| "WELCOME HOME" - #5 IN A SERIES
FOR NEW VETERANS
"Welcome Home" from Veterans' Advocate Jim Strickland will help vets
from Iraq and Afghanistan navigate the VA system.
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Veterans' Advocate Jim Strickland
provides regular columns for VA Watchdog dot Org.
If you would like to contact Jim
about his columns, you can email
him here... The archive of Jim's articles
is here...
To find an answer to a specific VA benefits question, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...
click here... And, be sure to use Jim's: A
Military Veterans Guide To Disability Compensation and Pension
Benefits -- A Compendium of Resources and Knowledge For The Disabled
Veteran --
click here... JIm's series for new vets,
"Welcome Home," is also featured on Military.com. And, you can
follow Jim on TWITTER here ...

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Welcome Home! #5 -- Home at Last
by Jim Strickland
"Life’s a voyage that’s
homeward bound."
—
Herman Melville
You're home at last. You've
fulfilled the obligation honorably, doing all that was demanded of
you. You've proudly accomplished the most difficult job ever; you're
now a veteran.
It's been a long time coming.
You're a little dazed and confused.
Now what?
Priorities! You must learn to
think for yourself and establish your own priorities. The company
commander isn't setting goals that are in line with the brigade's
targets today. There won't be a briefing by the First Sergeant.
You need to work, a place to live,
transportation and sustenance. Maybe you want to take advantage of
best "GI
Bill" that ever was and get that degree you've dreamed of.
Before you do any of that, you'll
want to know your health care is covered. As important as those
other tasks are, a broken leg, a bad bout of flu or an attack of
appendicitis will throw a monkey wrench into it all if you aren't
prepared. Making the arrangements for your health care is job #1.
You are the most fortunate veteran
ever. The Veterans Health Administration has opened the doors to you
for an extended period of time and you're about to receive the best
care in America.
Let's agree on one thing up front.
Your VA care isn't "free." The care provided to veterans by VHA is
expensive and costs untold billions of dollars each year. You paid
for yours in advance by your honorable service so if you do see any
charges, they'll be minimal co-pays.
VA health care may not be what you
expect. It's often perfunctory with little TLC or hand-holding. The
system is busy and the emphasis is on efficiency and quality.
Before you were in the military,
you may not have had much health care. You were young, healthy and
strong. While on active duty the health care goals were simple...
keeping you well enough to accomplish your mission.
The VHA looks far ahead rather
than into your past. Once you're in the VHA system, it's assumed
you're a patient for the rest of your life. The aims of caring for
you will shift from historical to the immediate and the distant
future. VHA discovered long ago that high quality care means
preventative medicine must be applied liberally and then maintained.
You'll be screened for
hypertension, diabetes, high cholesterol, cancers, glaucoma and
other conditions that you thought of as for the older crowd. If you
smoke or abuse any substances, VHA treat those harmful habits.
Some
of the ways VHA will work with you may have a military feel. While
it's true that you'll be together with men and woman who speak the
common language of your experiences, never forget that the people
providing your care are mostly civilian and that you can't talk with
them as if they were military.
Keep your former military
aggressiveness to yourself. If you're annoyed by a delay in an
appointment or the lab is backed up drawing blood, be patient and
remind yourself that you're ultimately going to receive services
that have little equal.
The improvements made in the VHA
system are legendary.(1) There are good reasons that waiting room is
so crowded today. The word is out that health care doesn't get much
better than this and veterans are beating a path to those doors.
By placing so much attention
towards preventive care, many veterans are discovering that as they
age, they're healthier for it...VHA care simply works. When you walk
in to register for your VHA care, expect to receive “The
Best Care Anywhere.”
If you do your part by keeping
appointments, playing by the rules and maintaining your military
bearing of courtesy toward others, you'll discover that the
caregivers of the VHA are dedicated to a single purpose: Serving
you.
Each year that passes proves that
the Congress has recognized the importance of your health care and
funds are appropriately increasing. Physicians, nurses and technical
staff are better trained and educated than ever before and programs
like Patient Advocates make the complex hospitals easier to navigate
for the veteran.
Many of the caregivers you meet
are veterans. My own Primary Care Physician is a board certified
family practitioner and a fierce veterans advocate. While I write
this, he's in Baghdad fulfilling his obligation as a major in the
Army Reserve.
Is the system perfect? No, of
course not. But the veteran of today is coming home to the best VHA
care that any veteran has ever been privileged to see and there's a
visible and ongoing effort to make it better yet.
Register today. Learn what to
expect and what's expected of you. Get to know the physicians and
staff who will provide your care.
Enjoy your good health. You've
earned it!
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TOPICS: veterans,
veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs, Jim
Strickland, Veterans' Advocate, Welcome Home, Iraq veteran,
Afghanistan veteran |