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Beyond The Battlefield: Unprepared For Wave Of Severely Wounded, Bureaucracy Still Catching Up

Veterans Affairs

First Posted: 10/19/2011 8:21 am Updated: 04/16/2012 2:59 pm

"Beyond The Battlefield" is a 10-part series exploring the challenges that severely wounded veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan face after they return home, as well as what those struggles mean for those close to them. Learn how you can help here. Other stories in the series can be found here. Listen to reporter David Wood discuss "Beyond The Battlefield" with NPR's Terry Gross here. Wood and wounded veteran Bobby Henline will hold a live video chat this Friday. See more details and send them questions.

A decade of fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq has left thousands of young Americans suffering with severe pain from amputated limbs, burned flesh, lacerations, shrapnel punctures and traumatic brain damage, injuries that kept them in intensive care for months or years.

Yet military doctors and nurses felt they were "ill prepared" to manage their patients' pain, an Army task force reported in May 2010.

The scope and ferocity of the wars caught the medical system serving the U.S. military and its veterans flat-footed. No one was ready for IEDs and the distinctive pattern of terrible wounds they would cause. No one was ready for the war to extend beyond a decade. No one was ready for the massive numbers of wounded, the severity of their wounds or the resulting strain on the broader system.

"The upside is the survival rate," says Army Col. Kevin T. Galloway, chief of staff for the pain management task force study, referring to the high percentage of battlefield casualties who are being saved from near-certain death -- a dramatic increase from previous conflicts.

The challenge for the medical system, he notes, is that the wounded "survive with such complex, serious injuries and pain management challenges that we didn't have to deal with in the past."

Over a decade of war, the Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs have been scrambling to catch up with the care that the severely wounded need, and with some notable exceptions and scandals, they have largely succeeded. Years of hard work have produced what many regard as the best combat trauma and rehabilitation system in the world. Military medicine, under the pressure of successive waves of the severely wounded, has created breakthroughs in prosthetics, surgical techniques and regenerative medicine, among others.

As a result, 16,000 or more badly wounded young Americans like Tyler Southern are coming home alive.

"I just want everyone to know what wonderful people took care of him,” says Southern’s mother, Patti. “They all went above and beyond, they do such wonderful work and they are so compassionate and took such good care of all of us, not just Tyler."

Yet despite all of their compassion, hard work and medical innovations, the huge bureaucracies of the Defense and Veterans Affairs departments still pose significant problems for the severely wounded. Veterans report difficulties in getting appointments, getting their disability ratings and payments, and getting access to mental health services. Wounded veterans, and especially their spouses, complain of having to spend hours and weeks on the telephone with what they view as the VA's bewildering bureaucracy.

A CONSTANT BATTLE

Ted Wade is a case in point. A sergeant with the 82nd Airborne, Wade fought in Afghanistan and then Iraq, where an IED struck his convoy in 2004. The blast severed his right arm above the elbow and left him in a coma with severe traumatic brain injury. When his fiancée Sarah Dent flew to the military hospital in Landstuhl, Germany, to be with him, the first issue she dealt with was whether she and the staff should simply let him die. Doctors were dubious about his chances of survival.

But Sarah and Ted fought for his life, and won.

Sarah says the intervening years, however, have been a nightmare. "Ted has incredible resolve and determination and has always been very motivated," she says. "But he had to learn to talk and walk again, and to continue to fight is demoralizing and exhausting."




Having to fight the Defense Department and the VA as well, she said, "has been really hurtful."

For instance: Ted was treated at the former Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where he received excellent orthopedic care, but no help was available there for his brain injury. Sarah found a private facility in Washington that specialized in such injuries, but the Army refused to pay for it. Instead, Ted was sent home to North Carolina for treatment at the Durham VA Medical Center.

The Durham center had no experience with combat brain injuries either, so doctors put him in the geriatric ward. His roommates were veterans of World War II and Korea.

It wasn't until Sarah convinced his former doctors at Walter Reed that Ted badly needed help that they arranged to have him treated at a private clinic in North Carolina, where he is still an outpatient today.

