Author Topic: Building 18  (Read 1410 times)

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Lanya

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Building 18
« on: February 17, 2007, 11:50:28 PM »
Soldiers Face Neglect, Frustration At Army's Top Medical Facility

By Dana Priest and Anne Hull
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, February 18, 2007; Page A01

Behind the door of Army Spec. Jeremy Duncan's room, part of the wall is torn and hangs in the air, weighted down with black mold. When the wounded combat engineer stands in his shower and looks up, he can see the bathtub on the floor above through a rotted hole. The entire building, constructed between the world wars, often smells like greasy carry-out. Signs of neglect are everywhere: mouse droppings, belly-up cockroaches, stained carpets, cheap mattresses.

This is the world of Building 18, not the kind of place where Duncan expected to recover when he was evacuated to Walter Reed Army Medical Center from Iraq last February with a broken neck and a shredded left ear, nearly dead from blood loss. But the old lodge, just outside the gates of the hospital and five miles up the road from the White House, has housed hundreds of maimed soldiers recuperating from injuries suffered in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
   
Photos
The Wounded and Walter Reed
Five and a half years of sustained combat have transformed the venerable 113-acre Walter Reed Army Medical Center into a holding ground for physically and psychologically damaged outpatients.


The common perception of Walter Reed is of a surgical hospital that shines as the crown jewel of military medicine. But 5 1/2 years of sustained combat have transformed the venerable 113-acre institution into something else entirely -- a holding ground for physically and psychologically damaged outpatients. Almost 700 of them -- the majority soldiers, with some Marines -- have been released from hospital beds but still need treatment or are awaiting bureaucratic decisions before being discharged or returned to active duty.

They suffer from brain injuries, severed arms and legs, organ and back damage, and various degrees of post-traumatic stress. Their legions have grown so exponentially -- they outnumber hospital patients at Walter Reed 17 to 1 -- that they take up every available bed on post and spill into dozens of nearby hotels and apartments leased by the Army. The average stay is 10 months, but some have been stuck there for as long as two years.

Not all of the quarters are as bleak as Duncan's, but the despair of Building 18 symbolizes a larger problem in Walter Reed's treatment of the wounded, according to dozens of soldiers, family members, veterans aid groups, and current and former Walter Reed staff members interviewed by two Washington Post reporters, who spent more than four months visiting the outpatient world without the knowledge or permission of Walter Reed officials. Many agreed to be quoted by name; others said they feared Army retribution if they complained publicly.

While the hospital is a place of scrubbed-down order and daily miracles, with medical advances saving more soldiers than ever, the outpatients in the Other Walter Reed encounter a messy bureaucratic battlefield nearly as chaotic as the real battlefields they faced overseas.

On the worst days, soldiers say they feel like they are living a chapter of "Catch-22." The wounded manage other wounded. Soldiers dealing with psychological disorders of their own have been put in charge of others at risk of suicide.

Disengaged clerks, unqualified platoon sergeants and overworked case managers fumble with simple needs: feeding soldiers' families who are close to poverty, replacing a uniform ripped off by medics in the desert sand or helping a brain-damaged soldier remember his next appointment.

"We've done our duty. We fought the war. We came home wounded. Fine. But whoever the people are back here who are supposed to give us the easy transition should be doing it," said Marine Sgt. Ryan Groves, 26, an amputee who lived at Walter Reed for 16 months. "We don't know what to do. The people who are supposed to know don't have the answers. It's a nonstop process of stalling."

Soldiers, family members, volunteers and caregivers who have tried to fix the system say each mishap seems trivial by itself, but the cumulative effect wears down the spirits of the wounded and can stall their recovery.

"It creates resentment and disenfranchisement," said Joe Wilson, a clinical social worker at Walter Reed. "These soldiers will withdraw and stay in their rooms. They will actively avoid the very treatment and services that are meant to be helpful."

Danny Soto, a national service officer for Disabled American Veterans who helps dozens of wounded service members each week at Walter Reed, said soldiers "get awesome medical care and their lives are being saved," but, "Then they get into the administrative part of it and they are like, 'You saved me for what?' The soldiers feel like they are not getting proper respect. This leads to anger."
[page 1 of a 5-page article]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/17/AR2007021701172.html
« Last Edit: February 18, 2007, 01:16:15 AM by Lanya »
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yellow_crane

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Re: Building 18
« Reply #1 on: February 18, 2007, 12:37:23 AM »

This administration, who has oftened been criticized for treating military personnel as if they were labor camp workers, and who really did scratch their collective head when blinding spotlights made them pretend they would actually do something for the common fodder of Katrina, are as remote from the dispiriting of Walter Reed as men busy saving their country from harm can be.

