Michael Forbus, who could have testified to his stability and award-winning performance before the October 2004 rocket attack. As Forbus puts it, before the attack Town was "one of the best in our unit"; after, "the son of a gun was deaf in one ear. He seemed lost and disoriented. It just took the life out of him."

Town finds his diagnosis especially strange because the Diagnostic Manual appears to preclude cases like his. It says that a pattern of erratic behavior cannot be labeled a "personality disorder" if it's from a head injury. The specialist asserts that his hearing loss, headaches and anger all began with the rocket attack that knocked him unconscious.

Wexler did not reply to repeated requests seeking comment on Town's diagnosis. But Col. Knorr of Fort Carson's Evans hospital says he's confident his doctors are properly diagnosing personality disorder. The colonel says there is a simple explanation as to why in so many cases the lifelong condition of personality disorder isn't apparent until after serving in Iraq. Traumatic experiences, Knorr says, can trigger a condition that has lain dormant for years. "They may have done fine in high school and before, but it comes out during the stress of service."

"I've never heard of that occurring," says Keith Armstrong, a clinical professor with the Department of Psychiatry at the University of California, San Francisco. Armstrong has been counseling traumatized veterans for more than twenty years at the San Francisco VA; most recently he is the co-author of Courage After Fire: Coping Strategies for Troops Returning From Iraq and Afghanistan and Their Families. "Personality disorder is a diagnosis I'm very cautious about," he says. "My question would be, has PTSD been ruled out? It seems to me that if it walks like a duck, looks like a duck, let's see if it's a duck before other factors are implicated."

Knorr admits that in most cases, before making a diagnosis, his doctors only interview the soldier. But he adds that interviewing family members, untrained to recognize signs of personality disorder, would be of limited value. "The soldier's perception and their parents' perception is that they were fine. But maybe they didn't or weren't able to see that wasn't the case."

Armstrong takes a very different approach. He says family is a "crucial part" of the diagnosis and treatment of soldiers returning from war. The professor sees parents and wives as so important, he encourages his soldiers to invite their families into the counseling sessions. "They bring in particular information that can be helpful," he says. "By not taking advantage of their knowledge and support, I think we're doing soldiers a disservice."

Knorr would not discuss the specifics of Town's case. He did note, however, that his department treats thousands of soldiers each year and says within that population, there are bound to be a small fraction of misdiagnosed cases and dissatisfied soldiers. He adds that the soldiers he's seen diagnosed and discharged with personality disorder are "usually quite pleased."

The Army holds soldiers' medical records and contact information strictly confidential. But The Nation was able to locate a half-dozen soldiers from bases across the country who were diagnosed with personality disorder. All of them rejected that diagnosis. Most said military doctors tried to force the diagnosis upon them and turned a blind eye to symptoms of PTSD and physical injury.

One such veteran, Richard Dykstra, went to the hospital at Fort Stewart, Georgia, complaining of flashbacks, anger and stomach pains. The doctor there diagnosed personality disorder. Dykstra thinks the symptoms actually stem from PTSD and a bilateral hernia he suffered in Iraq. "When I told her my symptoms, she said, 'Oh, it looks like you've been reading up on PTSD.' Then she basically said I was making it all up," he says.

In her report on Dykstra, Col. Ana Parodi, head of Behavioral Health at Fort Stewart's Winn Army Hospital, writes that the soldier gives a clear description of PTSD symptoms but lays them out with such detail, it's "as if he had memorized the criteria." She concludes that Dykstra has personality disorder, not PTSD, though her report also notes that Dykstra has had "no previous psychiatric history" and that she confirmed the validity of his symptoms with the soldier's wife.

Parodi is currently on leave and could not be reached for comment. Speaking for Fort Stewart, Public Affairs Officer Lieut. Col. Randy Martin says that the Army's diagnosis procedures "have been developed over time, and they are accepted as being fair." Martin said he could not address Dykstra's case specifically because his files have been moved to a storage facility in St. Louis.

William Wooldridge had a similar fight with the Army. The specialist was hauling missiles and tank ammunition outside Baghdad when, he says, a man standing at the side of the road grabbed hold of a young girl and pushed her in front of his truck. "The little girl," Wooldridge says, his voice suddenly quiet, "she looked like one of my daughters."

