Saturday, April 11, 2009

What motive does the Army have to misdiagnose PTSD?

So asks the two Salon writers, Mark Benjamin and Michael de Yoanna, following their recent series starting with the incriminating evidence, an audio recording by a Veteran suffering from PTS. Recording his visit because his wife couldn't be there so he needed a way to remember what took place in his session with his army psychologist.

A reluctance to diagnose post-traumatic stress disorder could be about the money, and about the need for troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.


The subject title and the blockquote above are what they use in their forth of four reports from last week. That all started with this audio from a session with Sgt. X and his army psychologist:



April 10, 2009 | In two stories published this week, Salon has described how a soldier secretly taped a psychologist saying that the Army was exerting pressure not to diagnose soldiers with post-traumatic stress disorder. Psychologist Douglas McNinch of Fort Carson, Colo., twice states on the recording that the Army discourages PTSD diagnoses.

If what McNinch says on the tape is true, why is it happening? Why would the Army purposely diagnose soldiers suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder with something other than PTSD? Combat stress is as real as your big toe. Why would the Army want to deny, or at least minimize, a known consequence of combat? The truth might rest in math.


This is their first report:

"I am under a lot of pressure to not diagnose PTSD"

A secret recording reveals the Army may be pushing its medical staff not to diagnose post-traumatic stress disorder. The Army and Senate have ignored the implications.

Editor's note: Last June, during a medical appointment, a patient named "Sgt. X" recorded an Army psychologist at Fort Carson, Colo., saying that he was under pressure not to diagnose combat veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder.

April 8, 2009 | FORT CARSON, Colo. -- "Sgt. X" is built like the Bradley Fighting Vehicle he rode in while in Iraq. He's as bulky, brawny and seemingly impervious as a tank.

In an interview in the high-rise offices of his Denver attorneys, however, symptoms of the damaged brain inside that tough exterior begin to appear. Sgt. X's eyes go suddenly blank, shifting to refocus oddly on a wall. He pauses mid-sentence, struggling for simple words. His hands occasionally tremble and spasm.


The Audio with above initial report is the one above or at that site page.

The next day Mark Benjamin and Michael de Yoanna wrote a follow up article:

Tale of the secret Army tape

After a soldier taped a psychologist saying he'd been pressured not to diagnose PTSD, the Army launched an investigation. Read the details of how the Army declared itself innocent.

Editor's note: Read about Sgt. X's tape -- and listen to a segment of it -- in the first story in this series, "I Am Under a Lot of Pressure to Not Diagnose PTSD." Read a summary of the Army's internal investigation, in which it determined that it was not exerting such pressure, here

"This report does not find pressure to change clinical diagnoses"
A summary of an Army investigation says some soldiers with PTSD may not get the diagnoses they deserve -- but nobody in the Army did anything wrong.


April 9, 2009 | In a story published yesterday, Salon reported on a surreptitious tape recording of an Army psychologist telling a patient last June that he had been pressured not to diagnose soldiers as having post-traumatic stress disorder. The soldier, whom Salon dubbed Sgt. X to protect his identity, recorded the Fort Carson, Colo., psychologist, Douglas McNinch, twice describing pressure to label soldiers with "anxiety disorder" instead of PTSD. The diagnosis of anxiety disorder could result in improper treatment and lower disability payments if the Army discharges a soldier from the military. "It's not fair," McNinch said on the tape. "I think it's a horrible way to treat soldiers."


That night, the 9th, on MSNBC HardBall they had this discussion:



Now to just break in, on the Salon reports, here this was known about, or at least suspected, from reports many of us Veterans or Advocates of had been hearing about or in talking to the returning soldiers from these two theaters. But on May 15th 2008 VoteVets and CREW {Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington} broke it open with a press release:

15 May 2008 // Washington, DC – Today, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) and VoteVets.org released an e-mail obtained from a Veterans Affairs (VA) employee directing VA staff to refrain from diagnosing soldiers and veterans with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).


