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In a heart beat I would do it the same even now knowing what it has meant in how my day to day living has been effected.
I am Free, Proud and a Veteran.
I'm now seeing new Veterans coming in to the VA here in SF. Will the services be there for them? The main thing I am doing is asking all vets, DEMAND SERVICES from the DVA, for this new group of Vets. I don't give a shit how you feel about this war. This new group of Vets should not get fucked over for the fine job they are doing. Demand FUNDING for PTSD programs. Make the people who order us to war pay for our lifes, those people being all Americans.
I hope you can read my dribbel, thats my meds for ya.
Malone B801426 US Navy
I am Free, Proud and a Veteran.
I'm now seeing new Veterans coming in to the VA here in SF. Will the services be there for them? The main thing I am doing is asking all vets, DEMAND SERVICES from the DVA, for this new group of Vets. I don't give a shit how you feel about this war. This new group of Vets should not get fucked over for the fine job they are doing. Demand FUNDING for PTSD programs. Make the people who order us to war pay for our lifes, those people being all Americans.
I hope you can read my dribbel, thats my meds for ya.
Malone B801426 US Navy
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Re: 1966-69-Navy Veteran 100% service connected PTSD Says
Sat, February 19, 2005 - 6:52 PMWell read sir.
:) -
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Re: 1966-69-Navy Veteran 100% service connected PTSD Says
Sat, February 26, 2005 - 4:43 PMVA Expands Outreach
In 2003, VA increased the staffing of benefits counselors at key military hospitals where severely wounded service members from Iraq and Afghanistan are frequently sent.
Currently, five staff members are assigned full-time and one assigned part-time to work bedside with patients at both the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, DC and the Bethesda Naval Medical Center in Maryland. Four of the counselors specialize in benefit programs and two are social workers who facilitate health care coordination as service members move from military to VA care.
On an as-needed basis, similar teams are committed to work with patients, discharge planners, and other military staff at three other DoD medical centers serving as key medical centers caring for seriously injured troops: Eisenhower Army Medical Center, Ft. Gordon (GA); Brooke Army Medical Center, Ft. Sam Houston (TX); and Madigan Army Medical Center at Western Regional Medical Command, Tacoma (WA).
Throughout the nation, VA officials work with military disability retirement lists staffs to identify service members from Iraq or Afghanistan for special outreach efforts. Iraqi Freedom/Enduring Freedom coordinators at each VA benefit office and medical center coordinate with DoD discharge staff to ensure a smooth transition to VA services at locations nearest to the veteran ’s residence after discharge. Through this coordination, the veterans are known at the local VA facilities which process their benefits claims and continuity of their medical care, including medications and therapy, is assured.
Benefits and Services
Every active-duty service member, Reservist or National Guards member who serves in a theater of combat operations is eligible for hospital care, medical services, and nursing home care for injuries or illnesses he or she believes is related to combat service for a period up to two years beginning on the date of discharge or release from service. This two-year eligibility for medical care is available even if there is insufficient medical evidence available to conclude that the veteran ’s illness is the result of combat service. At the end of the two-year period, these veterans have the same eligibility for VA medical care as veterans of earlier conflicts.
VA offers a spectrum of health care and benefit programs for veterans of the war on terrorism, including disability compensation, vocational rehabilitation, prosthetic services, life insurance, pension, education benefits, specially adapted housing and automobile grants, and survivor and burial benefits. Many VA services are provided at a higher priority or on an expedited basis for this newest generation of combat-disabled veterans. VA programs for veterans with a service-connected injury or illness apply equally to those who served in the regular active duty forces and to National Guard members or reservists returning from federal activation.
