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78-YEAR-OLD VETERAN WAGES WAR AGAINST VA FOR
BENEFITS -- "I have a claim. I know it's true.
They can't
tell me it never happened like they did before."

Edgar Freyre with a mound of VA
paperwork. (Tribune photo by MICHAEL SPOONEYBARGER) |
Story here...
http://www2.tbo.com/content/2008/
apr/10/na-fla-veteran-wages-war-against-va-for-benefits/
Story below:
-------------------------
Fla. Veteran Wages War Against VA For Benefits
By JOHN W. ALLMAN
The Tampa Tribune
TAMPA - Edgar Freyre knows about being at war.
Despite never seeing military combat, the U.S. Army veteran has spent
nearly a decade fighting an unlikely foe: his own government.
Freyre, 78, of Tampa, says he is entitled to medical benefits through the
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. He contends that he got sick while
training to fight in the Korean War and that the illness continues to
affect his health today.
The federal government has repeatedly denied his claims and appeals,
citing, in part, a lack of medical evidence.
"They claim it hasn't been proved yet, but that has nothing to do with me.
I am here. I know it happened to me," he said. "I'm not lying. I don't
have to lie."
Freyre first applied for benefits in 1967. He was
denied at the time and didn't challenge the decision for more than 30
years. Since 1999, however he has aggressively pursued compensation after
being diagnosed with nutritional hepatitis with cirrhosis, which his
doctors link to his previous illness.
In December 2007, the VA's decision was upheld by the U.S. Court of
Appeals for Veterans Claims in Washington.
Now Freyre is awaiting a new ruling from the VA after submitting new
evidence in January.
He is hopeful that this time will be different. He fears that time is
running out. His health, he said, is deteriorating. He wants his benefits
approved before he dies so his wife might be eligible to receive widow's
compensation.
And he's angry.
He said he was unable to work for most of his adult life because of his
illness. He has spent as much as $190 a month for years on medication he
believes should have been covered. And he doesn't understand why VA
officials won't take responsibility.
"That evidence is under consideration, so he will be getting another
decision," said Collette Burgess, assistant service center manager at the
VA's regional office in St. Petersburg.
The average wait time on claims at the St. Petersburg office is about 106
days, less than the 180-day national average.
If his claim is denied, however, and he has to file another appeal, the
average wait time for an appeals ruling is nearly a year.
Freyre said he has researched and found a number of cases in which
veterans died before their cases were resolved. He vowed not to let that
happen to him.
"I'm going to continue pursuing it. They're never going to stop me. Who
are they to deny me something that is right?" he asked. "I have a claim. I
know it's true. They can't tell me it never happened like they did
before."
The Facts
It shouldn't be this hard to prove.
Freyre has medical records showing various treatments he has received. He
has blood work. He has medical opinions from three Tampa specialists, all
supporting his claim.
And he has the facts.
In 1948, Freyre joined the Army and was sent to Puerto Rico, his
birthplace, to train for two years. He spent time digging ditches and
working in streams, immersing himself in the water and drinking it.
He was discharged two years later, in 1950, and moved home to New York.
That's when the problems began.
Freyre suffered severe abdominal pain and frequent bouts of diarrhea, he
said, starting in 1951. By 1957, he was diagnosed with schistosomiasis, a
disease caused by parasitic worms.
Schistosomiasis is not common in the United States, but can be contracted
in places such as Puerto Rico, particularly when people are exposed to
contaminated water. Freyre said he was not sick with the condition as a
child.
His doctor at the time injected him with Fuadin, a drug used to treat
schistosomiasis.
The injections worked, but his symptoms continued. Freyre says he believes
the parasites had already damaged him internally, which is why he kept
having problems.
When Freyre filed his first claim for benefits in 1967, the VA said he
showed no signs of illness when he was discharged, nor had he complained
of being ill.
Freyre presented medical opinions that said such illnesses could go
undetected for years.
The claim was denied, in part, because no medical records existed from his
treatment in 1957.
That's because all record of Freyre's treatment in the late 1950s was
destroyed except for a doctor's certificate, which says he was treated for
schistosomiasis.
Steve Westerfeld, a VA spokesman in Washington, said it's a common problem
the VA faces when dealing with older veterans. Many records simply no
longer exist.
Freyre said he decided not to fight the denial at the time because he had
a wife and a growing family to support.