When he returned to Fort Polk, Louisiana, Wooldridge told his doctor that he was now hearing voices and seeing visions, hallucinations of a mangled girl who would ask him why he had killed her. His doctor told him he had personality disorder. "When I heard that, I flew off the handle because I said, 'Hey, that ain't me. Before I went over there, I was a happy-go-lucky kind of guy.'" Wooldridge says his psychologist, Capt. Patrick Brady of Baynes-Jones Army Community Hospital, saw him for thirty minutes before making his diagnosis. Soon after, Wooldridge was discharged from Fort Polk under Chapter 5-13.

He began to fight that discharge immediately, without success. Then in March 2005, eighteen months after Wooldridge's dismissal, his psychiatrist at the Memphis VA filed papers rejecting Brady's diagnosis and asserting that Wooldridge suffered from PTSD so severe, it made him "totally disabled." Weeks later the Army Discharge Review Board voided Wooldridge's 5-13 dismissal, but the eighteen months he'd spent lingering without benefits had already taken its toll.

"They put me out on the street to rot, and if I had left things like they were, there would have been no way I could have survived. I would have had to take myself out or had someone do it for me," he says. The way they use personality disorder to diagnose and discharge, he says, "it's like a mental rape. That's the only way I can describe it."

Captain Brady has since left Fort Polk and is now on staff at Fort Wainwright, Alaska; recently he deployed to Iraq and was unavailable for comment. In a statement, Maj. Byron Strother, chief of the Department of Behavioral Health at Baynes-Jones hospital, writes that allegations that soldiers at Fort Polk are being misdiagnosed "are not true." Strother says diagnoses at his hospital are made "only after careful consideration of all relevant clinical observation, direct examination [and] appropriate testing."

If there are dissatisfied soldiers, says Knorr, the Fort Carson official, "I'll bet not a single one of them has been diagnosed with conditions that are clear-cut and makes them medically unfit, like schizophrenia."

Linda Mosier disputes that. When her son Chris left for Iraq in 2004, he was a "normal kid," she says, who'd call her long-­distance and joke about the strange food and expensive taxis overseas. When he returned home for Christmas 2005, "he wouldn't sit down for a meal with us. He just kept walking around. I took him to the department store for slacks, and he was inside rushing around saying, 'Let's go, let's go, let's go.' He wouldn't sleep, and the one time he did, he woke up screaming."

Mosier told his mother of a breaking point in Iraq: a roadside bomb that blew up the truck in front of his. "He said his buddies were screaming. They were on fire," she says, her voice trailing off. "He was there at the end to pick up the hands and arms." After that Mosier started having delusions. Dr. Wexler of Fort Carson diagnosed personality disorder. Soon after, Mosier was discharged under Chapter 5-13.

Mosier returned home, still plagued by visions. In October he put a note on the front door of their Des Moines, Iowa, home saying the Iraqis were after him and he had to protect the family, then shot himself.

Mosier's mother is furious that doctors at Fort Carson treated her son for such a brief period of time and that Wexler, citing confidentiality, refused to tell her anything about that treatment or give her family any direction on how to help Chris upon his return home. She does not believe her son had a personality disorder. "They take a normal kid, he comes back messed up, then nobody was there for him when he came back," Linda says. "They discharged him so they didn't have to treat him."

Wexler did not reply to a written request seeking comment on Mosier's case.


Thrown to the Wolves

Today Jon Town is home, in small-town Findlay, Ohio, with no job, no prospects and plenty of time to reflect on how he got there. Diagnosing him with personality disorder may have saved the Army thousands of dollars, he says, but what did Wexler have to gain?

Quite a lot, says Steve Robinson, director of veterans affairs at Veterans for America, a Washington, DC-based soldiers' rights group. Since the Iraq War began, he says, doctors have been facing an overflow of wounded soldiers and a shortage of rooms, supplies and time to treat them. By calling PTSD a personality disorder, they usher one soldier out quickly, freeing up space for the three or four who are waiting.

Terry, the veterans' advocate from IWVO, notes that unlike doctors in the private sector, Army doctors who give questionable diagnoses face no danger of malpractice suits due to Feres v. U.S., a 1950 Supreme Court ruling that bars soldiers from suing for negligence. To maintain that protection, Terry says, most doctors will diagnose personality disorder when prodded to do so by military officials.

That's precisely how the system works, says one military official familiar with the discharge process. The official, who requested anonymity, is a lawyer with Trial Defense Services (TDS), a unit of the Army that guides soldiers through their 5-13 discharge. "Commanders want to get these guys out the door and get it done fast. Even if the next soldier isn't as good, at least he's good to go. He's deployable. So they're telling the docs what diagnosis to give to get what discharge."

