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DoD NEWS SERVICE YANKS ARTICLE ON PERSONALITY
DISORDER DISCHARGES -- "Premature" article claims
DoD's investigation shows 85% of PD discharges
were accurate and only 1.5% were issued in error.

I received the following article on Thursday,
December 20 at 12:51pm Pacific from the Armed Forces Press Service.
Then, 28 minutes later, AFPS "pulled" the article
and sent this message: "WASHINGTON, Dec. 20, 2007 - An American
Forces Press Service article titled 'Military Works to Improve Personality
Disorder-Based Discharge Process' was distributed prematurely. It has been
removed from the DoD Web page. E-mail subscribers, please disregard it. We
apologize for the inconvenience."
I waited for over a day to see if they would
resend...and what changes, if any, would be made in the article.
The new article hasn't arrived...so, we go with
the old one. If a new article is released, I'll post it for
comparison.
This appears to be the "official" word from DoD
that they are doing the right thing with personality disorder discharges.
This is not good news and doesn't connect with a
simple question: If these people had personality disorders, how did
they get into the service in the first place?
For more about veterans and the personality
disorder discharge, use the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch
.php?q=PERSONALITY+DISORDER&op=ph
"Premature" story WAS here...
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=48489
Story below:
-------------------------
Military Works to Improve Personality
Disorder-Based Discharge Process
By John J. Kruzel
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Dec. 20, 2007 - The military is working to improve the way it
implements a policy of discharging troops based on pre-existing
personality disorders, Defense Department health officials said today.
Several articles in summer 2007 claimed that some 22,500 troops had been
discharged -- in some instances, wrongly discharged -- after being
diagnosed as having personality disorders. In response, the Defense
Department launched a "secondary review."
In the ongoing investigation thus far, officials have reconfirmed that 85
percent of servicemembers initially determined to have personality
disorders were correctly diagnosed. Roughly 1.5 percent, however, were
misdiagnosed, officials said.
Article continues below:
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"We have looked at most of them, and some, on
review, have been incorrect diagnoses," Dr. S. Ward Casscells, assistant
secretary of defense for health affairs, told reporters at the Pentagon
today.
Casscells denied the most inflammatory claim made in the articles: that
the military was shirking its responsibility to those affected. "When the
articles first came out, the tenor was, 'Military is labeling people
(with) personality disorders so they don't have to pay benefits,'" he
said. "We did not find any evidence of that."
Echoing Casscells' comments, Air Force Col. Joyce Adkins, director of
psychological health and strategic operations, defended the policy, but
acknowledged possible flaws in implementation.
Adkins clarified that a personality disorder does not necessarily bar an
individual from serving in the armed forces. "Certainly there are many
people who have personality traits that we would characterize as a
disorder who have stayed in the military," she said. "It's only when their
personality doesn't fit well with the job that they are separated."
Moreover, Adkins said a "separation," or discharge, on the basis of a
personality disorder can benefit the discharged servicemember because it
serves as a "safety valve," freeing the servicemember from further
obligation to military service.
"If you have a job and you don't fit well with that job, you can quit,"
she said. "In the military, you can't just quit that easily. This is a way
to say that this person doesn't fit well with this job and to allow them
to pursue other employments."
Adkins added that the "large majority" of such discharges occur within the
first two years of military service.
The difficulty of assessing a dormant personality disorder underscores the
complexity of the issue highlighted by media attention and subsequent
hearings on Capitol Hill.
In most cases, no psychological evaluation can determine whether a
personality disorder is apparent at the time of enlistment, as many signs
of a latent disorder are undetectable. But despite difficulties in
detecting pre-existing personality disorders, Adkins said, the military
could improve the way it evaluates servicemembers returning from combat
who are suspecting of suffering from such disorders.
"We are really stepping up on specifying the clinical criteria for what
that evaluation should include," she said. "We want to make sure that
(misdiagnoses) do not happen, that when a person is supposed to get a
thorough evaluation, they do get a thorough evaluation.
"If you have a clinical condition, such as (post-traumatic stress
disorder), major depressive disorder, an anxiety disorder, that certainly
is treatable," she continued. "And we want to know if the problems with
your behavior are related to one of these treatable conditions ... or if
it is related to a personality disorder, which is not easily treated."
With regard to inaccurate evaluations, Adkins called it "disturbing to
think that that might not be implemented in the way that it was intended."
She added that in large systems, like military health care, there are
bound to be some issues with "quality control."
Adkins said that $900 million appropriated by Congress to increase the
number of mental health personnel will help efforts to improve the current
process.
Casscells lamented troops whose personality disorders become manifest
during the course of military service, and emphasized a continuing
obligation to these individuals.
"The military doesn't bring out the best in them, like it does in most
people. In their case, it uncovered something else," he said. "There are
some people who want to serve but shouldn't serve because it's not the
right culture for them.
"I feel our responsibility is to not blame them for the fact that they
wanted to serve," he said.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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