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ANOTHER VETERAN COMMITS SUICIDE AFTER SEEKING
HELP AT SPOKANE VA -- This is the sixth suicide
this year
of a veteran who had contact with the Spokane VA.

Lucas Senescall
For a previous story about suicides by veterans
seen at the Spokane VA...click here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/nf08/nfAPR08/nf043008-5.htm
For more about veterans and suicide, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=suicide&op=and
Today's story here...
http://www.spokesman
review.com/breaking/story.asp?ID=15796
Story below:
-------------------------
Lives lost at home
Kevin Graman
Staff writer
A distraught 26-year-old Navy veteran who had a history of mental illness
hanged himself within three hours of seeking help at Spokane Veterans
Affairs Medical Center. The July 7 death of Lucas Senescall was the sixth
suicide this year of a veteran who had contact with the Spokane VA, a
marked increase in such deaths.
Last year, there were two suicides among veterans treated at the local VA.
Senescall's death comes amid heightened concern nationwide over the
suicide rate among veterans.
VA officials said the medical center continues to take steps to identify
veterans at risk of harming themselves, and it is training all employees
in suicide prevention. Citing confidentiality rules, officials would not
identify the recent fatalities.
But the identity of one other veteran who killed himself this year became
public when his family wrote U.S. Sen. Patty Murray in April about
concerns with VA mental health care. Spc. Timothy Juneman, 25, a National
Guardsman and former Stryker Brigade
soldier
who was injured in a roadside explosion in Iraq, died March 5.
The same VA psychiatrist, Dr. William L. Brown, attended Senescall on the
day he died and Juneman in early January when he was released from
inpatient suicide watch at the Spokane VA. Brown had prescribed Juneman
several medications, including potent antidepressant, anti-anxiety and
antipsychotic drugs.
Parents of both dead veterans have independently raised concerns that the
Spokane VA could have done more to save their sons.
"He was begging for help, and they kicked him to the curb," said
Senescall's father, Steve Senescall, of Spokane, who drove his son to the
hospital and was with him during a brief consultation with Brown.
Said Juneman's mother, Jacqueline Hergert, of Toledo, Wash.: "This thing
should never have happened with my son."
Juneman was a combat veteran diagnosed by the Spokane VA with traumatic
brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder. He was attending
Washington State University. "As soon as those diagnoses were made,
somebody should have been standing on a soapbox for him, and nothing was
done," Hergert said.
Juneman's body was found in his Pullman home March 25, nearly three weeks
after he had hanged himself. He had missed several appointments at the
Spokane VA. In records obtained by Juneman before his death, Brown wrote
that imminent redeployment to Iraq with the National Guard was a "major
stressor" contributing to Juneman's condition, his mother said.
The Spokane VA couldn't contact the 161st Infantry of the Washington Army
National Guard to advise officials there of Juneman's diagnosis. Without a
patient's consent, the VA cannot inform the Department of Defense about
the medical condition of "active veterans" such as Guard and Reserve
members.
The week before he died, Juneman received final notification that the
National Guard had rescinded a promise not to send him back to Iraq for
two years.
Brown has declined through VA officials to comment on either Juneman's or
Senescall's case. His superiors at the Spokane VA said they were unable to
speak about specific cases because of laws protecting patients'
confidentiality.
However, Sharon Helman, the medical center's director, and Dr. Gregory
Winter, chief of behavioral health, said each of the six suicides this
year was being investigated. As of this year, they said, every hospital
employee is undergoing suicide prevention training.
"We have dedicated mental health staff who are very passionate about
treating veterans, whatever their diagnosis is, to ensure they receive the
quality, safe care that they deserve," Helman said. "When there is even
just one suicide we are going to do everything we can to look at our
process to determine (whether there is) anything we can do to improve that
process and that care."
Winter said that when he came to the Spokane VA medical center seven years
ago, his staff numbered about 30. Today, largely as a result of increased
attention to the mental health of returning veterans, that number has
grown to 52 behavioral health workers, who see about 4,500 patients.