The lawyer says he knows this is happening because commanders have told him that they're doing it. "Some have come to me and talked about doing this. They're saying, 'Give me a specific diagnosis. It'll support a certain chapter.'"

Colonel Martin of Fort Stewart said the prospect of commanders pressuring doctors to diagnose personality disorder is "highly unlikely." "Doctors are making these determinations themselves," Martin says. In a statement, Col. William Statz, commander at Fort Polk's Baynes-Jones hospital, says, "Any allegations that clinical decisions are influenced by either political considerations or command pressures, at any level, are untrue."

But a second TDS lawyer, who also demanded anonymity, says he's watched the same process play out at his base. "What I've noticed is right before a unit deploys, we see a spike in 5-13s, as if the commanders are trying to clean house, get rid of the soldiers they don't really need," he says. "The chain of command just wants to eliminate them and get a new body in there fast to plug up the holes." If anyone shows even moderate signs of psychological distress, he says, "they're kicking them to the curb instead of treating them."

Both lawyers say that once a commander steps in and pushes for a 5-13, the diagnosis and discharge are carved in stone fairly fast. After that happens, one lawyer says he points soldiers toward the Army Board for Correction of Military Records, where a 5-13 label could be overturned, and failing that, advises them to seek redress from their representative in Congress. Town did that, contacting Republican Representative Michael Oxley of Ohio, with little success. Oxley, who has since retired, did not return calls seeking comment.

Few cases are challenged successfully or overturned later, say the TDS lawyers. The system, says one, is essentially broken. "Right now, the Army is eating its own. What I want to see is these soldiers getting the right diagnosis, so they can get the right help, not be thrown to the wolves right away. That is what they're doing."

Still, Town tries to remain undaunted. He got his story to Robinson of Veterans for America, who brought papers on his case to an October meeting with several top Washington officials, including Deputy Surgeon General Gale Pollock, Assistant Surgeon General Bernard DeKoning and Republican Senator Kit Bond of Missouri. There Robinson laid out the larger 5-13 problem and submitted a briefing specifically on Town.

"We got a very positive response," Robinson says. "After we presented, they were almost appalled, like we are every day. They said, 'We didn't know this was happening.'" Robinson says the deputy surgeon general promised to look into Town's case and the others presented to her. Senator Bond, whose son has served in Iraq, floated the idea of a Congressional hearing if the 5-13 issue isn't resolved. The senator did not return calls seeking comment.

In the meantime, Town is doing his best to keep his head in check. He says his nightmares have been waning in recent weeks, but most of his problems persist. He's thinking of going to a veterans support group in Toledo, forty-five miles north of Findlay. There will be guys there who have been through this, he says, vets who understand.

Town hesitates, his voice suddenly much softer. "I have my good days and my bad days," he says. "It all depends on whether I wake up in Findlay or Iraq."

BOMBSHELL COURT RULING ON VETERANS WITH MORE THAN ONE VA CLAIM PENDING

VA Watchdog Dot Org : "Keeping an eye on the VA because somebody has to"........


Senator Murray Introduces Bill to Help Veterans with Multiple Sclerosis Get Benefits
Legislation Cuts Red Tape by lifting the VA's 7-year Limit to Qualify for Automatic VA Benefits

Murray's Bill Addresses the High Rate of MS Among Veterans; Legislation is endorsed by MSVETS and National Gulf War Resource Center

For Immediate Release: Tuesday, March 13, 2007

(Washington, D.C.) - Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) reintroduced legislation to help more veterans who have Multiple Sclerosis (MS) qualify for disability benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Under current law, veterans have a deadline of seven years after being honorably discharged to connect their MS to their military service. Murray's bill would remove the seven-year limitation.


"This arbitrary deadline is another example of the unnecessary bureaucratic hurdles our veterans face when they return home," said Senator Murray. "This bill institutes a common sense approach that gives our veterans every opportunity they need to get the coverage they deserve. Especially now, as the administration continues to shortchange veterans, we need to make sure that we are opening doors to coverage rather than closing them."


A disproportionate number of veterans from the first Gulf War are developing symptoms of MS, but they often face difficulty obtaining disability benefits from the VA. Unfortunately, many veterans don't develop the symptoms of MS until after seven years, making them ineligible for automatic disability benefits from the Veterans Administration. These veterans must then go through a lengthy appeals process to prove that their disability is service-connected.

