Posts Tagged ‘PTSD’
Delegate Bulova Comments on HB 1691
Supporting Our Veterans
This session I had the honor to serve as chief co-patron of legislation introduced by Delegate Chris Stolle (R-Virginia Beach) designed to help veterans who have fallen on tough times. Based on successful programs in New York and Pennsylvania, House Bill 1691 allows local courts to establish special dockets for veterans and active military service members who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injury and run into trouble with the law.
According to a 2008 RAND Corporation study, nearly 20 percent of our service men and women returning from Iraq and Afghanistan suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder. Many more suffer from traumatic brain injury – both diagnosed and undiagnosed. Fewer than half of these individuals actually seek treatment for PTSD or depression. Unfortunately, while trying to recover, some of these veterans fall into drug and alcohol abuse or commit minor crimes and end up in the criminal justice system. It is during these trying times that our veterans need our assistance the most.
The premise behind HB1691 is to provide alternatives to incarceration when possible and to ensure that judges are aware of the rehabilitative programs offered by state and federal agencies as well as local veterans organizations. In New York the program had a 90% successful completion rate, without a single case of recidivism. The legislation was spearheaded by the Joint Leadership Council of Veterans Service Organizations, which represents over two dozen veteran service organizations in Virginia, and passed the House and Senate unanimously. …more…
Connolly Cites Important Victory in PTSD Treatment For Veterans
Congressman Gerry Connolly said a major change on how the Department of Veterans Affairs handles individual cases of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder among combat veterans will benefit those returning from Iraq and Afghanistan as well as older veterans dating back to the Vietnam War.
Connolly hailed the announcement by Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki that the VA will adopt a rule granting presumption of service connection to any veteran who served in a combat zone and has been diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
Connolly has been pushing for better treatment of PTSD among veterans since early 2009 when he co-sponsored the COMBAT PTSD Act (H.R. 952). The legislation would create a presumption of service connected disability for veterans diagnosed with PTSD.
“I applaud the decision by the VA to adopt the intent of this legislation as VA policy,” Connolly said. “Today’s news is long overdue for veterans, who have experienced PTSD, and their families. It is our duty to care for all who have answered the call to defend our nation, including those with wounds that may not leave physical scars, but are debilitating, nonetheless.”
Currently, less than half of the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans diagnosed with PTSD are receiving benefits from the VA. The rule change will also have a dramatic impact on many older Vietnam-era veterans, who are often diagnosed many years after their traumatic incident, which makes the service-related connection very difficult to establish.
Before this change in VA regulations, veterans who applied for disability benefits related to PTSD had to demonstrate to the VA that their illness was service related, essentially denying benefits to thousands of veterans unable to document their claims after their discharge from service. The new rule will make it easier for all veterans suffering from PTSD to receive VA health care and disability compensation, and many Vietnam veterans who were denied PTSD benefits in the past may now be eligible.
In a statement issued today, Thomas J. Tradewell Sr., the national commander of the 2.1 million-member Veterans of Foreign Wars of the U.S. and its Auxiliaries, called the VA secretary’s decision to ease PTSD claims requirements a sea-change in the mindset of the VA.
Tradewell, a combat-wounded veteran, said it follows numerous other decisions that increased the list of presumptions for diseases associated with Agent Orange exposure; increased services and programs for women veterans, veterans who reside in rural areas as well as the homeless; and reduced the size of the claims form from 23 to 10 pages. Tradewell said even the VA’s outreach to patients possibly exposed to improperly sterilized equipment at a small number of its hospitals reflects the department’s proactive, veterans-first attitude.
“The VA is acknowledging that mental injuries can be just as debilitating as any physical wound, and to no longer require veterans to relive their nightmares in great detail is a very positive step forward for veterans of all generations,” Tradewell said.
