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VETERANS RETURNING FROM WARS FIND VA UNDER
STRESS -- "Within the next three to five years,
the flood of
vets seeking help is probably going to overwhelm
the VA."

Iraq War veteran Christopher M.
Kreiger — at home since Thursday with wife, Melissa, and sons C.J.,
6, left, and Cole, 4 — suffers from seizures and hallucinations and
has been in and out of VA hospital seven times. (photo: Bill Wippert
/ Buffalo News) |
For a previous story about Christopher Kreiger,
click here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/07/nf07/nfDEC07/nf121707-8.htm
Story here...
http://www.buffalonews.com/home/story/290243.html
Story below:
-------------------------
‘Flood’ coming as soldiers return home needing
care
Veterans returning from wars find VA under strain
By Lou Michel NEWS STAFF REPORTER
Another surge is putting pressure on the nation’s military.
It is the surge of veterans from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
returning home with physical and psychological wounds, and the question
is: Are the nation’s veterans hospitals equipped and staffed to handle it?
“The flood is coming,” said Patrick W. Welch, director of veterans
services for Erie County. “Within the next three to five years, the flood
of vets seeking help is probably going to overwhelm the VA.”
It started with a trickle. Just 61 of these newest war veterans sought
help at the local VA hospital in 2003.
But in the years after, nearly 1,800 vets returning from Iraq and
Afghanistan went to the Buffalo VA and its seven community clinics.
Article continues below:
(use left/right arrows in screen to view more videos)
|
Local VA officials acknowledge the growing
demand, and they say they are keeping up with it and will hire 150 more
people to continue what, they insist, is success in providing prompt and
comprehensive health care.
The VA’s optimism is not shared by everyone.
Jeremy Lepsch, a Marine who served with an anti-terrorist unit in east
Africa, says his most recent admission to the Veterans Affairs Medical
Center’s psychiatric unit exposed him to staff shortages and overworked
psychiatrists.
Dana Cushing, who served twice in Iraq and once in east Africa, says she
has to make a 300-mile round-trip drive to the Syracuse VA because she
can’t get timely appointments here with a women’s doctor.
And then there’s Iraq War veteran Christopher M. Kreiger.
He has several physical and psychological problems and has been in and out
of the Buffalo VA Medical Center seven times. In the last six months, his
condition has worsened as he suffered from mysterious seizures and
hallucinations and has been unable to sleep. Kreiger was released Thursday
from the hospital and says he still does not know what is ruining his
health.
Despite repeated promises by VA doctors to send the Town of Tonawanda
father to a facility better equipped to diagnose and possibly cure him,
Kreiger remains here.
Even in the face of these criticisms, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
officials say they provide top-notch care, and veterans, in satisfaction
surveys, give the local VA Medical Center an approval rating of 75 percent
or better, which is consistent with national ratings.
But in the same breath, the local VA officials say they are looking to
hire 150 more staff members this year, from clerical support to medical
personnel. That would raise the overall hospital staff here to 2,025.
Over the last five years — since the Iraq War began in 2003 — the hospital
has added 86 employees.
The 1,800 new patients who arrived during that same time make up only a
fraction of the overall number of veterans receiving VA medical treatment
in Western New York. The VA estimates that it assists more than 40,000
local veterans annually.
Michael S. Finegan, the top VA health care administrator in Western New
York, says the system is on solid footing with staff and resources. Its
2008 budget, he said, is $200 million, which is $70 million more than the
$130 million allocated in 2003.
“If we don’t have the service in the building, we buy it in the
community,” Finegan said. “Every two weeks, I get a report on who’s
waiting more than 30 days for an appointment. Job number one is to get
vets in within 30 days.”
Because of patient confidentiality, Finegan says, he cannot identify
veterans who have had successful recoveries at the VA.
But he says they are many, including veterans who have been helped through
anger issues and now work full time, as well as vets who have learned how
to handle panic attacks and other psychological issues. He also cited a
vet who regained his speech after recovering from a traumatic brain
injury.
Some veterans, nevertheless,
tell a different story of waiting months for care when it comes to
appointments with specialists and getting diagnostic tests.
Funding falls short
When Kreiger began having seizures, doctors ordered an MRI on his brain,
but because the machine was broken, he said he waited about a month before
a portable machine was brought in to do the scan.
Even with the results, doctors were unable to diagnose his problem,
Kreiger said, and they took him off most of his medications and sent him
home with a supply of morphine.
At 8 p.m. last Monday , he was rushed to the VA Medical Center on Bailey
Avenue suffering from hallucinations, double vision, slurred speech, and
severe head and neck pains.
A doctor thought blood vessels in his brain had burst, and Kreiger was
admitted to the cardiology ward — a move that Kreiger’s relatives said
they found baffling.
“Why would he be placed in the cardio ward if he had a brain injury?”
asked Melissa Kreiger, his wife. “We later found out he was overmedicated
and it was poisoning his liver. Every time he goes there, they either give
him medicine or increase it.”
She said that on Tuesday, she met with Finegan to inform him that his
doctors continued to break their promise of sending her husband to a VA
hospital better equipped to deal with brain injuries.
She says she’s still waiting to hear back from Finegan.
During his time in Iraq, Kreiger was wounded four times. And he had a
close call when a 15-year-old Iraqi boy shot at him and two other
soldiers. Kreiger, a medic, shot the boy and then saved his life with
first aid.
A big part of the problem for Kreiger and other veterans who say they are
not receiving adequate medical treatment is insufficient national funding
of the VA, according to Welch, the local veterans services director and a
Vietnam War veteran.
“Congress will not fund the VA properly to do the job,” Welch said, in
predicting that the VA will be overwhelmed by returning combat veterans.