And in searching out a bit of information I came across this CNN Video from a month before:

Post traumatic stress stigma Sun, March 8, 2009
Army generals hope to remove the stigma that keeps many soldiers from getting help for stress. CNN's Barbara Starr reports.



These two Generals had recently come out about their own PTS and the counciling and help they received, and their want to help their fellow soldiers to seek out the help needed themselves.

On the day of the second Salon report there was another discussion at CNN:

Veterans and PTSD Thurs. April 9 2009
Veterans groups talk about post-traumatic stress disorder to CNN's Kyra Phillips
.


Now in the CNN discussion, in the beginning, Kyra makes the point that they've been contact the new Veterans Administration Director General Shinseki and that he hadn't returned their contacts for this report. I'm not going to fault Kyra for whatever point she wanted to make, as she clears that up later in the discussion by pointing out this all happened under the previous administration in 2008. But will say that the General has only been in the lead a very short time, and would not want to speak about all that is coming out finally until he has all the facts, so Kyra think before speaking please!

Salon followed up the first two reports with the following:

"I believe that I did have PTSD"

Matthew Marino was sent back to Afghanistan for a second tour of duty after the Army diagnosed him with "anxiety disorder" instead of post-traumatic stress disorder.

April 10, 2009 | Matthew Marino served five years in the Army and was deployed to fight in Afghanistan twice. He began to suffer from symptoms typical of post-traumatic stress disorder following his first tour. After returning to Fort Drum, N.Y. in late 2004, he couldn't lose the hyper-alertness he'd developed in Afghanistan. He had thoughts of suicide, was nervous, had nightmares, couldn't sleep, and stayed away from family and friends.

Despite his symptoms, however, the Army diagnosed the first lieutenant with anxiety disorder instead of PTSD. He was also diagnosed with depression and given antidepressants. The Army then "stop-lossed" Marino, to prevent him from leaving the Army although his time was up. He was shipped back to Afghanistan for a second tour in 2006. A diagnosis of PTSD might have kept him from being redeployed and sent back into combat; a diagnosis of anxiety disorder did not.


While searching I found a few more reports, following the Salon report, like this one:

Wartime Mental Health, Scandal and Stigma

Posted on April 9th, 2009 by Kelley Vlahos

Nearly a year ago, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates announced that eliminating the stigma of mental health from the military culture would be a Pentagon priority. Seeing that some one-third of soldiers returning from the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are reporting mental health symptoms, particularly those associated with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), hearing him say, “We have no higher priority in the Department of Defense, apart from the war itself, than taking care of our men and women in uniform who have been wounded — who have both visible and unseen wounds,” was at the very least, an institutional acknowledgment of the problem.

Good intentions and politically correct language aside, like most of what we see and hear in Washington, his words papered over and have yet to affect a cruel reality, one with which only a small percentage of Americans have any real familiarity. Perhaps with the help of investigative reporters Mark Benjamin and Michael de Yoanna, who have been producing some amazing work for Salon.com, we can all get up to speed.


I would like to make a couple of points to Kelley on an otherwise needed article. First: when Gates made his call he was relatively new in an administration that, while starting two long running occupations, all that is coming out now happened under their watch and with a congress of the same political ideology. Second: we could have all "gotten up to speed" if many had been listening to those of us, in the previous administration labeled "focus groups", had been saying all along, not to mention all of us Veterans who have been saying for years, but welcome to the reality now!!

WWP Concerned by Stigma of PTSD and Mental Illness in Military

In response to recently released information, http://www.woundedwarriorproject.org/Wounded Warrior Project again cited their grave concerns with the manner in which mental health and PTSD are perceived and dealt with within the military. One specific article on Salon.com highlighted concerns that military doctors are being pressured to not diagnose PTSD in returning military personnel and specifically brought to light such a situation in Fort Carson, Colorado.

"Post traumatic stress disorder is very serious," said Nardizzi. "We call on the military to prioritize the reduction of this stigma against seeking care and to foster unfettered access to mental health services, regardless of cost."


VA psychiatrist orchestrates services for increased PTSD patients

Some veterans got proper treatment 20 or 30 years after the issue should have been recognized, he said.

Many returning Vietnam veterans sought refuge from PTSD with addictive behaviors. They were frequently misdiagnosed with schizophrenia and other psychological abnormalities, Otero said. In reality, they were driven to those addictions to mask the increasing severity of flashbacks to horrific combat experiences.

"One of the differences between the current war and the Vietnam conflict is that current vets are receiving counseling and education (about PTSD) before they go and immediately after they return, he said.

"We are trying to catch PTSD early - undiagnosed, it becomes a much more disabling condition," he said.

While the VA mental health community is much more in tune to the workings of PTSD for the new group of veterans, these veterans face some stress issues the Vietnam era combatants did not.

As many Vietnam-era veterans were drafted, they served in the combat zone for a year and were discharged back to civilian life, Otero said.


Now this is for the Veterans and residents of Maryland but others may want to study what they're doing and submit to their state legislators to follow the example, if you don't have similar in your states.

Veterans Network Of Care Portal
Lt. Governor Brown Launches Maryland Veterans Network Of Care Portal

Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
Press Release:

ANNAPOLIS, MD (March 31, 2009) - Maryland Lt. Governor Anthony G. Brown today joined representatives of the public mental health industry and veterans affairs as Maryland became the first state in the nation to launch a "Network of Care" Website devoted to the state's veterans. The Maryland Veterans Network of Care portal is an on-line resource that provides simple and fast access to information on local, state and national behavioral health services available to veterans. The portal is part of Network of Care online community.>>>>>Rest Here


And those who may be seeking a new profession, have kids looking for a rewarding profession, or are returning Veterans of these conflicts seeking to continue your service to country and citizens of, you may find this worthy to research further.

VA Announces New Nursing Academy Sites
April 9, 2009

To provide compassionate, highly-trained nurses to serve the health care needs of the nation’s Veterans, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is establishing new partnerships with five of the country’s finest nursing schools. With these new partnerships, the VA Nursing Academy will expand the number of collaborations between the department and nursing schools from 10 to 15.

“The expanded role of the Department of Veterans Affairs in the education of nurses will ensure the department has the nurses needed to continue our world-class health care for Veterans,” said Dr. Linda D. Johnson, director of VA Nursing Academy. “The VA Nursing Academy expands the teaching faculty, improves recruitment and retention, and creates new educational and research opportunities.”

The VA Nursing Academy is a virtual five-year pilot program with central administration in Washington. It expands learning opportunities for nursing students at VA facilities, funds faculty development of VA staff for additional faculty positions to competitively selected school partners. The five-year, $59 million program began in 2007.


The names of the newly added schools, as well as those participating already in the program, can be found at the site link.

Thursday, April 09, 2009

Def. Sec. Robert Gates: Radical Overhaul of the Pentagon's Arsenal

Pentagon Chief: Why I Tore Up the Army's 'Future'

Of all the hard choices Defense Secretary Robert Gates had to make in his radical overhaul of the Pentagon's arsenal, the toughest, he tells Danger Room, was the decision to gut Future Combat Systems, the Army's $200 billion effort to design a fleet of next-generation tanks and troop carriers.


"Most difficult of all of these for me was the FCS program," Gates says in a Pentagon conference call. "I actually didn't make up my mind once and for all on it until this weekend."

This link brings up Windows Media Player for conference call.


At the end of this phone conference, which last about thirty five minutes, the Defense Secretary talks about the Military and Veterans, as well as their families, care monies that have been off budget, or not even thought of or included, and in the supplementals these years of these two occupations, which now will be included in the Defense Budget, nothing hidden, we hope!

**********

And the mindset should Always Be: "War as a very last resort!!"! No Wars Of Choice Which Damages Our Nations Security And Moral Standing!!

"""I think she is extremely sloppy"""

Burr to support Iraq vet for post at Veterans Affairs

Republican Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina has agreed to allow the nomination of injured Iraq veteran Tammy Duckworth go forward for a top post in the Veterans Affairs administration.



