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FEMALE VETERANS SEEK TREATMENT FOR SEXUAL
ASSAULTS -- Pentagon reports increase in sex
assaults as VA opens new facility for women.

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For more information about sexual trauma, use the
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Story here...
http://www.abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=3797346&page=1
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-------------------------
Female Veterans Seek Treatment for Sexual
Assaults
Pentagon Reports Increase in Sex Assaults as VA
Opens New Facility for Women
By RUSSELL GOLDMAN
The Department of Veterans Affairs announced it will open a facility this
December to provide counseling exclusively to female veterans who have
been the victims of sexual abuse or assault.
The treatment center, which will house 10 patients in Bernards Township,
N.J., opens amid increased reports of rape and harassment by women serving
in the military, and increased attention to the problem of military sexual
trauma, or MST, by the VA.
According to the VA, there are currently 15 federally funded programs
nationwide that treat both men and women for psychological ailments
related to MST, which could include depression, withdrawal and thoughts of
suicide.
The New Jersey facility, as first reported by the Star Ledger, will be the
first and only residential program that treats women. Currently, six of
the 15 national programs counsel women exclusively, but only on an
outpatient basis.
"The VA wanted to make it known that it has specific facilities for women
only, so if there are women who want to address this problem, and don't
want to be near men, they have a place to go," said Susan McCutcheon, the
VA's national director for military sexual trauma programs.
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Since 2002, the VA has screened all discharged
military personnel for MST, asking them if they have been the recipients
of uninvited sexual attention, or the victims of assault. In total, more
men than women 63,467 men versus 62,448 women have reported sexual trauma,
but that figure represents just 1 percent of all men surveyed, compared to
29 percent of women, according to the VA.
By those figures, nearly one in three women in the military is at risk for
sexual assault, twice as many as in the general population, according to
Pentagon statistics.
"Sexual assault is the nation's most underreported violent crime. Some
national studies indicate that one in six women, and one in 33 men will
experience a rape or attempted rape in their lifetime," said Cynthia
Smith, a Defense Department spokesperson.
While the VA says it has seen little change in the number of veterans
reporting MST since 2002, the Pentagon has recorded a marked increase in
the number of reported instances of harassment and assault by active duty
personnel in the past two years.
According to the Defense Department's 2006 sexual assault report, the
number of reported assaults skyrocketed 73 percent from 2004 when 1,700
incidents were filed to 2006, when 2,947 incidents were reported.
The military attributes the increase in incidents to an increase in
reporting. According to the Pentagon report, "Programs to promote
awareness, coupled with extensive training on policies and procedures, are
creating a climate of confidence across the services, as evidenced by
increased reporting."
According to Ira Katz, a VA psychiatrist, "Looking at MST often overlaps
with treatments and therapies for [post-traumatic stress disorder]."
Katz said that the VA's program differs from state-run programs because
the federal government employs "more experienced clinicians."
Groups that advocate for servicewomen who have been assaulted as well as
some of the veterans themselves however, say the VA has been slow to
taking MST seriously.
Valerie Cortazzo, a Navy vet who served from 1981 to 1987, said she was
assaulted by three different individuals during her service, and was
routinely extorted for sex by a superior for three years.
Though she left the Navy 20 years ago, Cortazzo, now 44, said she still
has flashbacks of those attacks, and has found the VA's programs wanting
in her hometown of Pittsburgh, Pa.
"Three months ago, I started having flashbacks and went to the VA. I asked
them for group therapy, but they don't have anything for women that have
gone through this. They say there isn't a need," she said.
Cortazzo added that when she would go to the VA for therapy, she was often
treated by inexperienced psychology interns, and not trained
psychiatrists. She said she thinks often about the master chief who
extorted sex from her for years, and how it has "impacted the relationship
with my husbands, and my self-esteem."
Twenty years later, Cortazzo still regrets not reporting the incidents.
"There is a lot of second guessing. Why didn't I report it? I felt weak
because I didn't do anything about it. For a long time, I thought I was a
bad person," she said.
Anita Sanchez, director of communications for the Miles Foundation, an
organization that advocates for sexually assaulted female veterans, said
the VA needs more experienced personnel and inpatient facilities like the
one planned for New Jersey.
She said a number of states have implemented their own programs to treat
women who have been traumatized, because, despite congressional directive,
the VA and Defense Department have been slow to act.
"We exist because the federal government hasn't done enough," Sanchez
said. "The Senate Armed Services has recognized there are not enough
services available, and the VA has been authorized since the early 1990s
to create sexual trauma counseling centers, but the Defense Department is
only now calling for proposals."
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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