"We save lives every day in the mental health service and all the other
services as well, but we are not 100 percent," Winter said. "It is a
tragedy when we lose a veteran and we ask ourselves many, many questions
when that happens."
Senescall's death under review
The Spokane VA is reviewing the death of Senescall, who hanged himself
with an extension cord in his garage between 4 and 5 p.m. July 7 after
leaving the hospital at 2:30 p.m. His father said the veteran remained
depressed and agitated when left the facility.Senescall's father and VA
medical records obtained by him describe a troubled young man unable to
pull his life together after leaving the Navy, where he had served from
July 2000 until September 2002, including service aboard the aircraft
carrier USS Kitty Hawk.
"He joined the Navy because his brother Jacob did," Steve Senescall said.
"He loved his older brother and emulated him." Lucas Senescall was
medically discharged after damaging his knees "hauling fire hoses up and
down stairs on the Kitty Hawk," his father said.
The veteran's first visit to Spokane's VA hospital was in December 2002;
he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, compounded by drinking.
In 2004, while traveling between Florida and Seattle, Senescall became
despondent and attempted to jump off a ramp at SeaTac International
Airport.
A 2005 document from the Puget Sound VA medical center, where Senescall
went to renew a prescription, describes Senescall as having "a long
history of childhood (attention deficit disorder) and depression." The
document said Senescall reported mood swings and severe depression when
not on medication, which included several antidepressants and the mood
stabilizer lithium.
On the day he died, Senescall had called his father, who agreed to pick up
his son and drive him to the medical center. Senescall had been receiving
care there, including mental health care.
The veteran was despondent over a recent breakup with his girlfriend and
domestic violence and malicious mischief charges stemming from an incident
in which he removed an air conditioner from the apartment he once shared
with her, his father said. Senescall also was bothered by a low score in a
class he was taking at Spokane Falls Community College, where he was
studying to become a prosthetics technician.
"Luke was no angel, but he wasn't a rotten kid," Steve Senescall said.
"There was nothing mean about him."
By the time father and son arrived at the hospital at 1 p.m., the veteran
was agitated and crying, "holding his hands on his mouth just to keep from
screaming," Steve Senescall said.
"My heart is just wanting to leave my body," Steve Senescall recalled his
son telling him.
By 2:39 p.m., VA social worker Diane Turner had signed a triage note and
mental health risk assessment of Senescall. Among her findings:
"Veteran is tearful, angry and expresses hopelessness. He is frustrated
with his care at the VA and feels like he is always accused of seeking
medication."
"Veteran denies suicide plan but states, 'I don't want to exist.' "
Turner recorded Senescall's alcohol use, legal problems and that he was
not taking psychotropic medications. She noted that Senescall was
sometimes loud and angry. At other times his father had to speak for him.
She noted he had missed mental health appointments in the past.
The social worker's suicide risk management inventory, a standardized
questionnaire used to screen patients capable of harming themselves, noted
suicidal thoughts and multiple stressors, then concluded, "Risk low.
Patient commits to safety plan."
Turner handed Senescall her name, her number, and the number for the VA
national suicide hot line. The veteran agreed to stay and meet with Brown,
the psychiatrist.
In his notes, signed at 2:46 p.m., Brown recorded treating Senescall for
adjustment disorder and that his father did most of the talking because
his son was crying. "The patient denied using alcohol or illicit drugs,"
Brown wrote.
Brown noted Senescall's active medications, including anti-anxiety drugs
and painkillers.
He described Senescall's attitude as "irritable, impulsive, intense" and
his mood as "depressed, hopeless, helpless, dysphoric, anxious." He wrote
that Senescall had no suicidal or homicidal thoughts.
"It's hard to know what is going on with Luc (sic) due to his poor
follow-through," Brown wrote.
"I point out to him and his dad that his last presentation to me in 2005
was almost identical. But he has had 2 NO SHOWS with me since then and
most recently a NO SHOW with (another VA psychiatrist). If there was a
quick solution to this problem, we would have given it to him by now. He
is going to need to work at his recovery and show some motivation for this
prior to being prescribed medications," Brown wrote.
