| DEADLY HIGHWAYS FOR
NEW VETERANS New vets
are 75% more likely to die in motor vehicle accidents than
civilians. The rate for motorcycle deaths is an astounding 148%
higher.
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... The VA, realizing veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan were
dying on the highways in record numbers, began a program for safe
driving with the support of NASCAR driver Richard Petty.
Information on the program is here.
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For returning vets, a tragic toll on the roads
Devastating death rate from
crashes sounds the alarm at Veterans Affairs
By Brian MacQuarrie, Globe Staff
NORTHAMPTON - For Dominic Taverna, a two-tour Army scout who
prowled Iraq for insurgents, the dream of peace and quiet lost
some of its appeal when he returned to Revere in 2007.
“I was looking for that rush, and you just couldn’t find it,’’
said Taverna, 28, staring past his folded hands. “You’re driving
90 all the time. You’re hauling ass under overpasses. You just
can’t flip a switch.’’
Former Army sergeant Carlton Duncan, 26, nodded knowingly. He
would drink too much, Duncan said, before grasping the wheel of
his car and driving without any memory of where he went or how he
got there.
Dominick Sondrini, 28, a former Marine officer, raced his car for
the pure thrill of driving 90 miles per hour, “because I knew I
wasn’t going to get in trouble.’’ Police nearly always allowed
Sondrini, who would flash his military ID after a traffic stop, to
drive away without a ticket, he said.
Dangerous driving is often a byproduct of military bravado, the
three veterans said. But among survivors of the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, the practice is now seen as a deadly crisis,
prompting the Department of Veterans Affairs to take unprecedented
preventive action.
In the first years after returning from deployment, veterans of
the two wars are 75 percent more likely to die in motor vehicle
accidents than civilians of comparable age, race, and sex,
according to a 2008 VA study. The rate for motorcycle deaths is an
astounding 148 percent higher.
The tragic result is that motor vehicle crashes - which already
are the top killer of Americans ages 16 to 34, according to the
latest federal safety data - are killing newly returned veterans
at a devastating rate. The 2008 study, which has yet to be
released, analyzed fatalities through 2006.
“You have to look at the situation they’ve been in,’’ said Mel
Tapper, who manages the Center for Returning Veterans, based at
the VA Medical Center in Jamaica Plain. “They’ve been in an
extremely tense, life-threatening situation, where there’s
adrenaline that goes through people constantly.’’
Once veterans return to the safety of home and loved ones, that
tension - sometimes life-saving in war, but often debilitating in
peace - can continue for months or years.
In Massachusetts, car crashes have taken the lives of at least two
returning veterans in the past nine months.
On July 10, an Iraq veteran from East Longmeadow was killed in
Andover when the driver lost control of the car in which he was
riding. Mark Ecker II, 23, who lost both legs after an explosion
in Ramadi, had not been wearing a seat belt. On Oct. 21, Boston
firefighter Paul Loring, another Iraq veteran, died in a one-car
accident when the vehicle he was driving struck a tree in Quincy.
These motor vehicle tragedies have not been linked to reckless
behavior. But the deaths are part of the overall fatality rate for
men and women
returning
from combat zones that has alarmed government officials. As a
result, the VA has launched a safe-driving initiative in which
home-bound veterans are counseled about the risks of careless
driving and encouraged to be screened for risky behavior.
Such screening, however, is more easily promoted than practiced.
For veterans who have recently left a war zone, making a
comfortable readjustment to home life can be maddeningly elusive.
“There’s no violence, no threat, no immediate danger,’’ said Kevin
Lambert, a former Marine who counsels veterans at risk of suicide
for the state Department of Veterans’ Services, comparing ordinary
life to deployment in a war zone.
Lambert, 26, a wounded Iraq veteran, knows the challenges
firsthand. The most difficult hurdle, he said, was the unfamiliar
“peacefulness’’ he encountered in the United States. “It was very
hard to transition to that, because I felt there was something
wrong,’’ Lambert said.
Taverna, the former Army scout, said the desk job he took back
home became so boring that he would pick bar room fistfights to
replace the dangerous excitement of Iraq.
“I was used to that rush,’’ Taverna said. “Fighting is the closest
thing to combat.’’
After too much fighting and too much drinking, Taverna sought help
from Soldier On, a nonprofit organization that leases space at the
VA Medical Center in Northampton to provide shelter, therapy, and
medication, if needed, to the physically and emotionally scarred.
Duncan, the once-chronic drunk driver, also receives treatment
there, where Sondrini, the former Marine, wears a jacket and tie
as a case manager.
The personality-altering effects of war service, such as
post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injuries, are
known to many recent veterans at Northampton. Trying to suppress
those symptoms can encourage alcohol abuse, drug use, and
recurrent, self-destructive behavior like speeding.
“Think about it,’’ said Michael Hagmaier, executive vice president
of Soldier On. “Many of these veterans had their drivers’ licenses
for maybe a year when they went in, so the only real training
they’ve had is driving in the desert at 80 miles per hour.’’
Coleman Nee, undersecretary of the state veterans department,
concurred that a problem exists. “It’s the bulletproof theory,’’
Nee said. “If I didn’t get killed over there, nothing’s going to
happen to me here.’’
The SAVE program, where Lambert works, reaches out to veterans who
often have a difficult time seeking help for PTSD and other
injuries. In the two years since the program began, Lambert said,
SAVE has contacted 7,000 Massachusetts veterans or relatives of
service members.
Despite a historic reluctance to seek help, an increasing number
of veterans and active-duty personnel appear willing to
acknowledge their vulnerabilities.
Dr. Douglas Jacobs, the president of a Wellesley nonprofit that
has contracted with the Defense Department for mental health and
alcohol-use screening, said the effort has recorded a huge
increase in anonymous self-assessments this year. Through the
first six months of 2009, the number of screenings through the
service, called Military Pathways, has doubled to 31,000.
If respondents score positive on tests for a variety of issues -
depression, PTSD, anxiety, and alcohol abuse, for example - they
are referred to the appropriate services.
Resources exist in Massachusetts to address reentry issues, said
state Representative Harold Naughton Jr., a Clinton Democrat who
is House chairman of the Committee on Veterans and Federal
Affairs. But questions remain as to whether they are being used as
efficiently and effectively as possible, said Naughton, a captain
in the Army Reserve.
To that end, Naughton said, an oversight hearing will be held this
fall in which outreach programs funded through the state will be
asked to justify continued funding of their work.
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
Iraq, Afghanistan, new veterans, accidents, death, automobile,
motorcycle |