Results 1 to 2 of 2

Thread: Re: Reporter Asks Help with Story on Sick Vets

  1. #1
    Baron Maximillian von Schtuldeworfshiseundurheimhoppen Guest

    Re: Reporter Asks Help with Story on Sick Vets

    Sir Arthur C.B.E. Wholeflaffers A.S.A. wrote:
    > In article <bmlcho$2ktu$1@pencil.math.missouri.edu>, President, USA
    > Exile Govt. says...
    >>
    >> Forwarded with Compliments of Government of the USA in Exile (GUSAE):
    >>
    >> Free Americans Proclaiming Total Emancipation and Working Towards
    >> Democracy. NOTE: Thanks to Rick Davis for this. -- kl, pp
    >>
    >> Please, anyone of you vfp members receiving this, if you have
    >> information or ways of obtaining the information Steve Rosenfeld
    >> needs to build his story and verify it, please respond. I ask you
    >> to send me a copy of your response to Steve, as well. I would like
    >> to see what he can do with this prior to Veterans Day.
    >>
    >> We thank you for your help,
    >>
    >> Woody
    >> ================================================== ====================
    >>
    >> Hi. Good to talk to you. Here is a link to the most recent piece I
    >> did on the Pentagon's failure to follow a 1997 law to create baseline
    >> medical records for all deployed troops.
    >>
    >> http://www.tompaine.com/feature2.cfm/ID/8995 --- [Editor's
    >> Note: This piece is appended below.]
    >>
    >> What I'm working on now is a report on what's happening to injured
    >> soldiers who have returned from Iraq. Here's what I know. The
    >> soldiers are being sent to several bases around the country, where
    >> they're stranded because there aren't enough doctors to oversee
    >> their treatment and transition out of the military and into the VA
    >> system.
    >>
    >> I heard from one well-respected veterans' activist who was at Ft.
    >>
    >> Stewart, GA, this past weekend. He said that there were 450 soldiers
    >> there and one physician overseeing their care. He said he heard
    >> stories of some who simply left the military, signed away their
    >> benefits, and just went home - because that was taking control of
    >> their lives.
    >>
    >> What I'm trying to do is nationalize and personalize this very
    >> important story. By nationalize, I'm trying to find out how many
    >> injured soldiers are on bases throughout the country and how many
    >> physicians are available for them. And by personalize, I'm trying
    >> to find injured soldiers - or relatives - who can tell me what their
    >> experience has been with receiving medical care.
    >>
    >> If any of your members can help me, please have them send me an
    >> e-mail. I will respond to each one personally, and let them know
    >> where I am going with my report. If you look at the above
    >> TomPaine.com
    >> piece, you'll see I quoted from e-mails but did not reveal anyone's
    >> identity or location.
    >>
    >> Thanks again. Please feel free to call.
    >>
    >> Steven Rosenfeld Senior Editor/Reporter www.TomPaine.com 415-642-1434
    >>
    >> ================================================== =====================
    >>
    >> Deserting Our Troops Steven Rosenfeld is a senior editor for
    >> TomPaine.com.
    >>
    >> The Army and Air Force failed to obey Congress' orders to create
    >> baseline medical records for soldiers sent to overseas war zones,
    >> in this case Iraq, Congress' General Accounting Office (GAO)
    >> concludes
    >> in a just-released report.
    >>
    >> "The percentage of Army and Air Force service members missing one
    >> or both of their pre- and post-deployment health assessments ranged
    >> from 38 to 98 percent of our samples," the GAO, Congress'
    >> investigative
    >> arm, found. "Moreover, when health assessments were conducted, as
    >> many as 45 percent of them were not done within the required time
    >> frames."
    >>
    >> These statistics confirm what veterans of the 1990-91 Persian Gulf
    >> War and members of Congress have been saying for months: the Pentagon
    >> has been ignoring a law whose primary intention was avoiding a
    >> repeat of the military's mistakes surrounding its handling of veteran
    >> illnesses that have become known as Gulf War Syndrome.
    >>
    >> After the Persian Gulf War in 1990-91, tens of thousands of veterans
    >> became sick with mysterious illnesses. But because the Pentagon did
    >> not have baseline medical records for each soldier in that conflict,
    >> it was very slow to acknowledge and act on its responsibility to
    >> provide health care for these veterans.
    >>
    >> So, in 1997, Congress passed a Public Law 105-85 requiring the
    >> military to conduct detailed pre- and post-deployment medical records
    >> for every soldier sent into a war zone. The GAO says the military
    >> "did not comply" with that requirement in the Iraq War. It also
    >> found the Department of Defense (DOD) "did not maintain a complete,
    >> centralized database of service members' medical assessments and
    >> immunizations."
    >>
    >> The issue has been simmering in veteran's circles for some time,
    >> but with the Pentagon announcing last week a new round of National
    >> Guard deployments to Iraq, it raises the question anew: will the
    >> Pentagon fully implement the law?
    >>
    >> "We've been calling for it. It's time for it to happen," said Steven
    >> Robinson, executive director of the National Gulf War Veterans
    >> Center. "We've had the hearings on the hill. We've done the Kabuki
    >> dance. [Undersecretary of Defense for Health Affairs William]
    >> Winkenwerder says they don't need to do the screening. The GAO says
    >> it's insufficient. Now what?"
    >>
    >> Robinson said he and other veterans advocates will be speaking to
    >> members of the House Armed Services Committee -- which requested
    >> the GAO report -- and Veterans Affairs Committee this week to see
    >> what the next steps may be.
    >>
    >> Veterans' advocates became aware last fall and winter that troops
    >> being sent to Iraq were not being examined as required. Instead,
    >> the military gave soldiers a short questionnaire to fill out. After
