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3 Years On, Combat PTSD Comes Out of the Closet

by rcs1

The 3rd anniversary of the Iraq invasion finds an interesting situation brewing: returning veterans coping with posttraumatic stress disorder [PTSD] are no longer being hidden away from our view. Rather, the media is beginning ever-so-slightly to lift the veil on this nerve disorder affecting at least 16,000+ of our troops who've served in Afghanistan and/or Iraq.

Since we have so very little else to celebrate as another year moves forward with no end in sight to war and its victims, I'm going to focus on the good reporting on this issue that is finally, finally, seeing the light of day. And I celebrate the fact today that rather than using this anniversary to glamorize and glorify the war, the media seem to have decided to use it to introduce this balooning problem at last to the public.

This gives me soooo much hope...


commentary :: :: :: buzz-it!
Spanning an enormous 12 online pages, one explanatory editorial, and an introduction by the author, Julie Sullivan (assisted by Torsten Kjellstrand), the Oregonian delivers its readers a grand public service this morning. Through the experiences of the Stout family (who were extremely gracious in allowing reporters into their lives to record their story), America receives a detailed view of the struggle some of our veterans -- and their families -- are facing as they cope with posttraumatic stress disorder.

This important article is so exhaustive and detailed, that it is impossible to do it justice in any way here; please just take the time to read it. And after you've finished, please contact The Oregonian and commend them for devoting resources and taking great care in presenting this topic to their readership. You might also wish to contact the reporters, Julie Sullivan and Torsten Kjellstrand, to offer your personal thanks.

New England Cable News (NECN) is set to air a new documentary, Hidden Wounds, detailing the struggle of three local soldiers who've returned from Iraq with posttraumatic stress. If you're in the viewing area, you can catch it today at 10:00AM and 7:00PM. NECN will re-broadcast the special throughout the week [times/dates - scroll down]. For those not in the viewing area, the Boston Globe has an article out today and online clips are available.

The pop of a firecracker in a parking lot was all it took to send Nate Fick back to Iraq. That sound had him ducking behind the nearest car, grabbing for the pistol holstered on his thigh. Except his gun wasn't there. The former Marine was in Maryland with his sister and it was July Fourth, about a month after his return from Iraq. "I stood up a few seconds later, and said, 'Man, I'm out of my mind,'" Fick said in an interview this week. ...

"Hidden Wounds," which debuts Sunday at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m., tells the stories of Fick, currently a Harvard graduate student, Sgt. Russell Anderson, a longtime military man from Norton, and Jeff Lucey, a Marine who killed himself several months after returning to Belchertown. "These are three very different men," said Iris Adler, the film's producer and writer. "In spite of their differences, they all come home with post-traumatic stress disorder."

About one in six soldiers from Iraq and Afghanistan are suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and depression, according to studies cited in the documentary. The soldiers in the film believe that the percentage is much higher, but a stigma prevents others from admitting the struggle. "There's a lot more people out there than you think like me," Anderson, 55, said this week.

Anderson's and Lucey's experiences are briefly outlined before returning to Fick's story:

Fick, a Dartmouth graduate, joined the military to test himself and because he believed members of the privileged class should serve. In Iraq, he led a reconnaissance unit to Baghdad. Carnage became commonplace, and the pressure of making life and death decisions was relentless. When he returned home, Fick fell into deep depression. He found relief writing about his experiences, an exercise that became the book, "One Bullet Away."

Fick said he hoped telling his story makes post-traumatic stress disorder real to people who don't know a soldier. People returning from Iraq are going to have serious problems, he said, and society needs ensure they get proper care, unlike so many Vietnam veterans. "Their problems have endured the 30-40 years since they came back," Fick said. "I don't want to see that repeated."

Don't forget to view the online clips if you're outside of the viewing area; and take a moment to thank NECN for their efforts at getting more to understand the plight of those troops coping with PTSD.

The New York Daily News presents an op-ed piece written by Dr. Gene Bolles, "chief of neurosurgery from November 2001 to February 2004 at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, America's tertiary hospital serving our troops." As we arrive at 20,000+ wounded and 2,600 killed in action, the physician remembers those he's crossed paths with these past three years.

With the third anniversary of Operation Iraqi Freedom upon us, I am reminded of war's horrors, but also of the unparalleled sacrifice and loyalty of the men and women who serve this nation. During my time at Landstuhl, I evaluated hundreds of men and women. As a civilian not in their chain of command, the servicemen and women often confided to me that they were living in constant fear as witnesses to the agony of war -- the smell and sounds of death; seeing their buddies mutilated, along with Iraqi men, women and children.

