![]() ![]() The Nation's #1 Independent Veterans Web Site Click here to make VA Watchdog dot Org your homepage VA NEWS FLASH from Larry Scott at VA Watchdog dot Org -- 07-30-2007 #3 |
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FIGHTING THE SYSTEM FROM WITHIN -- Tammy Duckworth reflects on her new role as director of the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs and what needs to be done to fix the federal system. Says federal VA "is incredibly frustrating to me."
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http://www.msnbc.msn. Story below: ------------------------- Fighting the System from Within Tammy Duckworth reflects on her new role as
director of the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs and what needs
to be done to fix the federal system.
Tammy Duckworth: Reflecting on my experience recovering at Walter Reed, it seemed so illogical that only those of us with obvious physical injuries were being screened for TBI. You know, if we were at a high-school football game and the quarterback gets a couple of hard hits in a game or over the course of a season, we'd certainly check him out for a concussion or an injury. Yet we don't do this for a soldier who walks away from an IED seemingly OK. As for the PTSD part of the program, there's a real issue with access to USDVA care. Most of our vets live well over an hour's drive from the nearest USDVA facility. When you wake up at 3 in the morning, you need a way to reach out for help. This 24-hour PTSD hotline staffed by clinicians does just that.
Governor Blagojevich is backing the program fully. We will use existing available funds to get the TBI and PTSD program started and will work with the state legislators to get the additional funding that is necessary. The program increases health-care benefits and we hope that it will later become part of the governor's Illinois Covered health-care plan.
The reason this program is so important is that no one truly knows. The numbers that I've seen range from below 10 percent to 25 percent. What this program will do is help identify those mild and moderate cases that are easily missed. I think the fact that no systematic comprehensive screening of all [Iraq war] vets exists is a real disservice to our troops and their families.
Yes, I was screened for PTSD and TBI. I never attended the formal counseling sessions for PTSD but the staff psychiatrist at Walter Reed certainly visited me like he did all the wounded.
I will be working very closely on the PTSD/TBI program. The program will be the responsibility of my department even though the actually delivery of service will be under the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services. I see myself as an advocate for my buddies who may or may not know that they need help. I didn't talk about my dreams of Iraq for a long time. I mentioned it to a fellow vet once and he was so happy to know that someone else had dreams, too, that I felt I needed to be open about my experiences.
We plan on having it operational September of this year.
I think that generally speaking the federal government was not prepared for the number of PTSD and TBI cases coming out of these conflicts. I have no idea why the federal government didn't immediately begin to screen all of its returning troops for TBI once it became apparent that this was a significant injury of the war. To be fair, it is easier for states to screen just their vets than it is for the federal government to implement a national program. Regardless, it is something that must be done. Both TBI and PTSD have a higher success rate if the treatment begins as early as possible.
There are many ways we could address the problem and one solution may be a partnership between states and the federal government. For example, Illinois's PTSD/TBI program is meant as a supplement to help identify the cases that are missed by DOD and USDVA and to help those slipping through the cracks. It is relatively easy to train clinicians to conduct the initial screenings and for the USDVA to take over once the cases are identified. I also think that the fifth year of the war is a woefully late point in time to start thinking about training PTSD clinicians. However, if the resources were truly put into it, we could train civilian mental-health providers to provide the needed care. Unfortunately, I don't see the federal government putting in this kind of effort right now.
It is incredibly frustrating to me to hear of the federal VA's backlogs. Right now they range from 400,000 to 600,000 cases. All those cases represent real men and women who have served. For the new claims, the vets can't get access to VA care until they are deemed eligible. This means that someone suffering from a brain injury may have to wait as long as 18 months to two years before getting help!
I owe my life to the incredibly dedicated men and women at Walter Reed. The problems there were a result of lack of planning by the leadership. I saw some of the structural strains on Walter Reed when I was there. For example, my social worker was working 60-70 hour weeks to take care of his patients during my time [there]. Three years later, the number of patients had grown significantly but the number of social workers stayed the same. I still go back to Walter Reed and would trust the staff there with my life again. I just wish they had been supported by the leadership.
I was surprised it took so long.
It was an exhausting, enriching experience. I can best compare it to trying to complete a 12-mile road march in full combat load. At the end of it you're dead on your burning feet, bruised, hurting in places you didn't know existed, but damn proud of having done it.
Life really does go on. It just takes me longer to do the same things that I used to do before. It can be frustrating, but then I remember that I made it home and over 3,000 of my comrades didn't.
Trying to find some time to take a vacation! -------------------------
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