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Fort Carson News

Fighting the Terror of Battles That Rage in Soldiers’ Heads

May 13, 2007

COLORADO SPRINGS, May 8 — The nightmares that tormented Sgt. Walter Padilla after returning home from Iraq in 2004 prompted extensive treatment by Army doctors, an honorable discharge from the military and a cocktail of medication to dull his suffering.

Still, Sergeant Padilla, 28, could not ward off memories of the people he had killed with a machine gun perched on his Bradley fighting vehicle. On April 1, according to the authorities and friends, he withdrew to the shadows of his Colorado Springs home, pressed the muzzle of his Glock pistol to his temple and squeezed the trigger.

Sergeant Padilla had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder at Fort Carson Army base here, where concerns over the treatment of returning soldiers struggling with the condition, compelled members of Congress last month to ask the Government Accountability Office to reassess the military’s mental health policies. Read More.

Vets group stands tall for sick GIs

May 11, 2007

Denver Post — An Army general said Wednesday that a “Wounded Warrior Transition Brigade” would come soon to Fort Carson. It will help soldiers with post-traumatic stress and brain injuries.

As Brig. Gen. Michael Tucker spoke at Colorado’s Mountain Post, no one from Veterans for America stood beside him.

They should have. VFA played as big a role in Tucker’s announcement as any of Fort Carson’s brass.

Veterans for America, a group run by ex-military personnel, has forced the Army’s hand across the country by exposing bad treatment of soldiers who return from war with psychological wounds. Read More.

Fort Carson faces more probes into PTSD cases

May 4, 2007

Army Times

Kelly Kennedy

May 04, 2007

After several solders came forward claiming they were discharged for personality disorders but diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injuries, officials at Fort Carson, Colo., say statistics show 56 of the 276 soldiers discharged with personally disorders in fact had PTSD.But officials say those PTSD cases were mild to moderate and the soldiers were discharged because of personality disorder issues.

Fort Carson soldiers have accused Army officials of everything from deploying them to Iraq with brain injuries to punishing them for behavior related to their combat injuries.

The soldiers also say that after Veterans for America asked for an investigation by the Army inspector general, no one from the IG’s office talked to them before submitting a report that essentially said no problems had been found.

Steve Robinson, director of veterans’ affairs for Veterans for America, said he then contacted members of Congress, six of whom asked the Government Accountability Office to investigate whether mental health cases are being properly handled in the Army. Robinson talked with reporters April 30.

Read More.

Salazar, Allard defend care at Fort Carson

May 2, 2007

The Pueblo Chieftain

PETER ROPER

May 02, 2007

How Fort Carson deals with soldiers suffering from post-combat stress has spilled back into the Senate this week where nine senators, led by Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., have asked for a General Accountability Office investigation into allegations that soldiers at the Mountain Post are not getting adequate treatment or are being punished for problems associated with post-traumatic stress.

On the other side, Colorado Sens. Ken Salazar and Wayne Allard sent their own letter to the GAO on Tuesday, praising Fort Carson for its research on severe brain injuries and asked that any GAO investigation look at problems Armywide, not just at the Mountain Post.

“Focusing the investigation solely on a single installation, such as Fort Carson, may result in the faulty perception that these challenges are confined to one installation,” Salazar, a Democrat, and Allard, a Republican, said in their letter Tuesday. The GAO is the investigative arm of Congress and does research and investigations on a bipartisan basis for lawmakers.

Veterans for America, a veterans group that has been interviewing soldiers at Fort Carson and reporting to various Senate offices, said they were not claiming that Fort Carson was the worst case of the Army failing to provide adequate care.

“No one can say that until they do a comparison,” said Jason Forrester, a spokesman for the group. “We are saying there are some alarming reports coming out of Fort Carson about how soldiers are being treated, or being poorly treated, before being sent back to Iraq.”

Scott Robinson, an investigator for the organization, said the group has been working with a caseload of between 30 and 40 Fort Carson soldiers on a continuing basis over the past 18 months.