And that 'sloppy' comment comes from a Representative of the People who, along with his staff, rarely answers correspondence, like Sen. Dole before and with him! And when deciding to place the hold on the Duckworth nomination didn't offer a reason why nor once decided to lift didn't make a comment till two days later! "Sloppy" Senator Burr, look in a mirror, and look at your staff, All on our dime!!

The public, who you serve, and us Vets who did our service and need the VA cleaned up after the almost total incompetent administration of during two wars. Of which your political affiliation held the power and the purse strings during those first many years. Had to find out about your release of the hold through the public media



with No Public Statement From You!! Clean up your own 'sloppy' house senator!!

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

On: TBI - PTSD - No Bids & War Profiteering - Obstructionism and the VA

Let me start out with some Good News, but that still have many of us puzzled as to why it took so long to get to the 'Good' and much needed, no answers.

On 'Obstructionism' and the VA, Plus:

I'm saving this cut of the Rachel Maddow show, on the evening of 4.07.09, to show how those we hire to represent us don't.

Not only was Sen. Richard Burr placing a hold on the nomination of Tammy Duckworth an OIF Veteran for the VA, much needed placement of this nominee as two theaters of occupation are still at hand and much has been surfacing as to the incompetent way the Veterans Administration was Administered under the previous Executive Branch, but this also shows how he and his staff conduct their job of representation, they don't.



If trying to get answers from them or just writing them on concerns they tend do as a previous Senator, Sen Dole, did they don't respond. Send an e-mail, regular or fax, no e-mail, et.el, response comes back even acknowledgment of receiving your correspondence, and instead every once in a great while one gets a regular mail response, and these are extremely rare unless an election is coming up than they fly into your mailbox in bulk.

There's another example as well. We found out he had stopped his, no excuse for, hold on Tammy's nomination on the afternoon of the seventh, yet in doing a search after hearing that and into the next day there is no Press Release either publicly or at his Senate website saying the nomination is no longer on hold nor his reasons for that hold, Nothing. We find out in the evening on the Rachel Maddow Show, and she's not hired by us to Represent, her job is Journalism and reporting the facts.

Now the reason for leading off with that cut of last nights show leads into some very recent reports, which add on to the many that have been followed, as we still have our military in two ongoing occupations with soldiers and innocents dying and being maimed daily.

There has been a showing of almost total incompetence that existed under the previous administration and a certain political party that held the power for much of the previous recent past, some of that incompetence has been finally coming into public view these last two plus years. This has been across the board in almost every government agency, but these that follow have more to do with the Military and especially the Veterans Administration. One wonders how much more we'll find out.

Patient Scheduling Debacle Takes Down VA Exec

Dr. Michael Kussman, undersecretary for health at the Veterans Health Administration, has resigned, effective in 30 days, well-placed sources have told me.

Last month, Kussman wrote a memo detailing the near collapse of an eight-year, $167 million effort known as the Replacement Scheduling Application Development Program.


When VA Secretary Eric Shinseki learned of the problems with the program, he told staffers to give him a comprehensive review by Thursday, April 9, and planned a congressional briefing for Friday, according to internal memos.


Now on the heels of the above report comes the announcement from the VA on his upcoming retirement:

Michael J. Kussman, VA Under Secretary for Health, to Retire

April 7, 2009

WASHINGTON – Dr. Michael J. Kussman, the Under Secretary for Health for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), today announced his intention to retire from federal service by May 9, ending a 37-year government career. Dr. Kussman, who attained the rank of brigadier general while in the U.S. Army, has been with VA since 2000.

As Under Secretary for Health since 2007, Dr. Kussman has directed a health care system with an annual budget of approximately $40.2 billion, overseeing the delivery of care to more than 5.6 million Veterans.


Can the problems with the above seemingly wasteful spending and time be attributed all to Dr. Kussman, No, but it can led into the Political Appointee to head the Agency, as any agency, and those they bring along with them to work in the Administration of these Government Agencies, Dr Kussman is taking the political fall.

