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PERSONALITY DISORDER DIAGNOSIS KILLS VETERAN'S
BENEFITS -- "We think it's a disgraceful
situation. We think it's a
deliberate policy to use up kids and then try
to save money."

Christopher Gearhart, 35, of Cape
Coral served nearly 14 years in the military — including three
tours of duty in Iraq, two with the Navy and one with the Army.
(photo: Andrew West / news-press.com) |
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http://www.news-press.
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Diagnosis kills veteran's benefits
Cape man among many battling Army
By JENNIFER BOOTH REED
jreed@news-press.com
Christopher Gearhart served 13 years in the military. He would have put
in more time were it not for a hospitalization, a diagnosis and a
discharge last year.
While on duty last December, Gearhart, 35, of Cape Coral fell into a
state of mania.
He doesn't remember much, only that he was going nonstop, 24 hours a
day. It was worse than being drunk, Gearhart said. Colleagues would
recount what he did or said, and Gearhart could recall none of it.
The soldier was sent to a private psychiatric hospital and diagnosed
with bipolar disorder, a chemical imbalance that causes his emotions to
swing wildly — from mania to depression.
His discharge came soon after, and with it, the military washed its
hands of him, he says.
Gearhart is receiving no Veterans Administration benefits. He has no
job, no disability pay, and most critically, no health benefits. He is
managing his illness with whatever drug samples doctors at Lee Mental
Health are able to find for him. The drugs otherwise cost $2,000 a
month, Gearhart said.
He said U.S. Army officials reclassified his bipolar disease as a
"personality disorder," which covers such things as antisocial,
obsessive or histrionic behaviors.
Gearhart said he was told he could not receive benefits because of the
diagnosis, which is generally considered a pre-existing condition.
Similar stories have been echoed in media reports across the country.
About 22,500 service people have been diagnosed with personality
disorders since 2001.
Now, some watchdog groups and lawmakers are charging the military has
turned the diagnosis into a catch-all, used to discharge those with a
multitude of ailments, including post-traumatic stress disorder.
A congressional inquiry was launched this summer into the personality
disorder diagnoses and alleged denial of benefits.
An Army official, however, said these veterans are eligible for VA
benefits, although they may not get them as quickly as, say, a
combat-wounded soldier.
"There's a lot of misinformation out there, which is unfortunate," said
Col. Elspeth Ritchie, an Army psychiatric consultant and director of the
Proponency Office of Behavioral Health.
She referred specific questions about benefits to the Department of
Veterans Affairs. The News-Press spoke to two public information
officers there requesting details but did not get a response.
Removed from service
Gearhart's discharge came after 12 years in the U.S. Navy, a year in the
Reserves and four months in the Army, where he had planned to finish out
his military career.
Gearhart said an Army officer brought him his discharge papers while he
was being treated at Texas State Mental Hospital, where his commanders
sent him after he had spent six weeks in a private psychiatric hospital.
"He said you're being discharged for a personality disorder," Gearhart
recalled. "I said I didn't have personality disorder. I have bipolar."
Gearhart does not have copies of his diagnoses from Texas, but he
provided The News-Press with doctors' notes from Ruth Cooper Center in
Fort Myers, Riverside Behavioral Health Center in Punta Gorda and a
private psychiatrist, all of which confirmed his bipolar disease.
Diagnosis difficult
Ritchie couldn't talk about Gearhart's case because of medical privacy
laws.
But from her general description of mental health conditions, it's
difficult to see how Gearhart could be diagnosed with a personality
disorder.
Ritchie said neither bipolar nor post traumatic stress disorder are
personality disorders. The Army uses standard medical definitions of
mental health conditions, and bipolar does not fall into the personality
disorder spectrum.
"This has to be a deeply ingrained, maladaptive behavior that interferes
with a soldier's ability to perform his duty," she said.
But she also said the diagnoses could be complicated. Symptoms of
borderline personality disorder could overlap with symptoms of bipolar.
Ritchie said it could take psychological testing and a thorough review
of the soldier's history to determine whether he showed a long-standing
pattern of behaviors, which would suggest personality disorder.
The Army would likely consider opinions of civilian doctors, Ritchie
said, but military physicians would issue a final behavioral analysis
and diagnosis.
Gearhart had three other hospitalizations while on duty and was
hospitalized once through Florida's Baker Act while on leave. All of
those incidents were for depression, Gearhart said. The hospital stays
were short, and the doctors who stabilized him did not diagnose the
bipolar at the time.
Even so, he moved up the Naval ranks to a grade of E-6. The highest rank
for enlisted personnel is E-9.
Gearhart did not yet have copies of his brief Army record, but he
provided copies of his Navy discharge papers, all of them "honorable"
and coded RE-R1, which meant he was eligible to return to military duty.
The discharge papers list numerous awards and designations, including
two Bronze Stars and good conduct medals.
"If he was in the military 13 years, there is no way he could have had a
personality disorder," said Paul Sullivan, a former Department of
Veterans Affairs administrator who now runs the Washington D.C.-based
advocacy group Veterans for Common Sense.
He doesn't know Gearhart, but he's been following cases like his across
the country.
