September/October 2005
PTSD/SUBSTANCE ABUSE COMMITTEE REPORT |
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It's About The Money |
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BY TOM BERGER, CHAIR |
Judging by the number of e-mails I’ve received in recent weeks,
many of you have heard the news that the VA will be reviewing some
72,000 PTSD claims that have been granted. “Why?” is the No. 1
question that’s being asked of me in those e-mails. The answer:
Because earlier this year, the Inspector General’s Office (the IG)
looked at about 2,100 claims and found that in some 600 cases,
“the presence of a stressor was not clearly defined.” So,
according to the VA, they “will be looking to ascertain the
presence of a stressor” (a specific traumatic event or experience
occurring during the period of military service. For a more
comprehensive look at the review issue, see the
Government Relations report)
Keep in mind that this is all about money. Rep. Steve Buyer (R-Ind.),
chair of the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, recently
stated: “Many veterans stop going to therapy/treatment once they
have received their 100 percent PTSD disability claim.” The fact
of the matter is that PTSD and other related mental health issues
represent long-term VA health care costs, not short-term costs
such as those associated with a broken arm. We also know that the
longer PTSD goes untreated, the worse it can become over time, and
subsequent treatment costs will rise. Add to this mix the fact
that many—if not most—VA facilities have neither the appropriate
number of professional mental health staff or resources (programs,
beds, or funds) to provide adequate mental health services,
despite VA claims to the contrary.
For example, at VISN 15 at the Kansas City VA Hospital, in 1996
there were 41/2 F.T.E.s (full-time equivalencies of staff time)
dedicated to 55 clients diagnosed with PTSD. In 2005, there are
21/2 F.T.E.s assigned to more than 1,000 clients. Weekly group
therapy sessions consist of hundreds of clients packed into
standing-room-only rooms. If you’re lucky, you can schedule a
one-on-one, 30-minute therapy session once every three months.
Given these facts, why do you think veterans would stop seeking
long-term VA mental health services?
In other news: In July 2004, a report in The New England
Journal of Medicine estimated that 17 percent of service
personnel returning from Operation Iraqi Freedom had PTSD-related
symptoms. But Dr. Al Batres, who heads the VA’s Readjustment
Counseling Service (Vet Centers), believes the rate is now
higher—and growing. So far this year some 14,000 veterans have
sought counseling at the 207 community Vet Centers he oversees.
About 27 percent of them, he explains, report such symptoms. “The
numbers coming in are escalating,” says Batres, who stresses that
his data are anecdotal.
PTSD continues to be an acronym the military doesn’t like. Rather,
it prefers “temporary adjustment disorder,” with an emphasis on
“temporary.” If Batres’s numbers prove correct, the overall rates
of PTSD could equal those of the Vietnam War. |