| Friday, July 23, 2010.  Chaos and violence continue, 3 US service members  are wounded in an Iraq attack, depleted uranium is back in the news, the  Congress examines VA health care, and more.     Lt Dan Choi: A big surprise. It's painful as much as much as I'm  prepared for that.  Anytime somebody knowingly breaks Don't Ask, Don't Tell for  the sake of integrity and telling the truth about who we are, we still have to  be prepared for the consequences --   John Hockenberry: Which were what?  What did your commander say to  you?   Lt Dan Choi: He said that I'd been discharged under Don't Ask,  Don't Tell.   John Hockenberry: You're out.   Lt Dan Choi: I'm fired.    John Hockenberry: He said fired or he just said -- 'You're being  honorably discharged'?    Lt Dan Choi: I'm being honorably discharged. That is an end to an  entire era that I've started since I was age 18 --   John Hockenberry: How long have you been in the  service?   Lt Dan Choi: -- I'm sorry.  I have not been a civilian since then.   And as much as you might be interested in how it was said and what was in the  letter, to me, it's all a summation of the entire journey and it says it's all  over.  As much as you can prepare yourself and build up the armor to get ready  for that, it's hard, it's very painful to deal with that.  I think about every  moment of being in the military since starting from West Point eleven years ago  and preparing for deployments and infantry training and then going to Iraq and  coming back and then starting a relationship and then all of the emotions of  this entire journey just came right back at that moment when he said that your -  your - your service is now terminated.  I got the letter. He e-mailed me the  letter, I got the letter yesterday morning, and in very cold words, it just said  that I'm finished.          According to the authors of a new study, "Cancer, Infant Mortality  and Birth Sex-Ratio in Fallujah, Iraq 2005–2009," the people of Fallujah are  experiencing higher rates of cancer, leukemia, infant mortality, and sexual  mutations than those recorded among survivors in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in the  years after those Japanese cities were incinerated by US atomic bomb strikes in  1945. The epidemiological study, published in the International  Journal of Environmental Studies and Public Health (IJERPH), also finds the  prevalence of these conditions in Fallujah to be many times greater than in  nearby nations.                             The assault on Fallujah, a city located 43 miles west of Baghdad,  was one of the most horrific war crimes of our time. After the population  resisted the US-led occupation of Iraq -- a war of neo-colonial plunder launched  on the basis of lies -- Washington determined to make an example of the largely  Sunni city. This is called "exemplary" or "collective" punishment and is,  according to the laws of war, illegal.     Press TV also covers it by interviewing former US Congress  member and Green Party presidential nominee Cynthia McKinney.   Press TV:  Mrs. McKinny is now with us from Atlanta, Georgia. Thanks so much for joining  our broadcast. Why is it that the use of depleted uranium in Iraq and  Afghanistan is largely being ignored by the media at large; in addition, this is  much more dangerous than the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, isn't it?        
 McKinny: Well, you're absolutely right that is dangerous. And not only  is the use of depleted uranium contaminating the areas that are considered the  war theater but because of air current the contamination by depleted uranium is  spreading over major world cities like for example London where the air has  tested positive for depleted uranium. We also have to be concerned about the  side effects of depleted uranium. We have seen an incredible increase in the  severity and in the proliferation of birth defects in these areas that are  considered the war theater by the US and the British troops. They have used  depleted uranium and it has affected the population.
 
 Press TV:The  Pentagon has denied risk from the use of depleted uranium and has refused to  help Iraq decontaminate affected areas, yet is also seeking alternatives citing  environmental factors. Is that last part as close as we are going to get to  admitting to the truth?
 
 McKinny:Well, we should have people in the  United States Congress who care about this particular issue. I did introduce  legislation to ban all use of depleted uranium munitions while the jury was out  with respect to what the health effects would have been as a result of the use  of these kinds of weapons. Now we know what the health effects are. We have seen  what the health effects are, and the impact on the people of Iraq. But, now the  United States is using depleted uranium munitions not only in Iraq but has been  using them in Afghanistan and Pakistan as well. So, it's not about the  environmental problems only that we are concerned, but we are concerned about  the health effects on human beings. We are concerned about the health effects of  war on human beings and that's why we are engaged in our activities to fight the  'US war machine' in general.
