| SHINSEKI WANTS TO
"TEACH RESILIENCE" TO PTSD
VA Secretary Eric Shinseki indicates
that troops can be taught not to get PTSD.
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... If you put government officials (elected or appointed) in a
room full of reporters and let them rattle on, sooner or later
someone will say what they really think.
VA Secretary Eric Shinseki
appears to have done that. At a recent White House
roundtable with reporters Shinseki opened up about
PTSD:
More money will fund more
research into PTSD to get a better understanding of its causes,
Shinseki said. “We know a lot about PTSD, but we don’t know
enough,” he said.
Why, for example, are two people who have had the same
experience affected differently? “There’s something here that we
don’t understand,” Shinseki said. “Is it personal makeup,
resilience, how kids were raised, or whatever? But unlocking
that door, for both [the Defense Department] and VA, will be
important because it will help us understand how we can teach
resilience.”
This comes dangerously close to
statements by some in the military and the VA
that PTSD can be cured ... except Shinseki is indicating that
PTSD can be prevented. How? With the Army's
Hooah programs? With
Battlemind? Beyond doubtful.
It is becoming more apparent
that Shinseki is part of the Beltway Bureaucracy that serves
itself instead of those whom they were appointed to serve.
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Obama, Shinseki Cite Post-traumatic Stress as Priority
By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON – Citing the direct
correlation between military deployments and post-traumatic stress
disorder, President Barack Obama said he’s hopeful that increasing
the size of the force will help to reduce incidents of stress.
Obama joined Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric K. Shinseki yesterday
to discuss a broad range of veterans issues, including his
commitment to tackling the causes behind PTSD and providing
resources to help those experiencing it.
“There is a direct connection between the problems of PTSD and the
pace of military operations,” Obama told military reporters during
a roundtable interview at the White House.
“As we are phasing down our operations in Iraq, we’re going to see
fewer PTSD cases coming out of Iraq,” he said. “As we’re seeing
increased velocity of operations in Afghanistan, that’s going to
put more strain on the military personnel who are located there.”
Faced with that hard reality -- one he said he takes to heart as
he deploys troops in the first place -- Obama said he wants to
reduce the incidents of PTSD. And one of the best ways to do that,
he said, is “to reduce the amount of time in theater without a
break.”
Obama noted steps he’s taken to increase the size of the military,
particularly the Army and Marine Corps, which have been most
heavily stressed with deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan.
He
also gave Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates authority to advance
the Army’s growth to end its “stop-loss” policy more quickly. The
unpopular policy keeps some soldiers in uniform beyond the terms
of their enlistment contracts.
The president also approved Gates’ recommendation to temporarily
boost the Army’s active force by 22,000 members, a move expected
to begin making an impact in January.
“All those things are going to make a difference in reducing
stress, because what you’ve seen is that the incidents of
post-traumatic stress disorder increase with each deployment,” the
president said.
But Obama called that just the first step in addressing the issue.
Identifying people with symptoms of PTSD and getting them help
also are key to a comprehensive approach.
“Step No. 2 is making sure that we are doing the screening that’s
necessary so that problems don’t fester, and eliminating the
stigma that may have historically existed when somebody is showing
symptoms of PTSD -- particularly if they’re still in theater, or
still on active duty,” he said.
The military has been working hard to change that paradigm, he
noted. “I think that you’ve seen steps both within all the armed
forces to talk about these issues, encourage people to avail
themselves of services while they’re in theater, but also when
they get home,” he said.
The president recognized “much more aggressive, systemic
screening” VA conducts for every veteran entering its system.
The third step in addressing PTSD is to provide mental health
services to those who need them.
Obama said his fiscal 2010 budget, which includes the largest VA
funding increase in 30 years, will help to confront PTSD and
traumatic brain injuries in a “more robust way.”
“Throwing money at the problem by itself is not enough,” he
conceded. But, he added, money does help by funding more
counselors, mental health specialists and treatment facilities.
“We’re hiring mental health providers,” Shinseki pointed out.
“We’re up to 18,000 in the VA today.”
Shinseki also noted the success of VA’s national suicide hotline,
staffed by mental health professionals. In the year since it went
operational, the hotline -- 1-800-273-TALK (8255) -- has received
about 150,000 calls.
But the biggest measure of the hotline’s effectiveness, Shinseki
said, are the 3,200 “online interventions” in which mental health
professionals were able to help stop suicides “in the process.”
“Because you have a mental health professional recognizing some
cues, with an electronic health record -- you have a name, you
know a location -- you can begin to vector, whether it’s police or
local authorities, to help,” Shinseki said.
Among those 3,200 interventions, one involved a suicide in process
in Baghdad, he said. A mother who was online with her troubled son
called the hotline. That sparked a chain of events that led to
getting notification to the servicemember’s unit commander, who
stepped in to help.
More money will fund more research into PTSD to get a better
understanding of its causes, Shinseki said. “We know a lot about
PTSD, but we don’t know enough,” he said.
Why, for example, are two people who have had the same experience
affected differently? “There’s something here that we don’t
understand,” Shinseki said. “Is it personal makeup, resilience,
how kids were raised, or whatever? But unlocking that door, for
both [the Defense Department] and VA, will be important because it
will help us understand how we can teach resilience.”
Even with more understanding and treatment options for PTSD,
Shinseki acknowledged another challenge: getting people to
acknowledge they need help in the first place.
Mandatory screenings will help, he said. In addition, VA is moving
its mental health care into the primary care areas of its
hospitals. “We’re trying to attack that stigma of, ‘I’m going to
mental health,’ as opposed to ‘I’m going to the hospital,’ where
it’s not so visible,” Shinseki said.
Another challenge is getting veterans, particularly younger ones
who think they can deal with the problem themselves, to reach out
for help. “Some of that is having to break through … the
invincibility of youth, convincing them that they have an issue
[and that] we can help,” he said.
“We know if we get them into treatment, they get better,” he said.
“We also know [that] if we don’t get them into treatment, it
doesn’t get better, and most often it becomes debilitating.”
Shinseki pointed to 131,000 homeless veterans, many of whom began
their downward spiral with undetected and untreated PTSD or other
mental health problems.
As VA works with other agencies to address the homeless veteran
problem, he said, it wants to resolve issues that can help the
newest veterans from facing the same plight in the future.
Obama said he’s seen a change in attitudes about PTSD since the
Vietnam era. “And I think both [the Defense Department] and VA
take the issue of PTSD very seriously,” he said.
“I’m confident that we’re moving in the right direction,” he said.
“We’re putting resources behind it. We’re putting time and energy
behind it. I’m focused on it personally. But it’s going to take
some time.”
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
Shinseki, Obama, PTSD |