Additional Resources
VA has brochures and other information for veterans of Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom available on the Web:
Veterans Benefits Information
www.vba.va.gov/
Information for Iraqi Freedom Veterans
www.va.gov/gulfwar/
Afghanistan Service Information
www.va.gov/environagents/
PTSD and Iraq Veterans
www.ncptsd.org/topics/war.html
VA Health Care Enrollment Information
www.va.gov/elig/
Brochures and Publications, Including:
* A Summary of VA Benefits for National Guard and Reserve Personnel
* Health Care and Assistance for U.S. Veterans of Operation Iraqi Freedom
www.vethealth.cio.med.va.gov/Pub...dex.htm
Online Benefits Applications
vabenefits.vba.va.gov/vonapp/
Women Veterans Health and Benefits Information
www.va.gov/wvhp/
www.va.gov/womenvet/
www.vba.va.gov/bln/21/Top...Women/index.htm/
# # #
People wishing to receive e-mail from VA with the latest news releases
and updated fact sheets can subscribe at the following Internet address:
www.va.gov/opa/pressrel...list_listserv.cfm -
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Re: 1966-69-Navy Veteran 100% service connected PTSD Says
Sat, February 26, 2005 - 4:51 PMRe: WHAT ARE SYMPTOMS OF PTSD?
A National Center for PTSD Fact Sheet
How can one tell if distress after a personal tragedy is a normal reaction to an upsetting life experience or something more serious?
It can be difficult to know whether distress is a normal reaction or a symptom of something more serious. Even experts may require the results of a detailed evaluation to answer this question. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is only one of many possible reactions to a traumatic experience. After a trauma, some people become anxious, some become depressed, and many find that they are not able to deal with their responsibilities as well as they had before the trauma. Although the majority of people are distressed for a while, over a period of a few weeks to a few months, most find that their upset lessens and they are better able to function. Someone who continues to be profoundly affected by their experience several months or even years later may be struggling with PTSD.
What is PTSD?
The fact sheet, What is PTSD? provides a more complete picture of the disorder, but the main features can be summarized as follows:
Trauma
PTSD is different from most mental-health diagnoses because it is tied to a to particular life experience. A traumatic experience typically involves the potential for death or serious injury resulting in intense fear, helplessness, or horror.
Symptoms
PTSD is characterized by a specific group of symptoms that sets it apart from other types of reactions to trauma. Increasingly, evidence points to four major types of symptoms: re-experiencing, avoidance, numbing, and arousal.
Re-experiencing symptoms involve a sort of mental replay of the trauma, often accompanied by strong emotional reactions. This can happen in reaction to thoughts or reminders of the experience when the person is awake or in the form of nightmares during sleep.
Avoidance symptoms are often exhibited as efforts to evade activities, places, or people that are reminders of the trauma.
Numbing symptoms are typically experienced as a loss of emotions, particularly positive feelings.
Arousal symptoms reflect excessive physiological activation and include a heightened sense of being on guard as well as difficulty with sleep and concentration.
Length and Severity
To qualify for a formal diagnosis, the symptoms must persist for over one month, cause significant distress, and affect the individual's ability to function socially, occupationally, or domestically.
How do I get an evaluation?
While it may be tempting to identify PTSD for yourself or someone you know, the diagnosis generally is made by a mental-health professional. This will usually involve a formal evaluation by a psychiatrist, psychologist, or clinical social worker who is specifically trained to assess psychological problems.
What can I expect from an evaluation for PTSD?
The nature of an evaluation for PTSD can vary widely depending on how the evaluation will be used and the training of the professional evaluator. An interviewer may take as little as 15 minutes to get a sense of your traumatic experience and the effect it has had on your life in order to determine whether treatment for PTSD is called for. On the other hand, a specialized PTSD assessment can take eight or more 1-hour sessions when the information is needed for legal or disability claims. Regardless of the length of the evaluation, you can expect to be questioned in depth about experiences that may have been traumatic for you and about symptoms you may be experiencing as a result of these experiences. Evaluations that are more thorough are likely to involve detailed, structured interviews and psychological tests on which you record your thoughts and feeling. Your spouse or partner may be asked to provide additional information, and you may undergo a procedure that examines your physiological reactions to mild reminders of your trauma. Whatever the particulars of your situation, you should always be able to find out in advance from the professional conducting the evaluation what the assessment will involve and what information it is expected to provide. -
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Re: 1966-69-Navy Veteran 100% service connected PTSD Says
Wed, March 2, 2005 - 4:26 PMWe also have a president who has submitted a budget to reduce veteran's benefits while simultaneously increasing the demand on them.
Contact your congressman and senator. Don't waste your time on this White House. -
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Re: 1966-69-Navy Veteran 100% service connected PTSD Says
Thu, March 3, 2005 - 9:13 AMnot true at all.