Fort Carson’s mental health system has been under scrutiny since last autumn, when there were news reports about soldiers complaining about a lack of mental health treatment. In 2005, Army doctors at Walter Reed Medical Center shocked Congress when they reported that 30 percent of all returning Iraq veterans were seeking post-combat mental health care - more than the Army expected and signaling a surge in the future caseload for the Veterans Administration.

Congress reacted by authorizing a special task force to look at mental health treatment in all branches of the military and that group was scheduled to report back to lawmakers this month. However, Army Lt. Gen. Kevin Kiley, who was then the Army’s surgeon general, was part of that task force leadership. Kiley was fired from his senior Army position in February for failing to fix the housing and treatment problems discovered at Walter Reed earlier this year. His dismissal has delayed the task force’s final report.

Neither Salazar nor Allard signed onto the Obama letter. A spokesman for Allard said the senior senator has not received any complaints from Fort Carson soldiers about their mental health treatment.

A spokesman for Salazar said that office is working on several cases on behalf of soldiers. “Sen. Salazar was an early supporter of looking at the adequacy of the Defense Department’s mental health programs,” his spokesman said Tuesday.

When Kiley visited Fort Carson last January, Army officials made a point of saying most soldiers diagnosed with post-combat stress are treated and stay in service, and are even returned to combat. Last year, Army doctors at Fort Carson diagnosed 590 cases of post-traumatic stress disorder - with 120 referred to medical boards to determine if they should be discharged.

Earlier this spring, Army doctors invited reporters to Fort Carson to showcase the research they are doing in treating severe brain injuries, a common wound from roadside bombs in Iraq.

But Obama’s new letter to the GAO said there are continuing problems at Fort Carson.

“There are allegations of commanders at Fort Carson, Colorado, denying soldiers access to mental health care and instead ordering them deployed to Iraq,” the letter said. “We have also heard of cases in which service members with PTSD are diagnosed as having ‘personality disorders’ that the Army considers to be ‘pre-existing,’ thus depriving otherwise eligible combat veterans of disability benefits and much-needed mental healthcare.”

Staffers from the Senate Armed Services Committee are scheduled to visit Fort Carson on May 14-15 along with staff from various Senate offices, including Obama’s. This marks the third review of mental health services at Fort Carson in the past year.

 

Congressional delegation to visit Ft. Carson

May 2, 2007

KOAA TV

May 02, 2007

Watch the Video

Veterans for America announced Monday, staffers from nine U.S. Senators’ offices, along with a representative from the Government Accountability Office, will visit Fort Carson in May.

VFA says the visit will give soldiers and their families a chance to discuss problems they’ve encountered when they have sought help for mental disorders like Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

Fort Carson has said that up to 20 percent of returning soldiers report symptoms of PTSD. It denies claims that soldiers don’t receive proper care. Recently it started training its non-commissioned officers and officers how to recognize the symptoms of PTSD.

Steven Robinson, of VFA says if that’s true then, “not one soldier should fall through the cracks.”

Robinson says he’s working with soldiers from Army posts across the nation, including Fort Carson, that are not receiving proper care. He also says some soldiers are being less than honorably discharged for behavior resulting from service-oriented injuries.

“You punish them for not maintaining their military discipline when they have PTSD, it’s like telling an amputee that he’s a dirt bag for not being able to run for two miles,” Robinson said.

Fort Carson says it has 24-hour care available to any soldier on post. It has denied the claims of inadequate care.

Veterans for America says the visit will be May 14th and 15th. It says the meetings will be confidential


VFA Blog

VFA Report Release: Pennsylvania’s National Guard, Under Great Strain

by VFA on Oct 23

Washington, DC - Oct. 23, 2008 - The citizen Soldiers of the Pennsylvania Army National Guard have borne a disproportionate share of the burden of our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Veterans for America (VFA) has found.

Between now and November…

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