    >> congressional hearings and public criticism from veterans last
    >> winter, the Pentagon said it would conduct post-deployment exams
    >> and expand its questionnaire.
    >>
    >> The GAO report was based on investigations at five military bases:
    >>
    >> Fort Campbell; Fort Drum; Hurlburt Field and Travis Air Force Base.
    >>
    >> It recommended that the Secretary of Defense and undersecretary
    >> responsible for military health "establish an effective quality
    >> assurance program that will help ensure that the military services
    >> comply with the force health protection and surveillance requirements
    >> for all service members."
    >>
    >> In a Sept. 11 letter responding to the GAO report, Assistant
    >> Secretary
    >> of Defense William Winkenwerder said his office "has already
    >> established a quality assurance program for pre- and post-deployment
    >> health assessments." Winkenwerder said this program has been in
    >> place "since June 2003," which would be several months after Congress
    >> held hearings on the law and launched the GAO investigation.
    >>
    >> While it remains to be seen what impact the GAO report will have
    >> on military health policies, many soldiers now in Iraq and their
    >> family members say the Pentagon has all-but ignored the requirement
    >> for creating the baseline medical records.
    >>
    >> "My husband [an Army Reservist]'s physical was waived before he
    >> left," wrote one member of Military Families Speak Out (MFSO), an
    >> activist group of families with relatives in the military in Iraq.
    >>
    >> Those contacted requested their names not be used.
    >>
    >> "Myself and my wife were given the anthrax and small pox vaccines
    >> and were not given a choice in the matter," wrote a soldier. "No
    >> screening was done before these vaccines were given to see if there
    >> might be complications from a genetic or health standpoint. No blood
    >> work was done on us besides a few general questions from a colonel."
    >>
    >> "My son has returned home and as far as I know no one has made any
    >> mention of medical testing," wrote another member of MFSO. "They
    >> arrived back the first week in August... [They] gave him a
    >> questionnaire
    >> to look over. There are three sections, but he said [questions] in
    >> the last section, more current symptoms didn't seem relative for
    >> now."
    >>
    >> These anecdotes corroborate the GAO's findings: that the pre- and
    >> post-deployment medical exams were largely an after-thought, not a
    >> policy priority.
    >>
    >> Among the soldiers contacted, several said they were aware there
    >> could be health consequences of their military services. What they
    >> and their family members most frequently cited was exposure to
    >> byproducts of depleted uranium (DU) munitions. DU is a slightly
    >> radioactive metal that's denser than lead and burns at very high
    >> temperatures. It is used in bullets and artillery pieces. Upon
    >> impact, it burns and vaporizes. Particles from the smoke are very
    >> tiny and can be breathed in and become embedded in lung tissue.
    >>
    >> "My daughter told me that as they rolled into Baghdad from Kuwait,
    >> right after the end of the big bombing, in mid-April, there were
    >> Iraqi tanks on the sides of the roads, that still had the dead Iraqi
    >> soldiers in them," wrote another MFSO member. "She asked why the
    >> tanks were not cleared off or the bodies taken out, and she was
    >> told that no one wanted the duty because the tanks had been hit
    >> with DU shells.
    >>
    >> "She said they all assumed the dust in the road was full of DU dust,
    >> and she said she felt she would now be at an increased risk of
    >> cancer, as did all of her unit. She was manning the 50-caliber on
    >> top of the truck, and said she breathed in the dust for many miles."
    >>
    >> Only one e-mail out of more than one dozen received from MFSO
    >> families said their spouse or relative had received the pre- and
    >> post-deployment exams and shots.
    >>
    >> In conclusion, the GAO said the Pentagon was poised to repeat the
    >> mistakes of the first Gulf War, where it did not promptly or
    >> adequately address the illnesses among veterans that became known
    >> as Gulf War Syndrome.
    >>
    >> "Failure to complete post-deployment health assessments may risk a
    >> delay in obtaining appropriate medical follow-up attention for a
    >> health problem or concern that may have arisen during or following
    >> the deployment," the GAO said. "Similarly, incomplete and inaccurate
    >> medical records and deployment databases would likely hinder DOD's
    >> ability to investigate the causes of any future health problems
    >> that may arise coincident with deployments."
    >>
    >> [demime 0.98e removed an attachment of type image/tiff which had a
    >> name of image_11.tiff" ; x-mac-type="54494646" ;
    >> x-mac-creator="4A464158]


    ..



  2. #2
    David Nebenzahl Guest

    Re: Reporter Asks Help with Story on Sick Vets

    On 10/18/2003 6:14 PM Baron Maximillian von
    Schtuldeworfshiseundurheimhoppen spake thus:

    [...]

    [forget attribution--I gave up trying to figure it out]

    [also did my part and trimmed 1 newsgroup]

    >>> What I'm working on now is a report on what's happening to injured
    >>> soldiers who have returned from Iraq. Here's what I know. The
    >>> soldiers are being sent to several bases around the country, where
    >>> they're stranded because there aren't enough doctors to oversee
    >>> their treatment and transition out of the military and into the VA
    >>> system.


    This much, apparently, is true; check
    http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=...7-024617-1418r

    (Headline of story: "Sick, wounded U.S. troops held in squalor ")

    D "just more BS from the 'liberal media'" N


    --
    It turns out that, contrary to cutesy lists of absurd laws and email
    sigs, it is actually *not* illegal to carry an ice cream cone in one's
    pocket (front or back) in Lexington, Kentucky. So there.


Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •