Veterans Program a Success with Colorado Springs Veterans

Pikes Peak Behavioral Health Group’s Peer Navigator program is successfully helping veterans with making their way through the often confusing world of VA benefits and healthcare.   The group connects veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain injury (TBI) experts in cutting through the red tape and getting the services these veterans need.  Kevin Porter, director of public affairs for the organization, says “A few hundred Colorado veterans have benefited from the program so far.”   The program provides a “friendly face” to guide former military personnel and their families through the transition back to the civilian world.

This program stands out from other programs because of its immediate response to the requests for help.  “Our peer navigator, if you’re at church if you’re at home or you’re at a bar, they’re dispatched to that location, just like an ambulance would be,” says Porter.  This program gives veterans hope for their futures as citizens in the country they defended.

For more on this recent success story view the full article.

Do you have experience with this or other VA programs for the Colorado Springs area?  Click here.

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New Horizons in Brain Injury Treatment

According to MSNBC, military leadership estimates that as high as 20% of the troops returning from Afghanistan and Iraq may have some form of Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI).  TBI symptoms can range from those of a mild concussion (such as headaches or blurred vision) to the very severe (seizures, change in personality, repeated nausea or vomiting, weakness in the body, confusion, and others).  While there is treatment available for some of the symptoms of TBI, there is no way to repair the actual damage done to the brain. 

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is currently working to change that.  DARPA is developing a new technology called REPAIR (Reorganization and Plasticity to Accelerate Injury Recovery.  This technology would aid veterans who suffer from TBI by repairing brain damage through the use of electrical implants on the surface of the brain.  The implants will use a science called “optogenics” to send out pulses of light that directly trigger individual neurons, repairing the neural pathways that are broken by TBI.

The project is in the early stages of clinical trials.  However, if researchers are successful, there could someday be new hope for affected veterans and their families.  For more on this research, check out the full article on WIRED.

Looking for resources now?  Find, rate and share TBI-related services and other programs by click here.

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May is Mental Health Month

May is National Mental Health Month. This is a month for us to reflect on the impact and prevalence of mental health issues. It’s a month to speak openly and freely about issues which are common, but commonly stigmatized.

Which is why this month the Warrior Gateway will be posting a series of resources, stories, and other information related to mental health and the military community. Stay posted for more!

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Helping service members with the emotional cost of war

M. David Rudd (dean of the College of Social and Behavioral Science and scientific director of the National Center for Veterans Studies at the University of Utah) has a good opinion piece in USA Today that discusses the tension between the ‘warrior identity’ built into our men and women in combat and the inevitable emotional baggage that comes along with killing and living in an atmosphere of frequent danger. As Rudd notes, there is a major perceived distinction between physical and mental injuries–while physical injuries are obvious and there is little stigma surrounding them, admitting to ‘mental wounds’ is often thought of as a sign of weakness–a weakness which conflicts with the ‘warrior identity.’

Rudd discusses the effect the stigma surrounding mental wounds on the recent increase in suicides among the military community, noting that the people often most in need are also those most reluctant to seek out help. Russ also suggests a number of possible solutions to the problem surrounding admitting and seeking help for their emotional baggage:

• Talk more frequently beforehand about optimal performance and resilience in combat, rather than post-trauma symptoms and mental illness afterward.

• Help soldiers construct a warrior identity that more clearly integrates the emotional consequences of killing.

• Encourage military leaders at the highest levels to talk openly about their own difficulty after combat experience, something that is already happening and is very effective at combating stigma.

Click here to read the full article.

Wounded Warrior Program aids civilian transition

The AP has a great article on the efforts of the Army’s Wounded Warrior Program to help wounded veterans – particularly those with mental/psychological issues – transition to civilian life. The Wounded Warrior Program (aka AW2) focuses on enabling wounded warriors to find and maintain a successful career in the civilian workplace. To do so, AW2 has worked with employers to educate them on the realities of conditions like PTSD or TBI, letting them know that veterans with ‘invisible wounds’ “might not be able to work regular hours or might startle too easily, suffer outbursts or require time off for counseling.”

Army officials say many new veterans suffering from PTSD and brain injuries struggle to find and keep a civilian job. Advocates say many employers don’t know how to accommodate veterans with these “invisible wounds” and worry that they cannot do the job and might even “go postal” someday.

“There is a stigma attached to the invisible wounds, and it’s largely borne out of ignorance,” said David Autry, a spokesman for Disabled American Veterans. “There’s a fear that somebody will go off the deep end.”

The program has also worked with individual veterans who need assistance juggling the transition to life in the workplace and the struggle with combat-related psychological disorders. The article tells the story of Richard Martin who, with the help of AW2 and his employer, has devised a number of ingenious devices to help him cope with his PTSP and TBIs in the workplace.

Richard Martin keeps a rearview mirror on his desk to prevent co-workers from startling him in his cubicle. The walls are papered with sticky notes to help him remember things, and he wears noise-canceling headphones to keep his easily distracted mind focused.

Martin, an Army veteran who was nearly blown up on three occasions in Iraq, once feared that post-traumatic stress disorder and a brain injury would keep him from holding down a civilian job, despite years of corporate experience and an MBA.

“Here I am with this background and I’m having problems with my memory,” said Martin, a 48-year-old engineer and former National Guard major who now works for Northrop Grumman, helping to devise ways to thwart remote-detonated bombs.

The defense contractor recruited him through its hiring program for severely wounded veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan. The company consulted occupational nurses on how to help him do his job without becoming overly nervous when someone, say, drops a heavy object. Martin figured out other tricks, like the headphones, on his own.

This is a great example of veterans, military programs like AW2, and employers like Northrop Grumman working together to overcome the issues associated with military-to-civilian transitions and invisible wounds.