Check your facts and try again.
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Re: 1966-69-Navy Veteran 100% service connected PTSD Says
Fri, March 11, 2005 - 3:09 PMWell when was your last VA appointment? Did you recive better care under Clinton or Bush? Before you say anything, live it. As a vet, the best care has been in the last 4 years. Who was in the white house then?
If you are a disable vet join DAV. -
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Re: 1966-69-Navy Veteran 100% service connected PTSD Says
Sat, March 12, 2005 - 12:47 PMlong waits and rooms full old fellows who needed better than care than me
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Re: 1966-69-Navy Veteran 100% service connected PTSD Says
Sat, April 9, 2005 - 8:17 PMthe va is in a sad state i went into the va to make an appointment for my wrist which got fragged in a mortar attack they told me they could see me in 2 weeks in wisconson im in illinois at the moment and while i was in the office i was witness to a young smart assed punk talking down to my veteran brothers from ww2 and vietnam like they were second class citizens we have alot of soldiers coming in from the front who are sufferinf from ptsd and had severs combat stress in theater as a squad leader i referred my troops to the chaplin to get help only to have my rank threatened by my former plt sgt and platoon ldr the army makes troops feel that it is bad to ask for help so they are scared to seek the treatment so alot will put it off till they get home onl to be turned away from the va or talked down to things need to be changed or i see some veterans having severe problems in their future
ssg mirshak
purple heart/bronze star recipient
iraq/kosovo veteran
god bless america -
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Re: 1966-69-Navy Veteran 100% service connected PTSD Says
Sun, April 10, 2005 - 10:02 PMI meet my dad when I was 5 years old, he was in the VA hospital. It was the 1 st time he was well enough to know who I was. PTSD, 9 bullet holes, The VA gave him a 10% rate, when they sent him home. In his whole life they never raised him over 90%, Why? He was machine gunned by Friendly Fire. No Purple Heart, just a fuck you.
Now I see that lame asshole Bush has in charge of the VA on CNN talking about how good the VA is. I have no theeth now, I was so sick trying to get treatment at the VA for PTSD I could not get in, or worse yet. I would get into short term treatment, they gave me so many drugs, I could hardly move.
I could not care for myself, my theeth got bad*gums* I went to the dentest, 3 years ago, they came up with a treatment plan for a root canal to save my theeth, They just took so long by the time it came to do it, they had to pull all my theeth. It has taken 3 fuckin years to get my dentures, they still don't fit.
How far do I live from the VA hospital? I can see it from my house.
They want to charge a $250 sign up fee. Non service connected vets are being billed $14 co-pay on baby asprin. Welcome home..? A greatfull nation...?
I knew one Vet with a medal of houner, when the army closed it's hospital, they told him to go to Kiaser. Told him he's benefits where up. WWII vet.
I got him into the VA... I was so fucking mad, I still cry when I think about this.
This is the way they have always treated vets, WWI had a tent army.
Vets where told they would all get $600. They went to Washington in the 30's
Where killed, beaten all by Gen MacArthur. Look it up.
WWII the average diable benefit was 10%, any more they had to fight.
What war in Korea... fuck those guys, that was not a war.
Vietnam, kidds that are not worth the time.
The thing that hurts so much. Most Vets even knowing all this, we would in a heart beat, fight for this country once more.
We will always fight for this country. When will this country fight for us.
I am sorry if I write like I'm a mess, but I'm a mess over this. -
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This is the maximum depth. Additional responses will not be threaded.Unsu...
Re: 1966-69-Navy Veteran 100% service connected PTSD Says
Tue, April 12, 2005 - 10:43 PMrock on man rock on, No respect from this country for what we did and our ancestors...so sad and madning... -
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Re: 1966-69-Navy Veteran 100% service connected PTSD Says
Tue, April 12, 2005 - 10:54 PMUm, why didnt he get a purple heart? Friendly fire gets you a purple heart. -
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Re: 1966-69-Navy Veteran 100% service connected PTSD Says
Wed, April 13, 2005 - 1:14 AMIt was in Wyoming in training camp, not combat.
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