Thursday, March 01, 2007

Tragic loss of Yolo County Iraqi Veteran

I was brought to a sad reality reading a notice of the death, by suicide, of Iraqi veteran Rafael Jauregui this week. As a psychotherapist, I wondered if he was able to access the mental health support due every returning Iraqi veteran in Yolo county and in our country. I recently watched "The Ground Truth," a video produced by Iraqi vets which vividly describes their journey as Marines through recruitment, training, war experience and aftermath. In this video, they relate experiences which continue to haunt them and trouble their relationships with those they love when they return home. As a therapist, their clear descriptions of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder followed by stories of being under-served by our Veterans Administration was unbearable. We can provide help for PTSD. Modalities such a EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) are proven through years of research to, in most cases, provide relief for those suffering from PTSD. According to the accounts in "The Ground Truth," as a soldier leaves Iraq, he/she is asked,"Do you think you have PTSD?" The answer "yes" results in a longer stay, maybe months out of the US for assessment and treatment, so most answer no. The soldier is then asked again as they are able to reunite with their families, "Do you have PTSD?" Their answer, "yes" will keep them from their families, possibly for months. The returning veteran, if suffering from PTSD, will often experience symptoms upon returning home, placing the need for services in his home county. His/her family should have education about reentry and access to services to support the veteran. We will never know what support was available for Rafael Jauregui but we must ask and assure that no Yolo County veteran of any war goes without the mental health and medical services they deserve. If the VA does not provide these critical services and counties will do so, VA funding should follow. Let's not forget our veterans, they ARE the troops we support.

1 comment:

molly two said...

I hope that Ted Puntillo, Yolo County's Veterans Services Officer and Matt Rexroad, County Supervisor, can work together to see that our vets returning from the horrors of war in the Middle East, have a fighting chance to recover from PTSD and all the other terrible damage done to them as they served their time in our military. Since Ted and Matt were effective in getting a new war memorial designed, manufactured and placed in front of the courthouse in Woodland, to memorialize the names of dead soldiers not listed on the big "old" memorial there, maybe they can adjust their focus on helping our returning vets BEFORE they're dead, instead of afterwards. The wars our soldiers are fighting now are so much different than World War II, or even Viet Nam. Our medical abilities are so much greater that now we can actually keep these terribly wounded soldiers alive, but at what cost? How can these men and women recover from the loss of one, two, three or even four limbs, while also dealing with PTSD? How can they recover from traumatic head injuries, not being able to remember that they have a wife and kids, while their loved ones pray ceaselessly to see just one tiny clue that their soldier husband or wife still recognizes them and knows that they love them? Oh, that our county elected and appointed officials could forge a solution, at least locally, to take care of "our own." We've got a great new County Health building in Woodland. Couldn't part of it be dedicated to serving our wounded vets, working in concert with the VA Hospital at Travis AFB? This would truly support our troops.

Molly Two