Are you stuck in the system also?

RaginRanger will respond to any comment--on any post--asking for help on your situation.
This blog "moderates" posts, meaning that your post will NOT be posted publicly if you request that your question remain private.

I am not a lawyer, but I have been in this fight long enough to at least point you to help in most cases. I'll help write a Memorandum For Record and/or the Commander if needed. Sometimes just getting a new perspective from someone who's been there, but doesn't have personal ties to
you, can make things more clear.

The most important thing is for those of us who have made it through, to be here for those still fighting through ~

24 February 2007

Recovery Ops

I'm glad the lid finally got blown off the military covering-up the failures of the administration. These problems so recently brought to light about WRAMC (Walter Reed Army Medical Center) are only superficial. Taco Bell has rats and roaches. The real problem is the leadership's failure to take corrective action. These problems have been known for a long time.
Good leaders are not just the lucky people who have no problems during their periods of responsibility. (Though many generals and high-power politicians have either been so lucky, or have done a hell-of-a-job covering things up) The best leaders are the ones who can take horrific problems and conditions and make the situation better. It will take leadership beyond the capability of those currently in charge to fix this problem.
This should be investigated - letting conditions get this bad is dereliction of duty. But to say that leadership knew nothing of the problems adds insult to injury - quite literally in this case.
Either the high-up leaders didn't care enough to inspect all facilities, facility managers lied to higher-up leaders, or the higher-up leaders knew, and did nothing to fix matters. Each of these possibilities demonstrate the dire circumstances within the DoD's management of military medical practices.

What is more - Walter Reed is hallowed ground for injured troops - it's a MEDCEN (Medical Center), in the middle of Washington D.C.!!! The outlying community hospitals in the Army don't have nearly what WRAMC can provide. Soldiers in outlying hospitals live in worse conditions (yeah, I've seen them and smelled the puke left in the asbestos filled hallways by cancer patients returning from chemo and radiation treatment, and I've seen the moldy showers where burn-victims and amputees have to bathe) and there is no spotlight to fix them!!

These troops have returned home from war with life-changing wounds and injuries and the administration continues their "fight the war on the cheap" mentality by cutting corners on health care.

And why can't soldiers make a cause for this themselves? Why is it that these men and women fought a faceless, far-off enemy and can't stick-up for themselves? Easy - they have no weapon, and no support. The majority of seriously injured troops returning to these piss-poor conditions are low-ranking and have little-to-no family or financial support. Battling the physical injuries and psychological trauma of their injuries and the PTSD most likely linked to that injury leaves our combat-trained service members in an unsupported position. They have no recourse against shitty medical care and have no one to guide them through the red-tape involved in transitioning from active duty to the civilian world. Sure there are benefits and programs linked to service - but what good are these services when they are not made accessible to vets and families who would most benefit from them. Besides, most of these vets-to-be just want to get on with their lives - they aren't the type to wallow in misery.

Hopefully this WRAMC shitstorm won't stop in DC - so many more military hospitals need the spotlight turned on. Hospital leaders need to be held accountable for their neglect of troop health.


So if it takes the press corps to motivate the leadership of "this great Nation" so be it - our troops deserve better treatment and their leadership lacks the character, the moral courage and the intestinal fortitude to find a way to provide it.

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