But Ted still needs a close supervisor to enable him to get out and into the community, a role Sarah can't fill while trying to earn a living.

"With the VA over the years, it has been a constant battle," Sarah says. "Six months after we got home they wanted to discontinue his care, the second he wasn't under the eyes of Walter Reed. It's been difficult to get them to pay for what the doctors recommended. I really had a challenge to get the VA to provide appropriate long-term care for him, a battle that continues to this day."

Sarah also fought, loudly and publicly, to get the VA to train, certify and pay full-time caregivers like herself who have given up their jobs and career to take care of their severely wounded spouses or sons. When the VA balked, Congress passed legislation demanding it establish such a program, and President Barack Obama signed the bill into law in May 2010, with Sarah there to witness it. The president lauded her "passionate and very effective voice on behalf of wounded warriors and their families."

It still took the VA another year before it actually put the caregiver program into action, and even now it doesn't cover the kind of long-term care and supervision that Ted and other young veterans feel they need to be active in their communities.

"What I have not seen, over more than seven years, is anybody admit that there is a problem," Sarah says.

THE INDIVIDUAL VS. THE MACHINE

Talk with combat-wounded veterans and you find a mix of high admiration for individual surgeons, therapists, nurses and other care providers -- sometimes mixed with frustration or contempt for the medical bureaucracy that constrains them. Many of the severely wounded feel that they should receive the best care available. After all, they reason, they’ve put their lives at risk serving their country and top-notch care is what most politicians promise anyway.

Triple amputee Southern, a Marine corporal blown up last year by an IED in Afghanistan, says flat-out that medics, surgeons and other trauma specialists saved his life. Still, he said, life at Walter Reed, where he is in his second year of rehab,"isn't the greatest."

"Overall, they take good care of us," says Bobby Henline, a former staff sergeant with the 82nd Airborne who was badly burned in an IED blast in Iraq. "They weren't ready for this many people coming in at once. We got that fixed. There's always room for improvement, but we're getting good medical care, what we need and then some."

While acknowledging the strengths of the system, however, Henline is also fighting to get the VA to pay for modifying his house in San Antonio, with extra-strength air conditioning. Burn patients, he pointed out, have skin grafts that don't sweat and they have trouble controlling their body temperature. The VA pays to modify the homes of amputees for wheelchair access. Why not help out burn patients, too?

Eric Shinseki, a retired general and former Army chief of staff who lost a foot in combat in Vietnam, is secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs. He did not respond to numerous requests for an interview to discuss the VA's care of the severely wounded.

But I asked the VA's undersecretary for health, who is responsible for all VA medical and mental health care, about these kinds of difficulties for wounded veterans and their families. Robert Petzel, a soft-spoken avuncular physician, told me that whatever problems veterans have encountered with VA medical care are in the past.

The problems have been fixed, he asserts -- including what had been a chronic problem with VA care: losing track of patients. To counteract that problem, veterans getting VA care are now each assigned at least one case manager, Petzel says.

I mentioned the difficulty that Cheryl Gansner had in getting help from the case manager assigned to her husband, former Army Staff Sgt. Bryan Gansner, badly wounded by an IED in Iraq. Cheryl had told me that their case manager was so busy with 5,000 cases that Cheryl told her not to bother trying to keep track of Bryan's traumatic brain injury treatments because she was useless.

"Everybody who enters traumatic brain injury care gets intensive case management," Petzel insists. "A tremendous amount of VA assets are directed at providing case management and support. That's quite remarkable, because it's so extensive. It's not something we have done in the past."