"They used personality disorder just to get rid of him," Sullivan said.
'Disgraceful'
Gearhart's medical debt totals $8,000 — and that's not including a
weeklong hospitalization at Riverside Behavioral Health Center in Punta
Gorda.
Cases like his are infuriating some lawmakers.
"We think it's a disgraceful situation. We think it's a deliberate
policy to use up kids and then try to save money," said U.S. Rep. Bob
Filner, a California Democrat who chairs the House Committee on Veterans
Affairs.
Filner ordered hearings on the subject last summer.
Since then, two Illinois Democrats, U.S. Rep. Phil Hare and Sen. Barack
Obama, have filed legislation asking for a moratorium on personality
disorder diagnoses.
"It's an epidemic and it's an abuse of the system by the military to
kick out veterans and save money by denying veterans their health care
and disability benefits," said Sullivan of Veterans for Common Sense.
According to the Army, the number of soldiers discharged for personality
disorders today is lower than that of the late 1990s. Of the 80,000
soldiers who left service in 2006, 1,086 were discharged for personality
disorders.
Even so, the Army is reviewing the discharges of all combat veterans
diagnosed with personality disorders since 2001, said Ritchie, the Army
colonel.
"We certainly are aware of the allegations and we are taking them very
seriously," she said.
Ritchie said she doesn't believe the allegations of intentional
misdiagnoses.
"A military physician wants to do the right thing by the soldier. The
amount of disability benefits is not an issue," Ritchie said.
A kid again
On a recent morning, Gearhart settled into an armchair in his parents'
Cape Coral home. He's living with them until he can find a job and start
a civilian life.
"It's like I'm a kid again living at home," Gearhart said.
It's hard to read his emotions. He's frustrated by the situation, but
his voice and his expressions don't reveal much. Whether that's because
of his medications or his underlying self or a practiced ability to stay
cool under pressure is impossible to know.
Gearhart has experience in nuclear engineering and accounting,
compliments of the Navy. He also put himself through two years of law
school.
He said his bipolar disease is under control, as long as he can get
medication. He said he should have been diagnosed with the disorder
years ago.
"Looking back on it now, I just thought it was me," he said.
Hope isn't lost.
Ritchie said any soldier who questions his discharge can appeal to the
Army Board for Correction of Military Records. They also can call a
hotline for wounded soldiers and their families to discuss health and
benefits concerns.
"If we did, by any chance, do the wrong thing, we want to right it,"
Ritchie said.
Gearhart has joined the American Legion in the hopes he can purchase
insurance through the organization. He is in the process of applying for
drug assistance programs from the pharmaceutical companies that make his
medication.
And he appealed the VA's denial of benefits, although he wonders whether
the government he served will now assist him.
"All those years spent in the military, it's hard to walk away with
nothing," he said.
"But it's so hard to fight the government."
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U.S. ARMY REGULATIONS
The personality disorder discharge falls under Chapter 5 of the Army
Regulations. The chapter is titled “Separation for Convenience of the
Government.”
It reads:
“Under the guidance in chapter 1, section II, a soldier may be separated
for personality disorder (not amounting to disability (see AR 635–40))
that interferes with assignment or with performance of duty, when so
disposed as indicated in a, below.
a. This condition is a deeply ingrained maladaptive pattern of behavior
of long duration that interferes with the soldier’s ability to perform
duty. (Exceptions: combat exhaustion and other acute situational
maladjustments.) The diagnosis of personality disorder must have been
established by a psychiatrist or doctoral-level clinical psychologist
with necessary and appropriate professional credentials who is
privileged to conduct mental health evaluations for the DOD components.
It is described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV) of
Mental Disorders, 4th edition.
b. Commanders will not take action prescribed in this chapter in lieu of
disciplinary action solely to spare a soldier who may have committed
serious acts of misconduct for which harsher penalties may be imposed
under the UCMJ.
c. Separation because of personality disorder is authorized only if the
diagnosis concludes that the disorder is so severe that the soldier’s
ability to function effectively in the military environment is
significantly impaired. Separation for personality disorder is not
appropriate when separation is warranted under chapters 4, 5, 7, 9, 10,
11, 13, 14, 15, or 18 of this regulation; AR 380–67; or AR 635–40.
d. Nothing in this paragraph precludes separation of a soldier who has
such a condition for other reasons authorized by this regulation.
e. Separation processing may not be initiated under this paragraph until
the soldier has been counseled formally concerning deficiencies and has
been afforded ample opportunity to overcome those deficiencies as
reflected in appropriate counseling or personnel records. (See para
1–16.)
f. When it has been determined that separation under this paragraph is
appropriate, the unit commander will take the actions specified in the
notification procedure. (See chap 2, sec I.)
g. For separation authority, see paragraph 1–19.
h. The service of a soldier separated per this paragraph will be
characterized as honorable unless an entry-level separation is required
under chapter 3, section III. Characterization of service under
honorable conditions may be awarded to a soldier who has been convicted
of an offense by general court-martial or who has been convicted by more
than one special court-martial in the current enlistment, period of
obligated service, or any extension thereof.”
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Larry Scott --