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VA SECRETARY NICHOLSON SAYS VETERANS NEED
TO LOSE WEIGHT -- Too many veterans are
developing diabetes and other health problems
because of their lifestyles and eating habits.

The VA has the MOVE! weight management program.
For more information, click here...
http://www.move.va.gov/Default.asp
For more on obesity in veterans, use the VA Watchdog search
engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/ses
search.php?q=overweight+obes
ity+veterans&op=and
Story here...
http://www.news-record.com/
apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070808/N
EWSREC0101/70807033/100
5/NEWSREC0101
Story below:
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Veterans need to lose weight, VA chief says
By Jason Hardin
Staff Writer
GREENSBORO — U.S. Secretary of Veterans Affairs James Nicholson has a
message for veterans: Watch your weight.
Too many veterans are developing diabetes and other health problems
because of their lifestyles and eating habits, he said during a speech
Tuesday to military veterans at the Koury Convention Center.
"We're carrying around too much weight and not getting enough exercise,"
Nicholson said.
Health care was one of the themes of the speech, which also touched on
issues involving benefits and VA cemeteries.
Nicholson acknowledged recent media reports of poor care at VA
hospitals, but defended the department's performance overall.
The nation's VA hospitals see more than a million patients a week, he
said. "Something will go awry here or there," he said.
The department is working to improve care, tackling problems such as a
nursing shortage, he said, and a nursing academy will help address that
issue.
Nicholson said that the hospitals also have made a successful effort to
cut down on staph infections.
According to Nicholson, there also has been success in recent years in
reducing the number of homeless veterans, which has dropped to 195,000
from well over 200,000.
That trend needs to continue, he said.
"It's still too high," he said. "It would be too high if we just had one
chronically homeless veteran."
Nicholson spoke in front of hundreds of veterans at the annual
convention of the American Veterans, or AMVETS group.
Tom McGriff, the group's national commander, said Nicholson has
acknowledged the issues the system is confronting.
"There's been some problems with the VA," McGriff said. "He's well aware
of them."
Nicholson, who is leaving his post this year, closed by paying tribute
to the veterans in attendance.
"Thank you for what you have done for our country," he said.
Contact Jason Hardin at 373-7021 or at
jhardin@news-record.com
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Larry Scott --