Most of those who are killed or wounded are under the age of 22. Those who are seriously injured (some with only one extremity remaining, some blinded and severely disfigured) frequently express a strong desire to go back to their units to complete their tour of duty and protect their buddies.

He tells the story of a 19-year old woman who came to him with severe back injuries; and he remembers the 21-year old man who'd lost two limbs, yet was still more worried about his buddies.

They are, every one of them, true heroes. And it is these heroes who pay the many human costs of war. In addition to post-traumatic stress disorder (it is estimated that 35% are afflicted), there is traumatic brain injury (often disabling, unrecognized and untreated), chronic pain and spinal damage, blindness and the questionable effects of undepleted uranium. Instances of amputation in the Iraq War are reportedly double previous rates, and while the military medical care is the best in the world, there are still long-term problems with disability and chronic pain often requiring multiple surgeries.

I have the highest regard for the medical care offered by the Veterans Administration and our military. But there are many problems associated with the bureaucracy, which often stymies the efficiency of the delivery of care, which is paramount. After soldiers are discharged, they are dependent on our Veterans Administration, an overloaded and underfunded system. This system designates only 30 minutes per month for treatment of post-traumatic stress, and can take from six months to a year to provide treatment in various specialty clinics.

Unfortunately, our global war on terror is only going to add to the number of veterans suffering from war-related injuries. Our esteemed athletes in the NBA, NFL and NCAA receive medical care and appropriate testing almost immediately upon being injured. Our soldiers and their families deserve no less. If we can spend $7 billion to $10 billion dollars a month on a war, we must also afford to help rebuild lives impacted by this war.

Something to consider, isn't it?


The Chicago Tribune presents an interview with Ed Klama, a social worker and PTSD program director at Hines VA Hospital at Maywood, IL. From WWII veterans dealing with late-stage PTSD to recently returned troops from OEF and OIF, the discussion deals with war's consequences and the role good counseling plays in Quelling War's Aftershocks. To accompany the print piece, they have the full interview audio available online. If you'd like to thank the Chicago Tribune for their PTSD coverage, please do.


Also Appearing Today

Display:
I'm quite confident that you're as pleased to see this expanded coverage today, too. Thanks for all that you've done to keep this issue in the forefront.
On PTSD Combat | Email list | Book
by ilona on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 01:18:03 PM EST
Jeff and DEFuming and the multitude of folks behind the scenes helping out!

was going to send you a note about the NECN special, glad you'd already seen notice of it!


by luaptifer on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 01:36:16 PM EST
[ Parent ]

I nearly collapsed from exhaustion after getting the diary together in good enough shape to post over at the Big Orange. Thanks for helping to get that on the Rec List. Darn, I wish I live out in the NECN area; I'd love to be able to catch this program. If anyone has the chance to see it this week, let me know what you thought. I'd be interested in hearing how it's received. Thanks, luaptifer.
On PTSD Combat | Email list | Book
by ilona on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 02:45:55 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I agree it's gratifying to see the expanded coverage.  The Oregonian's comprehensive piece was very well done.  

On this day marking the third anniversary of "shock and awe," I'm hoping we will see a significant change in our policy and get our troops the hell out of Iraq.  

by standingup on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 02:23:49 PM EST
[ Parent ]

With Cheney still clinging to the notion that there is no civil war? Sigh.
On PTSD Combat | Email list | Book
by ilona on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 02:49:01 PM EST
[ Parent ]
saying I'm more delusional than Dick Cheney ;-)

by standingup on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 03:13:50 PM EST
[ Parent ]

On PTSD Combat | Email list | Book
by ilona on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 05:52:38 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Got back a little while ago from the Rally in Fayetteville NC, smaller than last year, only a little over 1000 folks there, and even less than last years bush supporters [only about 30], and am catching up on e's and posts.

Just came in and saw yours, copied and just passed it on!

Thanks Once Again!!

Jim

by jimstaro on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 03:06:53 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Would love to see/hear about that...
On PTSD Combat | Email list | Book
by ilona on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 06:15:10 PM EST
[ Parent ]
But right now I'm abit Fried.

Hopefully tomorrow my muddled mind will have calmed down, after reading through the buildup e's from taking the two days away, actually, Thank God, there weren't as many as I thought there might be!