“One of the things we advocate is that Congress has to look at the VA as
part of the cost of war.”
At last count, 31,000 members of the armed forces were listed as wounded
in Iraq and Afghanistan.
But Finegan says the federal government is aware of the situation and is
budgeting for it. Returning troops, he added, have many problems, and that
presents greater challenges for the VA.
Welch acknowledges that VA funding has increased nationally but “not at
the level that the nine major veterans services organizations feel is
appropriate.”
Finegan and his staff cite steps they have taken to meet current and
future needs, particularly in the area of hiring mental health workers:
three additional psychiatrists, bringing the total to 13; five more
psychologists, increasing those ranks to 15; and doubling the number of
psychiatric social workers to 32. Also, two care coordinators have been
hired to help returning veterans.
Still, some veterans with persistent health problems, including
combat-related mental illness, say they feel ignored and betrayed.
Delays breed disgust
Lepsch, the Marine who served with an anti-terrorist unit in east Africa
and passed through Iraq, said he suffers from multiple psychological and
physical ailments.
When recently admitted to the VA’s psychiatric ward, Lepsch said that he
spent most of his time watching television and that after two days, he
left in disgust.
“I felt I was doing more harm than good to myself,” said Lepsch, who is
currently on “medical hold” awaiting retirement. “They pretty much are
treating everybody up there like they are a drug addict or an alcoholic.
In my case, I have 300 sheets of paper in my medical records explaining
about my [post-traumatic stress disorder] and my back and other ailments.”
Short staffing while he was at the ward, he said, resulted in psychiatric
patients not being taken outside to a courtyard for fresh air each day.
“Psychiatrists just basically give you a medication and you see the doctor
once a day. The doctor asks if your medication is working and that’s it,”
said Lepsch, 24, of North Tonawanda.
Cushing, a former Marine, described her efforts to get comprehensive
treatment from the VA as a major challenge, since she received a medical
retirement two years ago.
“They’re supposed to have four women’s doctors at the VA hospital here,
but my VA social worker told me two quit because of the big workload and a
third got tired of working here and one doctor is left,” Cushing said of
why she now travels to the Syracuse VA for care.
VA officials offered a clarification, explaining that while there might
have been more than one women’s doctor, they were part time and equaled
one full-time position only. As for the long trips to Syracuse, Dr. Thomas
Mahl, a 17-year VA employee and administrator, acknowledged that this
some- times happens but noted that 90 percent of veterans receive medical
care locally.
“The big problem with the VA is they don’t have the doctors. They keep
giving you to physician assistants, and that’s even if you can get an
appointment,” Cushing said.
The VA says veterans do have the option of seeing a medical doctor. The
ratio between primary-care physicians and local VA patients is 1 doctor to
every 1,200 patients, according to the VA. That number is close to the
statewide ratio of primary-care physicians to patients.
Sharon M. McGrath, a longtime veterans’ advocate, said that other veterans
do have “good experiences,” though she believes that the VA has lost
ground since she worked for it in the mid-1980s.
And newer combat veterans such as Cushing and Kreiger by no means have the
market cornered when it comes to concerns over VA health care.
A psychiatric nurse who left the VA in 1985 to open C.O.P.I.N. House in
Niagara Falls for troubled Vietnam veterans, McGrath says she has to take
an aggressive stand every time she sends a veteran to the VA.
Staff ‘being mobbed’
“I know it’s staffing, and I know they’re being mobbed,” McGrath said.
“They’ll placate me because I have a big mouth, and I’m not afraid to pick
up the phone, but I feel for the staff. I see the staff is working itself
to death.”
VA staff members, in fact, told The Buffalo News that they often work
beyond their normal workday to assist veterans and do not seek extra
compensation.
That, however, does not lessen McGrath’s frustration with how veterans are
sometimes released before receiving proper care.
“We just had one of our vets picked up the other day from the VA hospital;
he had not shaved,” McGrath said. “When questioned, he said he wasn’t even
offered a razor. He wasn’t suicidal. He was in because he’s an alcoholic.”
Finegan said that there are plans to expand the Buffalo VA Medical
Center’s psychiatric ward and noted that the VA’s overall national budget
for mental health spending increased by $300 million last year.
Dr. Sudha Krishnaswamy, the local VA’s chief of psychiatry, said other
steps are being taken to make psychiatric care more accessible.
“We have telepsychiatry, where the patient and psychiatrist are hooked up
live [on closed-circuit television] at our community clinics,” she said.
That same type of technology is used to conduct dermatologic and diabetic
eye exams at the clinics, making it more convenient for patients,
according to Finegan and his staff.
But McGrath says there are shortcomings in talking with a mental health
expert over closed-circuit TV.
“How would you like to talk to a psychiatrist by television? This is more
convenient for the staff,” said McGrath, who has worked with vets who have
complained about having to see a psychiatrist by way of TV.
And while the VA defends its practices, noting that capital improvements
are modernizing its facilities, including a state-of- art dental clinic,
other veterans advocates are less enthusiastic and say problems here
mirror those in other VA regions across the country.
“After monitoring the VA for 30-plus years, it seems they treat the
symptom, not the root problem. They will push as much medication as they
can on you and then tell you get in line and wait for an appointment,”
said Russell K. Terry, cofounder and chief executive officer of the
California-based Ira q War Veterans Organization.
Terry, who served two tours of duty in Vietnam, says he is disturbed by
what he hears from veterans and those who know of their plight.
“I have talked to many many coroners who have gone into the homes of
veterans after their death, either from natural causes or by suicide, and
they were absolutely stunned at how much medication the veteran had in his
or her bathroom.”
He is quick to say that the VA often succeeds at its job.
“But when it fails,” he said, “it can cost a human life.”
lmichel@buffnews.com
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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