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FEMALE VETERANS SLAM VA CITING LACK OF SERVICES
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The VA system remains poorly equipped to
address the needs of women.

Although this story is from New Mexico, I
hear about the same problems from women veterans all over the country.
Story here...
http://www.abqtrib.com/
news/2007/apr/05/female-veteran
s-slam-va-citing-lack-services/
Story below:
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Female veterans slam VA citing lack of services
Sex abuse, PTSD among problems
By Michael Gisick
It happened at a Christmas party on a U.S. air base in Germany in 1990.
Christin McKinley was a 20-year-old military police officer with the
U.S. Air Force, six months out of boot camp and eager to prove herself.
In a few weeks, her country and its allies would launch the first Gulf
War.
She wanted, she says, to be one of the boys.
That night, one of the boys, a staff sergeant who was also one of her
supervisors, pulled her into a bathroom.
She told him no, she says, but he covered her mouth, pinned her down and
raped her.
Among the growing ranks of female veterans, McKinley, an Albuquerque
resident, is disturbingly far from alone. About 3,000 sexual assaults
were reported in the military last year, a 24 percent increase over
2005, according to a Department of Defense report issued in mid-March.
Of 188 women now being treated through a clinic for post-traumatic
stress disorder at the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in
Albuquerque, between 80 and 90 percent report some kind of sexual trauma
while in the military, the clinic's director, Diane Castillo, says.
But McKinley, who works as a veterans employment representative with the
state Department of Labor and is president of New Mexico Women Veterans,
said the VA system remains poorly equipped to address the needs of
women, pointing to scaled-back services at a women's clinic at the
Albuquerque VA hospital.
"There are some good programs and some good people," she said. "But when
you find a lump (in your body) and you have to wait six months for an
appointment, it tells you something is wrong."
Although state officials say they're trying to help fill the void, the
Legislature this session failed to pass a bill that would have funded a
study on the needs of female vets.
Meanwhile, women are serving in the U.S. military like never before.
One in seven Americans deployed to Iraq is a woman. More than 450 women
have been wounded and 71 killed, more than the combined total for women
in Korea, Vietnam and the first Gulf War.
Most studies on PTSD have focused on two groups - civilian women who
have been sexually assaulted and male troops who've seen combat. Little
research has been done on a group Castillo sees emerging from the ranks
of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans - women who've seen combat and been
sexually traumatized.
The military's definition of sexual trauma includes harassment, but
Castillo said even women who haven't been assaulted can suffer serious
psychological consequences, likely accounting for a higher rate of PTSD
among female vets than among men.
"Imagine being out there in a war zone, worrying about the enemy, and
then also having to worry about being raped by your own comrades. It's a
double stressor," Castillo said. "There's nowhere to turn."
Echoing accounts from elsewhere in the country, Castillo said she's
talked to female vets who told her they took a gun to the latrine while
in Iraq because they were so fearful of sexual assault.
Others said they never went to the latrine at night, or would only go in
groups.
McKinley related this comment from a friend who just deployed for a
second tour in Iraq:
"She said as soon as she gets there, she's going to find an officer to
hook up with so she'll have protection."
More help, but not enough
The military has launched several initiatives aimed at sexual assaults,
including a Web site that allows people to anonymously report attacks
and harassment, and the local VA says it's working to expand programs
aimed expressly at women.
But five times more male New Mexicans are enrolled in the VA system, and
McKinley said it remains an unpleasant and often unresponsive option for
many women.
Like others, she says the closure two years ago of a segregated,
full-service women's clinic at the hospital was a step in the wrong
direction.
Gerry Oakland, the business manager for primary care at the VA hospital,
said the decision to cancel the clinic came amid struggles to find
steady staffing.
Women can still go to the clinic for ob-gyn care, though they now go
through the same primary care network as men. Oakland said a nurse
practitioner has just been hired for the clinic in an effort to expand
services.
But McKinley said she's "not buying" the VA's explanation.
"I don't think staffing was the issue, I think it was mismanaged. Now
they're telling us it was a budgetary issue," she said. "We're seeing an
expanding number of female vets, and other states are opening women's
clinics. We're closing ours, and that's not acceptable."
Castillo, whose women's trauma clinic for PTSD patients is separated
from male programs, acknowledged the importance of having separate areas
for women, especially those who've suffered sexual trauma.
"It can be very difficult for women who've been through that to sit in a
waiting area with a bunch of men," she said.
Barbara Goldman, director of the Santa Fe Rape Crisis and Trauma
Treatment Center, said many women are hesitant to seek care through the
male-dominated VA system even when programs for women exist.
"There's an understandable reticence to look for help within the same
military culture in which you were victimized in the first place," she
said.
The Rape Crisis Center is one of several New Mexico organizations
outside the VA seeking to expand services for New Mexico's estimated
15,000 female veterans.
This year's Legislature approved $375,000 for the center to begin work
on a statewide outreach program for female veterans.
But a bill that would have tabbed $469,000 for a pilot program to study
the needs of female vets stalled in the House.
"There's a clarion call to do something about this now, and I was
shocked that bill didn't pass," Goldman said.
State Rep. Jim Trujillo, a Santa Fe Democrat who sponsored the bill,
said he was unable to revive it after it stalled in the House
Appropriations and Finance Committee.
"Sometimes you can't convince people of the need, but I was convinced,"
Trujillo said. "Those ladies come out of the service having to deal with
not only the war issues, but the sexual abuse, which is pretty
widespread."
State Veterans Services Secretary John Garcia said the Legislature
appropriated money to hire five new veterans service officers across the
state. Two of those, including one in Albuquerque, will be women, he
said.
The department is also holding a conference on women's issues in June,
he said, and is supporting the formation of a women's honor guard team.
The department helped form New Mexico Women Veterans.
Few options for escape
Stepped-up efforts to care for female veterans only deal with the
end-result of the problem, and McKinley said she's dispirited by the
continued prevalence of sexual assault in the military.
She hears the question: Should women serve alongside men?
"I turn that around," she said. "This isn't women's fault. It's the men
who are doing this. They're the ones who need to change."
Though The Tribune's general policy is not to identify victims of sexual
assault, McKinley said she wanted to talk about the attack to help bring
to light a problem faced by many of the female veterans she knows.
She said she never reported her rape, but finally did report the
harassment that followed. She said another sergeant taped condoms to her
door and sent her threatening letters, saying she was sleeping with
everyone else and accusing her of refusing to sleep with him because he
was black.
One day, she overheard several other men taking bets on who would be the
first to sleep with her.
"That was really the low point," she said. "The rape was just one
person, but this was five or six. It was like, no matter how hard I
tried to be taken seriously and show what I could do, it didn't matter."
Castillo said female service members face immense peer pressure not to
report assaults and few options for escape.
"It's not as if they can move to a different city or change jobs," she
said. "They might be raped by a superior officer, and they have to
continue serving under them."
Despite more than a decade of sexual abuse scandals, Castillo said the
military still has far to go in confronting dangerous basic attitudes
toward women.
"In military culture, women are pushed into one of two roles - either
you date men and you're a whore, or you don't and you're a dyke," she
said. "That's still true to some extent of society as a whole, but it's
much more true of the military."
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Larry Scott --