One just came in that will interest you but will post it in a seperate Reply!!

by jimstaro on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 06:27:01 PM EST
[ Parent ]

...we all need it, I think. We never take enough time to relax ourselves. Tonight, I'm off the computer and snuggling on the couch with my long-neglected hubbie. Have a good night, Jim.
On PTSD Combat | Email list | Book
by ilona on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 06:31:54 PM EST
[ Parent ]

http://www.counterpunch.com/willson03182006.html

The Reality vs. the Rhetoric

Iraq Vets and Post-Tramatic Stress Disorder

By S. BRIAN WILLSON

I was flabbergasted to read Sally Satel's March 1, 2006 New York Times Op-Ed, "For Some, the War Won't End," describing the diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as creation of a suspicious "culture of trauma" providing veterans a "free ride" as they approach retirement age. A flag immediately went up for me because of my own history with PTSD, but also because Satel is a former VA psychiatrist who now is a resident scholar at the very biased, neoconservative American Enterprise Institute (AEI). AEI is a very wealthy think tank funded largely by old-line conservative family money such as the Scaife and Olin Foundations, and is closely associated and shares headquarters with the Project For A New American Century (PNAC), the latter offering a 1997 blueprint for an aggressive, unilateral U.S. global hegemony, including domination of Middle Eastern and Central Asian energy reserves.....read on............



by avahome on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 04:08:40 PM EST
DE Ford did a great job of exposing this angle of attack on our veterans when she did the legwork in Blaming the Veteran: The Politics of PTSD, Part III: Malign & Slime -- and this was even before Bush's key appointee to the National Advisory Council (NAC) for the US Center for Mental Health Services (CMHS) wrote her more recent NYT op-ed piece.

Even when considering everything we've seen these past three years, Dr. Satel appears yet to be stuck in the blame-those-malingering-troops mold. The troops are to be blamed for their mental health problems, and they're to blame for fleecing the system and putting budgetary pressure on the VA. War and its planners and funders are nicely left out of the equation. It's all the troops' fault, isn't it? From her writings, it appears that the Vietnam veterans especially are deserving of a distrusting glance. They've been milking and manipulating the system for decades and just will never stop, will they? ARGH.

This NYT op-ed Brian Willson talks about received a well-deserved negative backlash from the public. At least there are still some with sense enough to call smears and shameful displays out.

Thanks for the link, avahome; going to check out the rest...

On PTSD Combat | Email list | Book
by ilona on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 06:14:22 PM EST
[ Parent ]

After sending your Report out only a short while ago:

Subject: Re: Interview with Ed Klama on counseling veterans with PTSD.

Dear Editor,

   After viewing your online video with Ed Klama of Hines V.A. Hospital on
counseling veterans with PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder), I commend
the Tribune for its sensitivity and compassion to those affected by the
stress of combat. With this type of public outreach, the Tribune is helping
the Veterans' Administration in its mission "to care for him who shall have
borne the battle," in the words of Abraham Lincoln.

   Many veterans are unaware that PTSD can arise many years after combat
service, induced by stressors such as health problems,
unemployment, death in the family and others. The tragedy for the Iraq
veteran is that he, or she has only a two year timeline for treatment,
absent a disability rating. Today, PTSD counseling is being provided to
Vietnam, Korea and WW-II veterans, 40, 50 and 60 years after they served! Ed
Klama made it clear that Congress has shortchanged our most recent veterans
at the time they may need help the most!

Thanks Again,
Mike Woloshin,
Chapter President

Mike Woloshin, AMH-2, USN
ATKRON 86, onbd USS Coral Sea (CVA-43)
Vietnam (Yankee Station) 1969-1970
Cpl. Joseph E. Powers-Chicago Area Chapter 26
Veterans for Peace, Inc.
216 S. Meramec
St. Louis, MO. 63105
Phone: 1 (314) 725-6005
Fax: 1 (314) 725-7103     E-Mail: vfp@igc.org
National Website: www.veteransforpeace.org
Chapter Website: www.chicagovfp.org

"Never again shall one generation of veterans abandon another!"

Support Iraq Veterans Against the War!

That was all he sent, but a message isn't needed from him, just what he wrote to the paper.

Sent it to the NYC VetPac Yahoo Group Board, which handles messages from the NYC,NJ,Long Island and surrounding area between the Veterans Groups an Coalitions, also a number of others on my list, personal as well as groups!!

You All Are Doing Wonders and Your Work and Dedication is Greatly Appreciated, Believe Me!!!!


by jimstaro on Sun Mar 19, 2006 at 06:34:55 PM EST

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