However, his condition continued - and worsened - for nearly 30 years.
Claims Increasing
Freyre is like thousands of veterans who seek compensation every year.
During fiscal year 2007, which ended in September, the department received
more than 838,000 claims, a sharp increase over past years, Westerfeld
said.
The department also is seeing more reopened claims, he said, from veterans
such as Freyre who make another attempt to receive benefits.
If Freyre's claim were approved, officials would calculate his monthly
compensation based on factors such as the severity of illness or
disability. They also would look to see whether he was eligible for any
retroactive payment.
"It's a very open-ended system," Westerfeld said. "A veteran has the right
to appeal any decision we made, whether it's a decision to grant or a
decision to deny."
Appeals take longer to reach a decision, however. As of September, the
department had 140,000 pending appeals, each of which can take an average
of 300 days to resolve.
The St. Petersburg office, on average, can process an appeal in 244 days.
Westerfeld said the department is trying to improve its ability to deal
with a growing population. It is hiring 3,000 new employees and rehiring
retired employees to help train them.
The entire process can be overwhelming for a veteran.
"They want to say, this is all connected to my service and the government
should help me out," he said. "We certainly get that."
The VA agreed to discuss Freyre's case with The Tampa Tribune after he
signed a privacy waiver.
There was much officials can't say, however, including whether other
veterans received benefits for the same medical condition.
The VA also can't say how much has been spent to deny Freyre's claim.
Those costs aren't tracked either, Westerfeld said.
Freyre also couldn't provide an estimate, but said he has spent thousands
of dollars on medical care, tests and medications since he was diagnosed
in 1957.
Officials also declined to say whether the length of time Freyre has spent
trying to receive benefits is normal.
"I'm not going to speculate on that," Burgess said.
Appeal Denied
Freyre left New York in the 1970s and moved to Tampa. He continued seeking
construction jobs, but said his health made work difficult.
By 1998, he was still sick, but he had new hope. He had been diagnosed
with nutritional hepatitis with cirrhosis, which his doctor said could be
linked to the schistosomiasis.
Freyre filed a new claim for benefits in November 1999, but that, too, was
denied.
He requested a hearing. He provided testimony. He hired a lawyer. He
collected multiple medical opinions.
"I feel unable to disregard the thought that this patient has both
illnesses as a mere coincidence," Margarita Cancio of the Infectious
Disease Associates of Tampa Bay wrote in 2004. Cancio is a former chief of
staff at Tampa General Hospital.
The veterans department sought its own experts in 2000, 2004 and 2005 to
counter Freyre's claims. One was Rathel Nolan, an infectious disease
specialist at the University of Mississippi Medical Center.
Nolan was paid $500 in 2005 to address two questions: Was it possible
Freyre contracted schistosomiasis, as he said, while in the Army? And
could his nutritional hepatitis with cirrhosis have occurred as a result?
The answers: Maybe, and no.
"If he indeed had schistosomiasis, it is a reasonable conclusion that he
contracted it during his service," Nolan said, saying no record of
Freyre's initial diagnosis was available. "Since that time, there have
been no definitive tests to show that the patient had schistosomiasis."
Nolan argued that nowhere in Freyre's medical exams was there any evidence
of the disease. Freyre has contended in his appeals that the Fuadin
injections in 1957 cured the schistosomiasis, but that the damage to his
liver and intestines had already been done because it went undiagnosed for
years.
A year later, in February 2006, the Board of Veterans Appeals denied his
appeal.
His Goal
Most people likely would give up, but Freyre's attorney, Michael
Steinberg, said he disagreed with the decision.
"It's just my opinion that they could have said circumstantially, more
likely than not, his current condition could be related," Steinberg said.
"They gave more weight to the opinion of their doctor."
Steinberg told Freyre he still had options. He could appeal to federal
court, or he could submit new evidence.
In 2006, while his appeal was being considered, Freyre submitted to a new
blood test to detect schistosoma antibodies. The test was positive.
For the first time, doctors had found evidence in Freyre's system of the
disease that the VA's expert essentially questioned whether he ever had.
Three months ago, Freyre reopened his claim.
It's no longer about money, he said. He just wants to prove finally that
he hasn't been wrong all this time.
And, he said, "That's what I'm going to do before I die."
Reporter John W. Allman can be reached at (813) 259-7915 or
jallman@tampatrib.com.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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