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"Beyond The Battlefield" is a 10-part series exploring the challenges that severely wounded veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan face after they return home, as well as what those struggles mean for those...
"Beyond The Battlefield" is a 10-part series exploring the challenges that severely wounded veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan face after they return home, as well as what those struggles mean for those...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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Hank10303 12:03 PM on 10/19/2011
Yet, another thing that needs to be cleaned up after the Bush debacle. Many republicans have a very short sighted view of the world and a simplistic view of how all things are interconnected - even our desires, goals and objectives. Just as with the pro life concept, the extremist on the right don't mind expressing their blood lust to go to war over the slightest perceived wrong; just as they want every  Read More...
03:44 PM on 10/21/2011
As an outpatient of the VA for the last 23 years I haven't had one complaint. I was in the VA medical center for 11 days once and when I went home I almost wished I could go back to all the caring, friendly and professional people who worked there. I have never been treated better by people I didn't even know. I don't think veterans should blame doctors because your blaming them all and most of them only want to do the best they can with the sources and tools they have and it all boils down to funding, the almighty dollar that it takes to up to update equipment and more people who knows how to use it. Doctors, lab technicians and so on never quit learning and that is why so many combat wounded veterans of recent wars are surviving. There are good and bad in all professions. It is a fulltime duty of service organizations like the VFW, The American Legion and others to pressure the U.S. Congress into fully funding the VA budget they ask for. If not for them the VA would not be what it is today and it is important that every eligible veteran join a veterans service organization because congress looks at numbers as voters. I want the best care for our veterans money can buy because they earned it and deserve it.
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gypsynomad
I dwell in possibility.
08:44 AM on 10/21/2011
Suvival rate from 70.7 % from WW II to 89.9 for Iraqi Freedom. Then there is that amputation chart, which is so sad. All these very young men and women were thrown in the harms way, so many of them do not even make it , and so many come home wounded. Then not all come back to their loving family `cause they have none, they are all alone.
Kudos always to the care givers .
Freedom for Iraq ? How about survival in this Country ?.Young men and women graduating from college or from higher studies, what do we have for them to offer ? No jobs ,bills to pay, empty nesters are not empty an more .
Please end this bloody mess, end the senseless Wars Mr.President, bring them HOME.
11:33 PM on 10/19/2011
My son entered the Air Force at the age of 18 and served for 16years before he was forced to retire due to needing knee replacements from damage done from constant parachuting, he has had over 20 surgeries all combat related and is getting unfair treatment-actually minmimal treatment for both mental and physical problems he is experiencing. was given appointment for mental health in 90days for major depression and feelings he wanted to hurt someone.he believes the VA does this on purpose so people will committ suicide and government want have to pay. he also questions why veterans have to have MD's of foreign descent .. it just adds salt to the wounds already being experienced. Why does our government treat our veterans so poorly-they have given so much for our freedom and get care not acceptable by any ferderal standards. Our veterans need free help from attorneys- All law firms give some free assistance -why not use it for our vets.. It is assummed you never fight the government and win.. Let's prove them wrong!
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gypsynomad
I dwell in possibility.
08:47 AM on 10/21/2011
So sorry, wish your Son all the best .
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
10:07 AM on 11/10/2011
if Doctors noted on his medical records that he needed knee replacement before he left the service then the VA will give them to him fast .
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jerry Troutman
My micro bio is still empty
09:57 PM on 10/19/2011
Unprepared? Why were they unprepared? Having 2 wars going at same timefor years wouldnt have prepared them for the causalties that were bound to happen on both sides of the war? Im sure the Pentagon had studies done to show what they could expect in the different scenairos,varying time lengths of the wars,even if other countries jumped inon the side of Iraq,Afghanistan. Im sure funding wasnt in place for the aftermath of the war.Veterans have been having trouble with the VA for years since wars have been going on,even for the returning wounded,physically and mentally.Oh the Republicans know how to take care of the soldiers.Boo them for being gay soldiers.Try to put them back in the closet.Dont let them shower with real people.
08:00 PM on 10/19/2011
I THOUGHT OBAMA PROMISED TO BRING ALL THE TROOPS HOME WHEN HE WAS ELECTED!!

WELL...HE DIDN'T DID HE!!

