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VAOIG REPORT: VETS WITH BRAIN INJURY STILL NOT GETTING
PROPER CARE -- "Significant needs remain unmet,"
according to
the report released by the VA's Office of
Inspector General.

For more about traumatic brain injury, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=traumatic+brain&op=ph
The full VAOIG report is here...
http://www.va.gov/oig/54/reports/VAOIG-08-01023-119.pdf
Story here...
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5
i9DsPWrFDNMKsb0O2AUWqgXrNySwD90CUJG03
Story below:
-------------------------
Audit: Vets with brain injury still not getting
proper care
By HOPE YEN
WASHINGTON (AP) — Many Iraq war veterans with traumatic brain injury are
not getting adequate health care and job assistance for their long-term
recovery despite years of government pledges to do so, Veterans Affairs
Department investigators say.
"Significant needs remain unmet," according to the report released
Thursday by the VA's inspector general. It is the first to examine the
Bush administration's long-term efforts in supporting veterans with
traumatic brain injury, a leading problem among soldiers struck by
roadside bombs that often causes lasting emotional and behavioral
difficulties.
The study tracked a group of 52 patients that received VA treatment after
sustaining brain injury during a seven-month period in 2004. An initial
review by the IG in 2006 found gaps in follow-up care and family
counseling 16 months after the injury and urged the VA to improve
long-term case management.
The VA pledged to coordinate the necessary follow-up care with the
Pentagon, but the latest audit concludes that efforts are still falling
short for roughly one in four patients.
It found that 10 of the 41 veterans who agreed to
be interviewed said they weren't getting needed help for health care,
vocational rehabilitation, family support or housing. At least four
patients specifically cited trouble in getting primary or specialty eye
care, while others reported gaps with family counseling for problems such
as depression and anger.
The report included a VA response in which the department acknowledged
problems with case management but stated that with recent improvements it
now had "systems in place to ensure that all veterans with TBI are being
followed as their clinical needs require."
For example, the VA pointed to plans announced last week to start calling
570,000 recent combat veterans to make sure they know what services are
available to them.
In the audit, investigators praised the new measures as "positive steps"
but questioned whether the VA's latest promise to keep watch over veterans
would prove to be a reality. They said that "at least 8 of 49 veterans we
contacted had significant unmet needs and no evidence of VA case
management in the previous year."
"We continue to be concerned that all veterans discharged after inpatient
rehabilitation for TBI receive case management, unless this has been
explicitly denied by the patient," investigators stated, adding that they
will continue monitoring the VA to ensure Iraq war veterans are receiving
the care they need.
Other findings based on the sample group:
_Eighteen of the 41 interviewed veterans with brain injury, or 44 percent,
said anger was "a problem" for them.
_Twenty-one veterans, or 51 percent, reported receiving adequate
counseling and support for their behavioral or emotional problems.
The report comes amid renewed scrutiny of the Bush administration's
efforts in treating veterans with traumatic brain injury, which in its
mild form is known as a concussion, as well as post-traumatic stress
disorder in light of a prolonged Iraq war. As many as 20 percent of U.S.
combat troops who fought in Iraq or Afghanistan are believed to leave with
signs of possible brain injury, an Army task force has said.
Earlier this year, the Government Accountability Office found that
thousands of Iraq war veterans who could have suffered traumatic brain
injury may be getting unnecessary or inadequate health care because VA
officials have yet to determine whether their initial screening tests are
reliable.
The VA also has faced complaints that a backlog in claims and bureaucratic
hurdles have prevented some recent veterans from getting proper mental and
physical care. Last week, Sens. Daniel Akaka, D-Hawaii, and Patty Murray,
D-Wash., accused the VA's top mental health official of trying to cover up
the number of veterans' suicides and said he should resign.
"While VA has made progress since the last investigation, the inspector
general continues to find that too many veterans with TBI and their loved
ones are not receiving all the assistance and support they need," said
Akaka, who chairs the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee. "This does not
appear to be due to a lack of funding, but rather reflects a failure to
give these veterans and their loved ones the priority attention they are
due."
Active-duty troops who sustain traumatic brain injury are treated for
rehabilitation at one of the VA's four specialized medical centers located
in Tampa, Fla., Richmond, Va., Minneapolis and Palo Alto, Calif.
On the Net:
* Veterans Affairs Department:
http://www.va.gov/
* VA inspector general:
http://www.va.gov/oig/contacts/hotline.asp
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
Don't forget to read all of today's VA
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