One of the many problems that keep coming up has been the obstruction of fully diagnosing what the returning soldiers and veterans of the two occupations, OIF and OEF, have been experiencing, or actually misdiagnosing to save on the benefits due them and the government cost of their care and support. This is nothing new it's happened since at least Korea and especially to our brothers of Vietnam right up to the present. But it once again, as during and after 'Nam, been very blatant.

"I am under a lot of pressure to not diagnose PTSD"

A secret recording reveals the Army may be pushing its medical staff not to diagnose post-traumatic stress disorder. The Army and Senate have ignored the implications.

Editor's note: Last June, during a medical appointment, a patient named "Sgt. X" recorded an Army psychologist at Fort Carson, Colo., saying that he was under pressure not to diagnose combat veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder. Listen to a segment of the tape here:



UpDate to above Salon report 4.09.09:

Tale of the secret Army tape

After a soldier taped a psychologist saying he'd been pressured not to diagnose PTSD, the Army launched an investigation. Read the details of how the Army declared itself innocent.

Editor's note: Read about Sgt. X's tape -- and listen to a segment of it -- in the first story in this series, "I Am Under a Lot of Pressure to Not Diagnose PTSD." Read a summary of the Army's internal investigation, in which it determined that it was not exerting such pressure, here.



Hidden Wounds 1 in 3 injured troops suffer traumatic brain injury



Now the report above, with this Video, isn't long so I won't do a blockquote as it has a number of links embedded within for further study. But I will place those links here. Like this one TBI in the Military, and this one on the three million civilians who suffer from TBI in the U.S.. They have a link to Hines VA Hospital in Chicago and what they offer in care with high-tech devices. In the video they talk with Brian Sweeney who wrote of his experiences with TBI in Every 21 Seconds

Many Combat Vets Suffer Severe Headaches Upon Return

Almost all of those who had mild brain injury, blast exposure are affected, study says

Headaches have become a common complaint among soldiers who suffered mild head trauma while serving in Iraq or Afghanistan.

These headaches tend to be debilitating, mirroring migraines in intensity, according to research released Monday that is to be presented next month at the American Academy of Neurology's annual meeting in Seattle.

About 15 percent of soldiers deployed to Iraq experience mild traumatic brain injury (TBI), according to background information from the researchers, who are based at Madigan Army Medical Center in Tacoma, Wash.

But not much has been known about the headaches that can occur as a result.


And this on the continuing discovery of the Blatant War Profiteering, especially from the wide open no bid contracts dished out by the previous administration, and rubber stamped by those in Congress under the same political banner, to their friends and supporters:

Safety team warns of 'catastrophic' wiring in Iraq

A military team sent to evaluate electrical problems at U.S. facilities in Iraq determined there was a high risk that flawed wiring could cause further "catastrophic results" namely, the electrocutions of U.S. soldiers.


Now into just a few things good to report on. Some followed In Their Boots last year. It's an online series of extremely important video reports that aired weekly on a number of issues facing the soldiers and their families as they returned from these wars. It ran every week and some, like myself, passed on that weeks show in posts. They have now started the second year, with a new site look and a new format, instead of weekly the shows are now every month with showings in different cities around the country.

You can visit the site to view last years shows as well as the first one for this second season "Broken Promises"

Or view the "Broken Promises" here:


They've sent out an e-alert for this months documentary to be shown in Huston Texas area on April 22 called "Fractured Minds" with a message that it should be widely available on the 24th of April. I missed the debut show last month until after it showed, but I believe you can catch this months on their site on the 22nd but it will take to the 24th to be able to link to or embed anywhere.

This is the Trailer for "Fractured Minds"


There also seems to be some real good news for a 'Gold Star Mom' Nadia McCaffrey and her sons, Patrick McCaffrey who was killed in the Iraq War, Wife and Child's hard work on a memorial to her son to help the returning OIF and OEF veterans readjust back to society and help them with any problems some may have.