A little understanding, if you please!

These people are working hard elsewhere. 

Damn.

Perhaps the man who is talking to his god could send over Jerry, the guy who headed florida's social programs and who had one of the more hilarious hybrids of our now highly hybridic American religious system.

Oh wait.  For shearing in office, shining Jer was stripped of his cross and sword, no longer the head inquisitor of what was once Florida's social services.

God given, and God taketh away. 




BT

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Re: Building 18
« Reply #2 on: February 18, 2007, 01:11:50 AM »
You know what puzzles me about this attack on military medical facilities by certain posters and the MSM.

This is the same model that is being pushed for universal health care. If it is so horrible on this scale imagine how horrible it will be on a much larger scale.

The fact is it isn't horrible.

I had another occasion to visit the local VA at the end of January.

I had zero complaints about the staff, the food or the facilities.

The doctors in the emergency room decided to keep me overnight for further tests, because my earlier visit and treatent were not producing the desired results,  while podiatry and vascular sorted out which might be the better treatment. This was on a thursday. By midday friday all the tests had not been completed and i cut a deal with the attending doc to release me that evening and come back monday if needed. Over the weekend i would have just taken up a bed as no testing is done, unless under emergency circumstances and my situation, though painful, was not an emergency.

By 4:00 PM i had one test left and the person who did it had stayed over her shift to get me finished.

On that friday i had an xray, a cat scan, an echo something or other, an ultrasound, bloodwork and tissue cultures taken.

Dr. Field, the head of podiatry,  saw me on the second floor at cardiology and pushed my wheelchair to the elevator to deliver me to the seventh floor and took the time to explain the game plan vascular was proposing and then told me his staff had flagged my records and would be monitoring me for a while to make sure that the treatments were working.

I have a followup with my primary care physician in a week or so, my foot is about 75% recovered and except for my limp and an occasional pain blossom life is slowly getting back to normal.

Now this doesn't sound like an uncaring staff to me.

Nor does it sound like a medical facility poorly serving its constituents.

Which is why stories like Lanya chooses to post simply don't match my reality.


Lanya

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Re: Building 18
« Reply #3 on: February 18, 2007, 01:24:30 AM »
BT, this is the reality as the reporters found it.
You aren't at Walter Reed.
The medical care is wonderful, but this Building 18 isn't.

"While the hospital is a place of scrubbed-down order and daily miracles, with medical advances saving more soldiers than ever, the outpatients in the Other Walter Reed encounter a messy bureaucratic battlefield nearly as chaotic as the real battlefields they faced overseas.

On the worst days, soldiers say they feel like they are living a chapter of "Catch-22." The wounded manage other wounded. Soldiers dealing with psychological disorders of their own have been put in charge of others at risk of suicide." 


And we're still planning on closing Walter Reed.
I'm not attacking anything here, certainly not the medical care.  I don't think everything is rosey, though...do you?
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BT

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Re: Building 18
« Reply #4 on: February 18, 2007, 01:53:26 AM »
I don't have to be at Walter Reed to recognizes a pattern of attacks on military aftercare.

Is Walter Reed stressed due to the influx of patients. Probably.

Are they taking steps to correct it, according to the back pages of the article you posted, they certainly are.


BT

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Re: Building 18
« Reply #5 on: February 18, 2007, 02:01:15 AM »
BTW - did you know Dana Priest was married to William Goodfellow who according to wikipedia is Executive Director of The Center for International Policy, located in Washington DC, which was founded in 1975 by diplomats and former peace activists in the wake of the Vietnam War.


Agenda anyone?


Lanya

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Re: Building 18
« Reply #6 on: February 18, 2007, 03:48:50 AM »
I didn't know it and it doesn't make a difference to me. 
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BT

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Re: Building 18
« Reply #7 on: February 18, 2007, 03:58:25 AM »
Does it make a difference that many of the relatives of these soldiers are being given free housing and per diems while the soldiers are being processed and many of the outpatients are also being housed at hotels and motels some of which are pretty swank?

That was revealed on about page 4 of the article.