   Turning to some of today's reported violence, Reuters notes  3 US soldiers were wounded in an  attacak on a US Nassiriya base, a Kirkuk car bombing injured a police chief,  claimed the life of his son and injured nine other people, a Baghdad sticky  bombing injured two people, a Baghdad home invasion killed the parents of one  police officer, and, dropping back to Thursday for the rest, one army officer  injured in a Baghdad shooting, an Iskandariya bombing which injured nine people,  a Baghdad mortar attack which injured three people, and a Baghdad roadside  bombing which injured three people.   Yesterday the US House Veterans Affairs Subcommittee on Health held a  hearing on physical war wounds.   Chair Michael Michaud explained in his opening  statement,  "The purpose of today's hearing is to explore how we can best serve  our veterans who have sustained severe physical wounds from wars in Iraq and  Afghanistan. Today, we will closely examine VA's specialized services for the  severely injured, which include blind rehabilitation, spinal cord injury  centers, polytrauma centers and prosthetics and sensory aids services.  With  advances in protective body armor and combat medicine, our service members are  surving war wounds which  otherwise would have resulted in casualties."     Thomas Zampieri: The VA, I want to start off on some good news, the  blind rehab services have expanded services throughout the system. Ironically,  back in 2004, they developed the plans for a continum of care based on the idea  that the aging population of veterans would need a lot of low vision and blind  rehabilitative services.  Little, I think, did they realize back then that the  plans that they were making to expand services would suddenly be immediately  useful for the returning service members with eye trauma and Traumatic Brain  Injuries with vision impairments associated with the TBIs. And so what we have  is now the VA has expanded.  They've had ten in-patient blind centers which  offer comprehensive, rehabilitative services for those with blindness but they  also have all the specialized staff in those centers such as consultants with  orthapedics, general surgeons, neuroligists, psychologists, pharmacologists,  occupational therapists, physical therapists, speech pathologists, the list goes  on and on. So those individuals refered to the ten blind centers get, I think,  excellent care.  But the VA has also expanded and they now have 55 sites where  they have either low-vision specialists or advanced blind rehabiltative centers.  And those centers have specialized staff -- they've actually hired about 250  staff including about 60 low-vision optometrists and they're screening these  patients with visual problems and visual impairments. And so that's the good  news.   In addition, Zampieri noted problems such as the fact that BROS (Blind  Rehabilitative Outpatient Specialists) can visit the VA and do various things  but they can't do what they're trained to and so he asks that the VA grant BROS  the same Medical Treatment Factilities (MTF) clinical privileges as VA clinical  staff.  We're going to stay with opening statements and, please note, this is  what was stated.  It may or may not track with the prepared written opening  statement which are submitted ahead of time and submitted for the record. So  here's a sampling of the first panel, via their opening statements.  And these  are excerpts, not their entire opening statements.   Carl Blake: It is important to emphasize that specialized services  are part of the core mission and responsibility of the VA. For a long time, this  has included spinal cord injury care, blind rehabilitation, treatment for mental  health conditions -- including Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder -- and similiar  conditions. Today, Traumatic Brain Injury and polytrauma injuries are new areas  that the VA has had to focus its attention on as part of their specialized care  programs.  The VA's specialized services are incomparable resources that often  cannot be duplicated in the private sector.  For PVA, there is an ongoing issue  that has not received a great deal of focus: Some active duty soldiers with a  new spinal cord injury or dysfunction are being transferred directly to civilian  hospitals in the community and bypassing the VA health care system.  This is  particularly true of newly injured service members who incur their spinal cord  injuries in places other than the combat theaters of Iraq and Afghanistan. This  violates a memorandum of agreement  between VA and DoD that was effective  January 1, 2007, requiring that "care management services will be provided by  the military medical support office, the appropriate military treatment facility   and the admitting VA center as a joint-collaboration" and that "whenever  possible the VA health care center closest to the active duty member's home of  record should be contacted first." In addition, it requires that to ensure  optimal care, active duty patients are to go directly to a VA medical facility  without passing through a transit military hospital -- clearly indicating the  critical nature of rapidly integrating these veterans into an SCI health care  system.  This is not happening. For example, service members who have  experienced a spinal cord injury while serving in Afghanistan and Iraq are being  transferred to Sheppard Spinal Center, a private facility, in Atlanta when VA  facilities are available in Augusta. When we raised our concerns with the VA  regarding Augusta in a site visit report, the VA responded by conducting an  information meeting at Sheppard to present information and increase referrals.   However, reactionary measures such as this should not be the standard for  addressing these types of concerns. Of additional concern to PVA, it was repoted  that some of these newly injured soldiers receiving treatment in private  facilities are being discharged to community nursing homes after a period of  time in these private rehabilitation facilities.  In fact, some of these men and  women have received sub-optimal rehabilitation and some are being discharged  without proper equipment.  