Nadia's dream was the Veterans Village, which has been growing slowly but surely over these years since her sons death in Iraq. You can visit the link to find out more.

Well it looks like that dream may be speeding up and taking on the direction intended all along:

Veterans project heads in new direction

New leaders focus in on Washington

Coulthard, 64, a Vietnam veteran who has made a name for himself by securing government dollars for veteran housing for the past two decades, is optimistic about turning the Oak Ridge property into "Valley Forge Village," a 400-unit retreat for veterans and their families where they may stay as long as they wish in a self-sustaining common interest community that offers training and reintegration strategies.

He, along with Oak Ridge property owner Jim Jauss, and Nadia McCaffrey, the mother of Patrick McCaffrey, who was killed in the Iraq War, are slated for a visit to Washington April 19-21.


Any Vets in the DC area, especially OIF and OEF Veterans, may want to contact Jimmie Coulthard or Nadia McCaffery to give a hand with the Pols and the Administration, Stimulate this Dream!!

Tuesday, April 07, 2009

Coming Home with Honor! Ending 18yr Ban, 4.05.09

First Photos of Fallen Soldier Ends 18-Year Ban
Air Force Allows Media to Cover Arrival of Airman Killed in Afghanistan



For the first time since the Obama administration reversed an 18-year-old ban on news coverage of returning fallen soldiers, the military allowed media to cover the arrival tonight of an airman killed in Afghanistan.

The arrival of remains of Staff Sgt. Phillip A. Myers, a 30-year-old supporting Operation Enduring Freedom, at Dover Air Force Base at 11 p.m. today marked the first time that the transfer of any of the nearly 5,000 U.S. troops who have died in Iraq and Afghanistan was open to the media. >>>>>More

Monday, April 06, 2009

Exclusive Audio: Bob Dylan's New Single

"Feel A Change Comin' On" from his new album "Together Through Life"

Remember James Watt.....

On This Day:

April 6, 1983 Pres. Ronald Reagan’s interior secretary, James Watt, banned all rock 'n' roll groups from the Fourth of July celebration on the Washington Mall. The bands scheduled to play included the Beach Boys, generally considered very wholesome. But Watt said such acts attracted the “wrong element.” ”We're not going to encourage drug abuse and alcoholism as was done in the past.” The president’s wife, a fan, complained directly to Sec. Watt, but he claimed never to have heard of the band.

First Photos of Fallen Soldier Ends 18-Year Ban

An airman stands next to the coffin containing the body of Air Force Staff Sgt. Phillip Myers as it is lowered from a plane upon its return to the U.S. at Dover Air Force Base in Dover, Delaware April 5, 2009. Myers, of Hopewell, Virginia, died April 4 near Helmand province, Afghanistan of wounds suffered from an improvised explosive device. For the first time since the Obama administration reversed an 18-year-old ban on news coverage of returning fallen soldiers, the military allowed media to cover to cover the arrival tonight of an airman killed in Afghanistan. Collapse
(Joshua Roberts/REUTERS)




I wish to thank the families who allowed the press photo's showing the respect the fallen receive and the real cost of war!!

We serve the Nation, not just the families nor communities, a Nation that does little in Sacrifice!!

We Can No Longer Condemn!!!!!

Torture In Iran

April 5, 2009


Watch CBS Videos Online

Ahmad Batebi tells CNN's Anderson Cooper, in his 1st U.S. television interview how he was tortured for 9 years in an Iranian prison and how he managed to escape.


I thought this was very interesting coming out at this time, and with the mention within on how our actions have tied the Human Rights Advocates hands because of our Now Policies!!

Sunday, April 05, 2009

Mike Farrell on 'Taking a stand'

Actor Mike Farrell talks about why he 'sticks his neck' out as a political activist Pt1



This is the book he's written: Just Call Me Mike: A Journey to Actor and Activist

Mike Farrell on taking a stand - Pt2



Mike Farrell on taking a stand Pt3



Mike Farrell on taking a stand Pt4