As We Were Saying…

Fort Campbell troops recover from war / Gareth McConnell

Tough story in the Clarksville, Tenn., Leaf-Chronicle this morning about a soldier with PTSD who says he went AWOL, instead of returning to Afghanistan, because of the lack of mental-health services at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. “All I wanted was to be treated,” Specialist Jeff Hanks, who also served in Iraq in 2008, said outside the fort’s gate Thursday as he turned himself in. “Hopefully they’ll listen to me and treat me.” Hanks said he went absent without leave nearly a month ago after his post-traumatic stress disorder and the collapse of his family convinced him he couldn’t get the help he needed in a war zone:

Hanks said he reached out to his commanders while home on leave, but he was met with resistance and delay. He said he was told he would immediately have to go back to Afghanistan.

We wrote about this sad state of affairs at Fort Campbell in the August 16 issue of Time:

The Army has spent $7 million building at Fort Campbell what it calls its first behavioral-health campus (soldiers call it “the mental-health mall”) with a half-dozen new clinics filled with the latest technology for diagnosing and treating posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain injury. The fort’s mental-health staff has grown from 31 in January 2008 to 95 today…But the trend at the base remains clear; the workload per mental-health worker has nearly doubled from 2008 to 2010, jumping from 19 to 32 visits per week.

Additional reporting for that story revealed:

The focus on Fort Campbell’s mental health has been driven, in part, by a 2008 probe that tried to figure out why its 2007 suicide rate was 50 percent higher than the overall Army’s. Outside Army experts found that even as Fort Campbell’s mental-health visits increased fivefold from 2005 to 2007, the staff shrunk from 28 to 18. That led to longer waits between visits and individual troops being seen in clinics beset by “frequent staff turnover,” forcing the soldier to “start over” with a new therapist each visit. The mental-health workload led to poor care and morale, as well as “compassion fatigue,” among counselors. The first recommendation to curb suicides: “address critical behavioral-health shortages.”

The Army’s didn’t care for the attention garnered by the young soldier. “It seems a shame to focus attention on this particular young man on Veterans Day,” a post spokeswoman said in a statement, “when we have 15,000 men and women from the 101st Airborne Division bravely supporting the fight and placing themselves in harm’s way in Afghanistan and Iraq.”

Related Topics: army, mental health, Troops, National Security
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  • howiesgirlami2004

    As a mother of a Ft. Campbell soldier, I can sympathize with this soldier. My husband suffers from PTSD and receives very little help for this devastating condition. My son served in Iraq in 2008 and is now in Afghanistan and I have seen changes in his behavior and life that scare me to death. He is supposed to be getting help, but it is not up to the standards that a civilian person suffering from PTSD receives.
    The comments by post officials show the lack of understanding and concern for our soldiers, sailors, Marines and airmen. I feel it was a fitting time for this young man to do this because it shows how the government lacks concern for the care it promises our service members past and present.

  • apr2563

    howiesgirl: It is unforgiveable to not give our service people the best care possible. I would hope that Mark Thompson and other journalists will continue to focus on the need for better treatment.
    On your behalf, I will send a copy of this posting to my congress people and the appropriate departments of our government.
    I would encourage everyone who reads this post do the same.
    My warmest wishes and thanks to you, your husband, and your son.

  • http://2thirdsrocks.wordpress.com 2thirdsrocks

    Ahh yes aper, still more of that selective concern and gratitude.

  • chantelleivaw

    Hi, I’m Chantelle, I’m a part of the Operation Recovery campaign team, and one of the veteran organizer who was supporting Jeff last week. The events in Ft. Cambell last week made it very clear just how many soldiers their are suffering. Other service members and military family members have contacted us since then with similar accounts. You and your son are not alone. The O.R. team is working to expose the military’s treatment of its service members and hold those who are responsible accountable. Additionally we are working to grow resources and support networks for each other and our families while we wait for the military to get it together. The 101st will be coming home before we know it and they are going to need all of the help we can muster since we know that the military is incapable of fully supporting its returning veterans.

    I would definitely like to hear more about you and your son and find out how the O.R. team can support you. http://www.ivaw.org/operation-recovery or you can email me directly chantellebateman@ivaw.org. Military Families Speak Out is also a great resource for military family members as well as an Operation Recovery campaign partner (www.mfso.org).

  • http://healingmilitaryfamilies.wordpress.com healingmilitaryfamilies

    Howiesgirl: Help is available to your son and any soldier serving stateside or deployed. Many Fort Campbell soldiers step inside A Healing Room because it is local to Ft Campbell. It is open to anyone no matter where they are currently serving. Click on the Fort Campbell link and you will see: http://www.healingmilitaryfamilies.com All natural, true healing that gives people the energy to live their lives and the peace of mind to enjoy it.

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