PVA is greatly concerned with this type of process  and treatment.    Joy Ilem: Today's injured military service members are experiencing  higher survival rates than in previous wars, with the overall survival rate  among wounded troops being about 90 percent.  This increase is attributed to the  widespread use of body armor, improved battlefield triage procedures and  expedited medical evacuation. For a majority of our wounded service members, the  first level of complex intervention on their journey to a VA PRC nomrally occurs  at the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany, operated by the US Army. Up  until 2009, VA received little or no information about wounded service member  transport, the full extent of the acute care process that service members had  undergone or the stress that these patients had experienced before arriving at a  VA PRC. However, in October of 2009, a team of two VA physicians and two nurses  from VA's Polytrauma System of Care spent four days at Landstuhl to gather  information and put a system in place to establish a regular exchange of  information between medical teams in the military and VA's PRCs.  The PRCs are  now able to track patients from the beginning of their jouneys and can identify  medical complications much earlier. This system of coordination has established  a continuum of care that is not proprietary to the DoD or VA and has aieded them  to develop one system that benefits our wounded personnel and veterans.     Tom Tarantino: We asked our members what they though of the  treatement they were receiving at the VA and we've received a wide range of  opinion, both complementary and critical.  However, several-several common  themes appeared: Long waits for appointments, frequent interaction with rude  administrative staff, a growing distrust of VA health care and long drives to VA  facilities. Fortunately, we received very few complaints about the actual  quality of care at VA medical centers. But in addition to the concerns listed  above, our members have expressed concern with how the VA deals with Traumatic  Brain Injury. To properly treat returning combat veterans with mild to severe  TBI the VA must completely rethink and adapt their medical  rehabilitation practices.  IAVA is concerned that the VA has limited or denied  access to some veterans seeking recovery services for TBI because current  statute requires that the VA provides services to restore functions to wounded  veterans and while full recovery should always be the desired outcome for  rehabilitation, sustaining current function or just preventing future harm  should also warrant access to VA services.   Denise Williams: In response to the large number of veterans with  prosthetics and rehabilitative needs, VA established Polytrauma Rehabilitation  Centers (PRC).  The VA Polytrauma Rehabilitation Centers provide treatment  through multi-disciplinary medical teams including cardiologists, internal  medicine, physical therapist, social work and transition patient case managers  and much more specialty medical service areas, to help treat the multiple  injuries.  Currently, VA maintains four VA Polytrauma Rehabilitation Centers in  Richmond, VA; Minneapolis, MN; Palo Alto, CA and Tampa, FL.  However, the  American Legion is concerned about VA's ability to meet the long term needs of  these young veterans. As stated by the Military Medicine Journal, rehabilitation  is a crucial step in optimizing long-term function and quality of life after  amputation. Although returning veterans with combat-related amputations may be  getting the best in rehabilitative care and technology available, their expected  long term health outcomes are considerably less clear. It is imperative that  both DoD and VA clinicians seriously consider the issues associated with  combat-related amputees and try to alleviate any forseeable problems that these  OIF-OEF amputees may face in the future.    We'll note this exchange.   Chair Michael Michaud: This question is actually for all the  panelists. I've heard some anecdotes from veterans who applaud prosthetic  services that they receive at the Dept of Defense but are very leery of the care  that they might receive through the VA system.  Do you believe that DoD provides  better overall prosthetic services compared to the VA? Or do you believe that  these anecdotes that I'm hearing are just a few isolated cases?  And I don't  know who wants to address that.   Joy Ilem: I'll go ahead and take a stab at that.  I think early on,  you know, we heard reports -- I mean, I remember from hearings even with [Iraq  War veteran] Tammy Duckworth [now the Assistant Secretary for Public and  Intergovernmental Affairs at the VA], one of the situations that's very unqiue  is DoD and Walter Reed obviously have had -- you know, the focus has been on  them for really doing much of the prosthetics and rehab there on site. I know  that VA, from attending their prosthetics meeting, have integrated their people  to go out and see, you know, what's going on as these people start to transfer  back to the VA.  But the complaints were that when they returned to the VA to  have either their item serviced or to continue their rehabiliation they ran into  sort of a disconnect from anyone at the facility they had been working with.   The prosthetician had very much attention to and all the access to the newest  items and options at the DoD site -- it seemed very different within the VA. I  think that, you know, VA's prosthetic services tried to really improve that  and make good strides in trying to make sure that they are ready to accept these  veterans as they transition back into VA to repair their equipment , to have --  I know that they have access to all of the vendors that are working out there  and they have done this liason work. I'm hoping that -- that percetion, as Tom  has mentioned, you know, it lingers when you hear so much about DoD and then  people want to return there because it's a very sensitive issue in terms of the  people that they're working with and the items that they're working with and  then to have to go to a new system where people that haven't seen the high tech  equipment, you know, you don't have a lot of confidence, I'm sure.  