Online MH Screening for Returning Vets & Families

Dear Colleague,

We were so pleased to join you as participants at SAMHSA's Returning Veterans conference last week. As your partner in serving our nation's service members and veterans, we are writing to alert you of a new Department of Defense (DoD) sponsored online mental health screening and referral program for families and service members/veterans affected by deployment or mobilization. As you may know, (if you visited our conference exhibit or presentation) Screening for Mental Health, Inc. has been contracted by the DoD Office of Health Affairs to provide this program of free and anonymous mental health and alcohol screening with referrals to services provided through the DoD and Veterans Affairs. It is available to every branch of the military including National Guard and Reserve units. The new "Mental Health Self-Assessment Program" launched at the end of January. Your service members/veterans and families can access it at: www.MilitaryMentalHealth.org.

Please help us reach as many service members/veterans and their families as possible by sharing this link through your website, email listservs and newsletters. You can download articles, emails and other materials to promote this link at: www.MentalHealthScreening.org/Military. Simply click on "Materials to Publicize the Online Screening Program."Thank you so much for notifying your service members/veterans and families about this valuable service. Please contact either of us with any questions or if we can be of help in any way.

Sincerely,

Barbara S. Kopans, Executive Director
Anne S. Keliher, Senior Program Director
Screening for Mental Health, Inc.
781.239.0071
bkopans@MentalHealthScreening.org
akeliher@MentalHealthScreening.org
www.MentalHealthScreening.org

Agent Orange Victims Gather to Seek Justice

HANOI - Vietnam War veterans from the United States, South Korea, Australia and Vietnam gathered on Tuesday to call for more help for the victims of the Agent Orange defoliant used by the U.S. military. Deformed children born to parents Vietnam believes were affected by the estimated 20 million gallons of herbicides, including Agent Orange, poured on the country were brought to the conference as dramatic evidence of its effects.

A view of the Ho Chi Minh Trail as it crosses the Rinh River near the village of Thanh Liem, in an undated photo. Vietnam War veterans from the United States, South Korea, Australia and Vietnam gathered on Tuesday to call for more help for the victims of the Agent Orange defoliant used by the U.S. military. REUTERS/File "The use of Agent Orange in Vietnam produced unacceptable threats to life, violated international law and created a toxic wasteland that continued to kill and injure civilian populations long after the war was over," said Joan Duffy from Pennsylvania. Duffy who served in a U.S. military hospital in Vietnam in 1969-1970, said the Agent Orange used there was more toxic than usual."In an effort to work faster and increase production of Agent Orange, the chemical companies paid little attention to quality control issues," she said. "The Agent Orange destined for Vietnam became much more highly contaminated with dioxin as the result of sloppy, hasty manufacturing," she told the conference in Hanoi.

Last March, a federal court dismissed a suit on behalf of millions of Vietnamese who charged the United States committed war crimes by its use of Agent Orange, which contains dioxin, to deny communist troops ground cover. The Vietnam Association for Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin (VAVA) has filed an appeal, saying assistance was needed urgently as many were dying. The U.S. appeals court was expected to make a decision in April.Dioxin can cause cancer, deformities and organ dysfunction. Manufacturers named in the suit included Dow Chemical Co. and Monsanto Co..
...... http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0328-04.htm

Vet Pax:

Just learned that any Vet (90 days service) or spouse (need not be a vet) that is in need of home aide health care can qualify for V.A. financial assistance up to $16,000 per year.

For all details: call Michael Devlin at 877-904-8387

No human is illegal, derechos para immegrantes ...La lucha cntinua

Dave Silver

A note from Hudson Valley Area Labor Federation, AFL-CIO (hvalf@hvc.rr.com)

SGT. Eddie Ryan graduated high school in June, 2002 and enlisted in the Marines the following September. On April 13, 2005 Eddie was on patrol in Iraq when he was shot twice in the head. Two 50 caliber bullets pierced his lower jaw and above his eye. His injuries were so severe that his parents (Chris and Angela) could only recognize him by his tattoos. After miraculously surviving his life threatening injuries, Eddie is at Helen Hayes Hospital and is ready to come home almost one year later.

We received a request from the IBEW 503 to support efforts to raise funds for SGT. Eddie Ryan. Mr. Ryan is also the son of an IUOE local 137 member. Please dig deep to help with renovations on the home to accommodate Eddie's wheelchair. The Ryan family needs to come up with $100,000 to widen doorways, renovate their bathroom, and more so that their son can come home.

Donate at Barry's Estate Jewelry, Route 304, New City
Contact: Jaclyn at 845.558.9045
Or through the website at http://www.helpeddieryan.com