LIAR LIAR LIAR
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
yoursotruly
Youth is Wasted on the Young.
06:08 PM on 10/19/2011
For you teary-eyed patriots who think that veterans will ever be cared for as much as they are saluted, just talk to some Viet Nam or Korea vets. We will give them the least possible care which will never give them their lives back so if you really care, stop being teary-eyed false patriots and quit sending these brave bodies to battle for NO REASON except funding war profiteers.
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Hally
It's all stinky.
11:33 AM on 10/20/2011
Hallelujah and hear hear!!
06:06 PM on 10/19/2011
As a disabled veteran, I recognize many of the issues this series is bringing up. The lengthy hospitalizations, 9 months for me. The one step forward, 2 steps back can be interrmidable. Treat ments that work, and those that do not. The medical and nursing staff at the MTF's and at VA, all kind, professional, and caring. The systems them selves? Bulky, slow moving, pointless roadblocks, endless excuses and 20 and 30 year paper pushers who seem to purposely 'go slow' at every step.
While in hospital, I got confortable with the routine, I felt safe, secure, and could let it all go. As an out patient, everything is harder, and more threatening. I have been out of rehab almost 2 years now, the tubes and bag I live with are ok. The wheel chair is a fact. Those I can accept. I just cant leave my home anymore. That fear is also part of my life now. Cest' la guerre!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tim Haselden
An Enemy of Rupert Murdoch, since 1984.
07:20 PM on 10/19/2011
It seems the system in the US isn't much different than that in the UK. I can't fault the nurses & doctors for my treatment or for that of my men, but the bureaucracy. Sometimes I wonder whether they are deliberately obtuse & offensive, just for the sheer hell of it.
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fabuloush2s
EverGreen
06:03 PM on 10/19/2011
So now that the stories are no longer concealed by veterans who came back to be branded as shameful, baby killers, druggies, alcoholics and left for the spouses and family to deal with these incureable diseases, people should voice anger and disgust against the treatment they receive here while fighting their butts off in hope to return home... HOME, and the possiblities of reconnecting becomes the reverse of what they went in the first place! I know.... because the issues are well lived in my life after the Vietnam war. To be frank, it destroyed my life. No excuse for not doing everything in the world to help victims of the system...and that's exactly what and who they are. Congress and the senate should be ashamed and made to offer remedies at once for the brave men and woman who have sacrficed their lives for these manufactured wars!!! Forget for a sec....what party you represent and step up bills and articles to justify the road to recovery, not only for the Veterans but for the caregivers and their family members!!!
05:50 PM on 10/19/2011
As a diabled veteran who has used the VA for about 20 years I know how they work or don't work mostly they don't. I hold them respancable for the condition I now have put my life on the line again and stopped letting them treat me and have gotten my own insurance but that means they will not give me anymore meds unless I see one of there doctors. My feeling is I would not let them treat my dog. All I can say is don't put up with there crapp.. They will kill you
05:37 PM on 10/19/2011
Shame on you United States government.. Shame on you .
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fonsini
Let there be pie.
05:13 PM on 10/19/2011
How about we stop treating the symptoms and start treating the disease - our involvement in all these pointless wars.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
care4ub0y
05:38 PM on 10/19/2011
That won't help the one's that are already wounded, these wonderful people deserve the best in EVERYTHING from us (they gave their best)!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
yoursotruly
Youth is Wasted on the Young.
05:44 PM on 10/19/2011
We don't take care of these people, we won't take care of these people no matter how much you wish we would are so let's quit pretending and quit sending them off to get mutilated.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fonsini
Let there be pie.
06:24 PM on 10/19/2011
ANYONE who has lost a limb deserves the best treatment, you shouldn't have to lose it in a war to get top line care.
05:10 PM on 10/19/2011
Sad, sad commentary on the gov't. Just think how our soldiers would be treated had they been drafted, not volunteered.
05:06 PM on 10/19/2011
The differance in VA facilities is like night and day from State to State. Delaware is great to me but we are a small state and in my opinion have a good Veterans care program.
05:05 PM on 10/19/2011
Physical therapy is amazing. As for the woman, out wings on her now. The unsung heroes often see the battle for what it is and can find the hope and power to get out of it.
05:04 PM on 10/19/2011
The best way to protect a soilder in combat is to keep him home!!! Send the Congressment to fight the war and they will kill the enemy with tons of Bull#@$% thrown at the enemy. Hmmm Kind of like they throw at us.