>>Valley Patriot>>
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As
we remember the anniversary of 9/11, the most devastating
attack on American soil, all Americans must also be
constantly reminded of this: since the Civil War,
veterans who have fought and defended this countrys
liberties and freedoms have been assured that America
would make the very best efforts to take care of them
with their battle wounds and their health care
needsour simple commitment to their great
sacrifice....
The yellow ribbons have faded and are fraying outside the
neatly appointed house in Manassas Park, VA where Jay
Briseno lies tethered to a respirator, his nearly
motionless, 21 year old body a shrunken shadow of the
young man who last year went marching off to war.
Shot in the back of the neck in Baghdad on a sweltering
afternoon in June 2003, Briseno was rushed with all the
speed and efficiency the Army could muster to one
hospital after another. Skilled physicians brought him
back from multiple heart attacks and strokes.
But Briseno isnt a soldier anymore. He is a
veteran, facing a lifetime of excruciating disability.
The efficient war-fighting machine he was a part of has
moved on. His care is left to his parents and sisters
who, bent over his bed day and night, are struggling to
adjust.
For Briseno and his family - as for thousands of others
wounded in the Iraq war - the transition from the life
they knew as soldiers to a future as disabled veterans is
filled with frustration and pain. The military is more
efficient than ever in treating its wounded. But after
the battle-scarred leave Army hospitals, they often find
themselves on their own in an unfamiliar and
difficult-to-navigate thicket of benefits and services.
Since the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq began, 6,239
troops have been wounded in action, according to a recent
Pentagon count. Of these, 57% were so severely injured
that they were unable to return to duty. Medically
retired from active duty military service, they need
immediate assistance from the Department of Veterans
Affairs healthcare system.
The surge of newly disabled veterans represents a
challenge of a magnitude unseen since Vietnam.
Aware of potential pitfalls, the Army and the VA have
started programs to reach out to the most severely
wounded soldiers. Among the steps being tried are putting
social workers in hospitals where the severely wounded
are being treated, adding benefits experts willing to
meet bedside with soldiers and creating call centers that
offer advice and help after the injured are sent home.
The pilot programs are small and both the Army and the VA
acknowledge they are not nearly enough.
Congress has yet to allocate funds for the programs,
which are being covered out of general soldier and
veterans healthcare budgets. But already, case workers
say they have helped some former soldiers get pay owed
them and helped others get needed medical equipment and
services.
In the case of Jay Briseno, Army officials interceded
with the VA to get him a specialized bed that his parents
said made it easier to care for him. The bed has a
built-in scale so a nurse can weigh him without moving
him and a platform that makes it easier to turn him the
dozen times a day needed to avoid bedsores.
In looking to the government for their healthcare needs,
new veterans follow a long line of their predecessors
who, since the Civil War, have been assured that the
country they fought for would make the best efforts to
take care of them.
But there have always been difficulties in follow
through. The VA is a difficult bureaucracy to navigate
even in the best of circumstances, much less when dealing
with devastating injuries. For decades, the VA with 7.5
million vets enrolled has struggled to keep up.
At any one time more than 3,000 vets are waiting for
their first visit to the doctor. Those whose injuries
from battle qualify them for disability compensation
often wait six months to two years to receive it. The VA
has taken steps to cut the wait for veterans of the Iraq
and Afghanistan wars. In recent months it has begun to
station benefit experts at the military bases of
returning units. Newly discharged soldiers who have been
helped by these experts have waited only 54 days on
average to get their first veteran disability checks, a
monumental improvement.
Help from the Army and from Social Workers with the VA
have made a difference for many veterans, but the future
is far more limited for Jay Briseno. In his parents
home he lies in his bed, a stuffed animal from his
childhood tucked into his motionless arms. A photo of him
in uniform rest on the mantle nearby.
Although conscious, he is unable to move and his ability
to communicate is severely impaired. His teen-age sisters
have dropped many of their after-school activities to
help out. The Deacon of their church comes by three times
a week. His Mom and Dad dont stay in their bedroom
anymorethey sleep on a futon next to their
sons bed to care for him through the night. They
have to: the money they get from the VA is only enough to
pay for 19 hours a day of nursing care and he needs help
all 24. Congress needs to correct these oversights in the
system.
On this Healthcare issue all Americans must stay united
and nonpartisan. They must reaffirm their pledge to take
care of these young warriors and those of the past, who
defended our liberties and freedoms in our times of need.
God bless them all and God bless America.
Send your questions
comments to ValleyPatriot@aol.com
The Valley Patriot is a Monthly
Publication. All Contents (C) 2004,
Valley Patriot, Inc.
We distribute in Andover, North Andover, Methuen,
Haverhill, Lowell and Lawrence.
To download this month's edition click here (September Edition)
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Prior Columns By Jim Cassidy
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