Secretary Nicholson Announces Plans for New Atlanta ‘Vet Center’
June 28, 2006
VA Continues to Ramp-up
Mental Health Services for Veterans
WASHINGTON --
Newly-returning veterans from the War on Terror will have greater access to
readjustment counseling, Secretary of Veterans Affairs R. James Nicholson
said today in announcing that VA will soon open a second “Vet
Center” in
Atlanta. Secretary Nicholson
also announced that VA is moving the employment status of 50 additional
Global War on Terror Outreach Specialists nationwide from temporary to
permanent.
“VA remains committed to treating the ‘whole veteran,’
and this new
Vet Center
will enhance Atlanta-area veterans’ access to important mental health
services,” said Nicholson. “The permanent hiring of 50 additional Global
War on Terror Outreach Specialists – who themselves are veterans of Iraq and
Afghanistan – is another important step in bolstering access and ensuring
returning veterans get the treatment they need to overcome their common
reactions to the uncommon experiences of combat.”
VA’s Readjustment Counseling Service (RCS)
Vet Center
program is a special program designed to help veterans exposed to the unique
stress of serving in combat. The program features professional readjustment
counseling for war trauma and other social readjustment problems, family
readjustment counseling, and community-based services, including outreach,
education, extensive case-management, and referral.
VA has 207 community-based Vet Centers across the
country. The centers are easily accessible and are staffed by small
multi-disciplinary teams. In most cases combat theater veterans, including
Global War on Terror Outreach Specialists, serve as counselors.
The process of identifying a location for the new
Atlanta Vet
Center, which will open
later this year or in early-2007, is now underway. Once opened, the
Vet
Center will be staffed
by a team leader, two counselors, and an office manager. The new location
will help serve the more than 468,000 veterans in the
Atlanta area. VA already
operates a
Vet
Center at
1440 Dutch Valley Place in
Atlanta.
“Vet Centers are a vital part of VA’s mission of
serving the men and women who have borne the battle,” said Dr. Jonathan
Perlin, VA Under Secretary for Health. “The additional center will ensure
that we provide veterans in the
Atlanta area with the counseling
services they need when they need them.”
The 50 newly-permanent Global War on Terrorism
Outreach Specialists join 50 others who were hired by VA as full-time
employees earlier this year. The specialists, one of whom is stationed in
Atlanta, augment other VA staff
at the Vet Centers. Nationwide, they are now averaging more than 13,000
outreach contacts each month with returning Operation Iraqi Freedom and
Operation Enduring Freedom veterans and their families.
Last year, the Vet Centers had 1,046,628 visits by
132,853 veterans and their families. This represents an increase of 9,477
veterans and 14,863 veteran visits from the previous year.
Last year, VA spent more than $2 billion to serve the
state’s 760,000 veterans. About 115,000
Georgia veterans
received VA health care, while 120,000 obtained disability compensation or
VA pensions. VA operates major hospitals in
Augusta,
Decatur and
Dublin, plus 10 outpatient
clinics, three nursing homes and two Vet Centers.
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