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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: coug who wrote (113346)8/19/2007 1:39:31 PM
From: Karen Lawrence  Respond to of 361609
 
Blogging today on Thinkprogress, Army Reserve Capt John Soltz - head of VoteVets.org - has posted a sad and disturbing report that although recent figures via the WaPo indicate that the rate of suicides by active duty members of our military is currently at it's highest point in 26 years, the rate of diagnosis for post traumatic stress disorder has strangely not kept pace - leaving many of these emotionally wounded soldiers undiagnosed, untreated, and at severe risk.

To get to the core of the issue, we have to look at the real reason for which combat troops and veterans would take their own lives. And that real issue — the larger issue — is Post Traumatic Stress Disorder The numbers of troops diagnosed by the military and the VA with PTSD are disturbingly low — especially when viewed by one who’s been in combat. Early in the war, the number given was around 30 percent. So the question becomes then, how do we reconcile these two figures — the high suicide rate with the low PTSD rate?

The next most obvious question is, of course, if PTSD is a leading cause of suicides among our troops - why is the rate of PTSD so low yet the rate of suicide so high?

Possibly because, like so many government services, before treatment is provided the potential patient has to run a gauntlet to prove that they've actually suffered an injury. And sometimes that proof is exactly what you don't want to see.

If you walk into a hospital and your arm is broken you have an X-Ray for proof. If you have cancer or HIV there is medical proof for the diagnosis. There is nothing in the medical community that can completely prove or disprove PTSD — that is until its too late. These increased suicide rates are a sign that were still not doing our jobs catching those with PTSD, before they reach a critical point.

And then there's another reason why it might be increasing difficult for those soldier potentially suffering from PTSD to find treatment. The cost.

It can’t be ignored that there’s a monetary "benefit" for the government if it keeps the count of PTSD down. The bar for qualifying for is kept unreasonably high. If a veteran is diagnosed with PTSD, it will cost our government money in care and disability, perhaps for the life of the person. So, while we’re not seeing a real increase in the cases of declared PTSD, we have seen an increase in the diagnosis of "adjustment disorder" and "pre-existing personality disorder," because those aren’t diagnoses the government will compensate our troops for. Not only does it deny troops financial disability, but also the mental services the system provides, leaving them all alone in society.

If you don’t think it’s accurate, I would remind you this is an administration that won’t even tell our country the names of soldiers wounded in war. They have a track record of dishonesty in supporting our veterans.

We have to look no further than the quality of outpatient care at Walter Reed Hospital, to understand how keeping both eyes on the bottom line can and has blinded the Department of Defense from giving our wounded soldiers the type of care they deserve.

But the true roots of the problem, and the issue of costs, go far deeper than Walter Reed as Paul Krugman pointed out earlier this year.

The quagmire in Iraq has vastly increased the demands on the Veterans Administration, yet since 2001 federal outlays for veterans’ medical care have actually lagged behind overall national health spending.

To save money, the administration has been charging veterans for many formerly free services. For example, in 2005 Salon reported that some Walter Reed patients were forced to pay hundreds of dollars each month for their meals.

More important, the administration has broken longstanding promises of lifetime health care to those who defend our nation. Two months before the invasion of Iraq the V.H.A., which previously offered care to all veterans, introduced severe new restrictions on who is entitled to enroll in its health care system.

What's worse is the fact that even those who have received care, and have been diagnosed with PTSD are being sent back into active duty - with prescriptions of anti-depressants.

As reported by the Hartford Courant, Col. Elspeth Ritchie, a psychiatry consultant to the Army surgeon general, confirmed that there was a decision to send back soldiers to Iraq with symptoms or a diagnosis of PTSD stating that it was "something that we wrestle with," and partly driven by the military’s need to retain troops because of recruiting shortfalls.

...

Also, according to the Hartford Courant, one 26 year old Marine who was having trouble sleeping was put on a strong dose of Zoloft that carries warnings urging doctors to closely monitor new patients for suicidal urges. Within several months of starting that drug the Marine killed himself in Iraq.



To: coug who wrote (113346)8/19/2007 1:41:06 PM
From: Karen Lawrence  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 361609
 
Pray you never have to go to a hospital:
ource: Associated Press

(08-18) 13:14 PDT WASHINGTON, (AP) --

Medicare will stop paying the costs of treating infections, falls, objects left in surgical patients and other things that happen in hospitals that could have been prevented.

--
The rule identifies eight conditions — including three serious types of preventable incidents sometimes called "never events" — that Medicare no longer will pay for.

Those conditions are: objects left in a patient during surgery; blood incompatibility; air embolism; falls; mediastinitis, which is an infection after heart surgery; urinary tract infections from using catheters; pressure ulcers, or bed sores; and vascular infections from using catheters.

--
Hospitals in the future will be expected to pick up the cost of additional treatment required by a preventable condition acquired in the hospital



To: coug who wrote (113346)8/19/2007 3:34:11 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Respond to of 361609
 
Southern Heat Wave Death Toll Reaches 44
Tennessee Records Its 13th Death From Heat As Toll in Southeast, Midwest Reaches 44
The Associated Press By KRISTIN M. HALL Associated Press Writer
NASHVILLE, Tenn. Aug 19, 2007 (AP)
An oppressive two-week heat wave in the Southeast and Midwest has killed at least 44 people, many who were elderly and living in homes without air-conditioning.

Authorities in Memphis reported 2 more heat-related deaths Saturday, bringing Tennessee's total to 13.

The latest victims were a 74-year-old man found dead Saturday after working in his yard and a 60-year-old man found dead in his home late Friday. He had asthma, the Shelby County Medical Examiner's Office said.

Medical Examiner Karen Chancellor warned that individuals with chronic respiratory or heart conditions should take special precautions during this heat wave.

The high temperature in Memphis was 101 on Saturday, according to the National Weather Service, and Sunday's high could reach 102, despite earlier forecasts that weekend temperatures would dip slightly.

As of Saturday, Memphis has had nine straight days of triple-digit temperatures.

Mayor A C Wharton set up a heat wave phone line for people seeking services that can help them escape from the heat, including the locations of cooling centers and free fans for seniors.

The local health department said the city's heat index a measure that factors in humidity to describe how hot it feels has broken 100 every day since June 27.

Health officials in Alabama said Friday that eight people there had died of heat-related causes this week and last week.

In Elmore County, an anonymous donor gave county schools 20,160 bottles of water Friday for children to drink on school buses that have no air conditioning.

"The kids were so thrilled. They were quiet on the buses and just sat in their seats and drank their water," county schools spokeswoman Judy Caton said.

Emergency physicians warned that days of heat-related stress can lead to problems such as nausea, dizziness, headaches, cramps and vomiting for people who otherwise are healthy. Those symptoms are the first signs of heat exhaustion.

"It is a cumulative thing," said Dr. Franc Fenaughty, an emergency room physician in the Memphis suburb of Germantown. "After four or five or six days you are going to see more people get dehydrated. And, the big problem is dehydration."

Southern Heat Wave Death Toll Reaches 44
12Next

abcnews.go.com



To: coug who wrote (113346)8/19/2007 4:29:18 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361609
 
Ok......

under water..??

sounds like

Sen Jim ...Mountain ..(of bullshit)..InHofe...
gonna need some
blue state
aid
to save his manipulated

voters...
once again...