Steve Senescall described Brown's attitude during the brief examination as
callous, arrogant and accusatory. Now the father is asking, "Why didn't he
have Luke stay the night, if only for observation?"
Brown scheduled an appointment for Senescall on July 21, two weeks away.
On the way home from the hospital, Senescall became agitated when his
father asked him why he had missed earlier appointments at the VA center.
When their car was stopped at a stoplight, the veteran got out and walked
away from his father's car.
"I thought the walk would do him good," Steve Senescall said.
He never saw his son alive again.
According to VA records, the veteran left a message about 3:24 for VA
nurse practitioner Lester Peters to call him. Peters was off for the day.
The nurse who took Senescall's message called the veteran around 3:31 to
make sure he was OK.
"No, I'm not … OK," was Senescall's reply.
The nurse informed Peters, who called Senescall about 4 p.m.
Peters wrote in his notes from the conversation that Senescall felt
anxious and was crying. He reported that Senescall was taking the
antidepressant sertraline, but was running out. Peters said he would
continue the prescription until Senescall's appointment later in the
month.
He advised the veteran to seek help if he felt suicidal or his condition
worsened.
Senescall's brother Jacob and his roommate found his body in his garage
that evening.
Police told Steve Senescall his son was dead by 5 p.m. About 150 people
attended a memorial service July 13.
The investigating officer told Senescall's father he found 16 prescription
medications in his son's home. It will be several weeks before a
toxicology report is available. In the meantime, the father is engaged in
a legal battle with the VA over release of redacted portions of his son's
medical records.
Veterans' suicide rate twice that of non-veterans
That legal battle is the type Paul Sullivan, a veteran and former VA
employee, knows well. As executive director of the Washington, D.C.-based
group Veterans for Common Sense, he has led efforts to correct perceived
deficiencies in VA mental health care for veterans returning from Iraq and
Afghanistan.
Though his group's lawsuit against VA Secretary James Peake was dismissed
last month in U.S. District Court in San Francisco because the court
lacked jurisdiction in the case, presiding Judge Samuel Conti wrote that
plaintiffs "have demonstrated that their members have suffered injuries in
fact."
During the course of the civil case, Veterans for Common Sense produced
evidence, including VA documents, showing that in recent years 1,000
veterans a month attempted suicide while in VA care.
A CBS News investigation found that in 2005, the latest year for which
numbers are available, 6,256 veterans of all wars in 45 states killed
themselves. Five states could not or would not provide information on
veteran suicides. The investigation found that veterans were killing
themselves at more than double the rate of non-veterans. Veterans age 20
to 24 were two to four times more likely to commit suicide than
non-veterans of the same age.
Spokane VA medical center director Helman attributed at least some of the
increase in the number of reported suicides to increased awareness of the
issue; in the past, the VA might not have heard of all such cases.
Sullivan said the problem could get worse, that the VA is unprepared to
absorb 1.7 million returning Iraqi and Afghanistan war veterans if they
need care. The health care system currently is treating 325,000 of them;
of those, nearly 134,000 are being treated for mental health conditions.
Of the Senescall case, Sullivan said the fact that the VA is withholding
records from the dead veteran's father is evidence that officials are
covering their tracks.
"It's unfortunate that the VA is treating this like a corporation would
handle a lawsuit instead of taking responsibility and fully disclosing the
facts," Sullivan said.
Helman said the VA is "known nationally for its disclosure process" and
that if the investigation reveals a medical error, her staff would be
forthcoming with a patient's family.
She would not disclose whether there had been disciplinary action against
Spokane VA personnel in any of this year's suicides.
Winter, the chief of behavioral health at the Spokane VA, said VA policy
is to conduct an internal, peer review of every suicide involving a VA
patient, as well as a "root-cause analysis" of the incident.
"What we are learning is it is very important for us to maintain contact
with these veterans to make sure they don't fall through the cracks,"
Winter said.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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