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Panel: Military Health System Needs Help
Hoffman, the pediatric psychologist, said she's seen children regress on toilet training, have severe headaches, stomach pains, and suffer in school because of the stress of having a parent deployed.
And for soldiers and veterans returning home, only 10 to 20 percent of the military's mental health experts are trained to help those with post-traumatic stress disorder, the report found.
![]() Army National Guardsmen fill the room at a memorial service at the Army National Guard Readiness Center in Arlington, Va., Friday, Feb. 23, 2007. The memorial was held for three soldiers, Col. Paul M. Kelly, 45; Command Sgt. Major Roger W. Haller, 49; and Sgt. 1st Class Floyd E. Lake, 43, who died in an helicopter crash in Iraq Jan. 20, 2007. Col. Kelly was the highest ranking National Guard member to be killed in combat in Iraq. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) (Jacquelyn Martin - AP) ![]()
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"I know guys that are waiting for appointments," said Russell Terry, chief executive officer of the Iraq War Veterans Organization. "I know guys who are dealing with doctors who have no concept of PTSD."
Terry was on the phone with an Iraq war veteran last year when the vet killed himself.
Report co-chair Michelle Sherman, a psychologist at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Oklahoma City, said the military and VA are "working very hard to meet the needs" of those returning from Iraq.
At VA headquarters, Antonette Zeiss, deputy chief consultant in the agency's office of mental health services, said the report "misses the mark by quite a way." She said her agency didn't have "an opportunity to present data (to the panel) about what the VA is really doing."
Sherman said the panel did seek data from the VA, but when asked if the agency provided information to the psychologists' panel, she said: "I'm not supposed to answer that question."
Zeiss said the VA has been increasing spending on mental health services yearly, opening new centers and hiring more psychological professionals.
"We have the strongest mental health system in the country and we are making it stronger," she said.
But veterans groups disagree.
"The system as it exists today ignores the readjustment needs specific to Iraq and Afghanistan service members," Veterans for America President Bobby Muller said in a statement. "We have to stop throwing money at a problem that requires a complete overhaul. The system is broken."
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