Printer Friendly Page
BRAIN INJURIES OVERLOOKED AT SOME VA HOSPITALS
--
Local VA facilities often unprepared to deal
with
injuries sustained in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Story here...
http://www.abcnews.go.com/WNT/
WoodruffReports/story?id=2908676&page=1
Story below:
---------------
Brain Injuries Overlooked at Some Veterans
Hospitals
Local VA Outposts Often Unprepared to Deal With
Injuries Sustained in Iraq and Afghanistan
By MELISSA SOWRY
Bob Woodruff has visited with many soldiers and marines over the past
several months, who complain that the Veterans Administration is not
equipped to care for brain injured vets once they leave the specialized
rehabilitation centers and return home to their local VA hospitals.
As part of the documentary "To Iraq and Back," Woodruff questioned Jim
Nicholson, who runs the Veterans Administration and serves 5.5 million
veterans, as to whether the smaller VA hospitals can appropriately care
for the soldiers returning from the war zone with brain injuries.
"We have organized the VA with this priority for these combatants
returning back," said Nicholson.
The VA runs the largest health care system in the nation and had to
adapt its services when soldiers began returning with multiple injuries
from Iraq and Afghanistan. In 2005, the Veterans Administration set up
four special polytrauma centers to treat these traumatic injuries.
Woodruff visited the polytrauma center in Tampa, Fla., and found that 60
percent of the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans they treated had endured a
brain injury.
Dr. Steven Scott, who helped establish the polytrauma centers, told
Woodruff that in Tampa they are much more experienced at treating brain
injured veterans.
"Because we see a lot more here, we have more experience or [are] more
attuned to what's going on, you know, with the war itself and those
injury patterns," said Scott, the chief of rehabilitation of the Tampa
VA.
And Scott said that it is "absolutely" much more difficult for veterans
to get the kind of help they need at the smaller VA hospitals.
Patient Arrives, but Hospital Not Prepared
Sgt. Michael Boothby, who was injured by an IED blast in Iraq last
September, is one of those soldiers who has had a difficult time
transferring his care to his local VA.
Woodruff first met Boothby and his wife, Megan, on a visit to Bethesda
Naval Hospital. Woodruff caught up with the couple three weeks later in
Tampa, where Boothby was sent for his inpatient rehabilitation.
"I'm doing so good right now," Boothy told Woodruff in Tampa, with his
condition improved in part by the three to five hour therapy sessions he
was receiving each day.
Boothby was making good progress and planned to move home, so the day
before he would leave Tampa, a teleconference was held between the Tampa
VA and the center in Texas, to make sure his rehabilitation would
transfer smoothly once he returned home to Texas. "Once you leave the
Department of Defense and a place like Walter Reed, or one of the
polytrauma units, and you get home to your local VA, they may have never
seen a traumatic brain injury," said Paul Rieckhoff, executive director,
Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. "The specialists aren't going
to be there, evaluation methods aren't going to be there, even the
paperwork's not going to be there."
That's exactly what happened when Boothby arrived home.
The VA hospital in San Antonio didn't have a program in place to treat
brain injury. Boothby had to wait for paperwork to arrive to begin
private rehabilitation, and while he waited, his condition deteriorated.
"Well, when we first got here, it was our understanding we were supposed
to start with an outpatient program," his wife, Megan, explains, "but …
there was nothing. Nothing was set up."
After making progress in Tampa, he again struggled to use his left hand,
and the Boothby's believe that many of Michael's problems could have
been prevented.
"I don't know whose fault it is -- they dropped the ball. But somebody
left me out of the loop, basically," Michael Boothby said.
Dispute Over Number of Injured Vets
According to a July 2006 report from the Veterans Administration
inspector general, brain injured veterans often fall through the cracks.
It found that "multiple factors lead to suboptimal access to care" and
"services are often very limited in communities where injured veterans
live."
According to the Department of Defense, there have been about 23,000
nonfatal battlefield casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan. But through an
internal VA report, Woodruff discovered that there are more than 200,000
veterans who have sought out the VA for care.
"What you have are two sets of books," says Paul Sullivan, who served in
the first Gulf War and is now an advocate for Veterans. "The Department
of Defense saying that there's 23,000 wounded from the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, but the Department of Veterans' Affairs is actually
treating 205,000 veterans from these two wars."
Secretary Nicholson seemed to downplay the numbers in his interview with
Woodruff.
"A lot of them come in for, for dental problems, others come in for a
lot of the, you know, the normal things that people have," he said.
The VA report lists a wide array of injuries, including post traumatic
stress disorder, mental disorders, infections and parasitic diseases and
ill-defined conditions.
The report does not have a category for traumatic brain injury.
Full report here...
http://abcnews.go.com/
images/WNT/SW-Asia-Prese
ntation-November-2006.ppt
Officially, the Department of Defense says that 1,835 soldiers and
Marines have a traumatic brain injury.
The force from an IED or roadside bomb can rattle the brain so severely
inside the skull that it can cause life long health problems.
"There's a tremendous number of people who've served, who are at risk
for traumatic brain injury, and those are folks who could have been
anywhere in the vicinity of the blast," says Rieckhoff. On Veterans Day
2004, Sgt. Nick Bennett suffered multiple wounds in an explosion in
Iraq. His head didn't appear to be injured, but he knew something wasn't
quite right and sought out a diagnosis at the VA hospital.
"I went a year and a half, passed all the neuropsych tests. And they're
like, 'you know, you're fine,'" recalls Sgt. Bennett, saying since the
explosion he has trouble with his memory. "I can't remember
appointments. I can tell you, 'I've got something next week,' but who
it's with, where it's at, I'm lost."
Bennett was finally diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury last June
after he pushed his local VA to be tested again.
It took nearly a year and a half, after his initial injuries, for
Bennett to be diagnosed with traumatic brain injury.
His situation brings to light that many more soldiers serving in Iraq or
having returned from battle, may be walking around with a traumatic
brain injury and not even know it.
Data obtained by ABC News, shows that 10 percent or more of the Marines
and soldiers who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan have possibly
sustained a brain injury.
"I can't give you an absolute number, but I think the 10 percent … is a
good estimate," Scott said. "But it could be higher."
That could mean of the 1.5 million Americans, who have served or are now
serving, more than 150,000 people could have a brain injury that is
unrecognized by the Department of Defense.
While all may not need treatment, the Department of Defense is not
routinely screening returning soldiers for brain injuries despite calls
from some of the department's own brain injury experts.
---------------
Larry Scott --