They're  saying, 'That's the first time I've seen that' but  the truth is they're getting  access to some of the most high quality equipment that nobody has seen, so I'm  hoping it's changing but it still may be the case in some  situations.   Carl Blake: Mr. Chairman, I just want to sort of piggy-back a  little on what Joy had to say and also make another comment first.  Representing  a membership that is probably one of the highest in the users of prosthetic  devices and equipment from the VA,  I would say that our members generally never  -- I won't say "never" -- generally do not have problems getting the most state  of the art wheel chairs and other types of equipment that they need.  In the  occasion where maybe there's some difficulty getting some prosthetic equipment  or whatever it may be, it's usually just a matter of working with the prosthetic  department through our service officers or what have you to make sure that the  right steps are taken.  But-but our members are not experiencing a lot of  problems getting what they need and, believe me, when it comes to state of the  art wheel chairs, you'd be surprised at what's out there. I want to sort of tag  along on what Joy had to say, I think you would find that DoD is not unlike VA  in sort of the prosthetic structure and some of VA's prosthetic services is not  unlike the rest of its health care, it has to become adaptable to the changing  needs of this generation. Prosthetics is no exception. I think a lot of focus is  put on the high tech -- we talk about these advanced prosthestics the service  members are getting from DoD but it really boils down to them getting through  Walter Reed, Bethesda, Brooke or some of the major military checkpoints. But if  they went back to a lot of home stations,  I think you'd find that a lot of  these military treatment facilities, they don't exactly have the capacity to  meet their needs when it comes to prosthetics or the maintenance required for  that equipment either. So DoD is not unlike the VA in that respect and I think  that VA is probably trying to address it more than DoD would in that respect and  we've heard time and again from Mr. [Fred] Downes who overseas the VA's  prosthetics that -- I think he recognizes the need for them to become more  adapatable and get it to the field so that, as these men and women are  ultimately going to come to their local facilities, the VA can meet their needs  particularly on the maintance of this high-end equipment. I mean, they are  intimately involved in what's going on out at Walter Reed in particular because  that's sort of where everything begins when it comes to these advanced  prosthetics.  So I -- You can beat up on the VA for it but in fairness to the  VA, they're seeing demands on their system that they never could have imagined  before now also.    Chair Michael Michaud:  Thank you very much. My next, my last  question for all the panelists actually is: When you look at speciality care  within the VA system, do you believe that speciality care is provided equally  among all of VA facilities talking to your membership?    Carl Blake: I'll speak to the SCI [spinal cord injury] side of it.  I think because of the model that's been established, we feel pretty confident  that it's sort of a uniform policy in the way that all SCI care is provided  across the system. That again is a function of how the entire SCI service has  been set up through the hub-and-spoke model. We're encouraged to see that the VA  is sort of moving that way in the polytrauma aspect.  And yet there are a lot of  challenges as it relates to TBI that Joy raised and going forward that the VA is  going to have to figure out how to deal with along the way. But I feel pretty  confident that they do the right thing across the board when it comes to SCI  service in particular.    Joy Ilem: I would add on to that, some of the complaints that we've  heard from veterans  contacting us about mild to moderate TBI is that their  family sort of recognized that they had an issue, they had been using the VA  system for other things, they went to the VA, weren't satisifed in certain areas  of  the country -- I mean, I'd received calls from sort of different locations  saying, you know, 'I ended up in the private sector with VA fee-basing me into  an out-patient program that really offered a range of things that I've learned  so much in the last six months in terms of mild TBI, how to deal with it for my  family centered care, addressing a range of issues and opportunities for them to  have this wide range of out-patient care.'  And in those cases, you know, I've  contacted the VA directly and tried to find out is it just this location that  they're having this problem or is it a systemic problem.  It's hard to say  unless, you know -- someone like PVA really has people on the ground that are  doing site visits and the Legion.  But in that specific area, that's a concern  of ours. We're hoping that in certain areas, we're hoping that they've got the  interdisciplinary teams that are needed to provide that care and that they've  developed a wide range of services and a good type of program for that but I'm  not convinced of that, that it's everywhere yet.  I think it's in certain  locations -- obviously with the major polytrauma centers -- but as you go  further out, and then obviously in the rural areas where those services are-are  not available and they have to connect them with the nearest prviate sector  facilities. You know, we'd like to see some continuity of care and make sure  that care is available everywhere.   Denise Williams: I'd like to add that during our site visit that  was a main issue: staffing shortages. As Joy just mentioned,  in the areas where  they have the polytrauma centers, you'll see where they have a lot of speciality  care available but as you go out to the other facilities there is definitely a  shortage for speciality care. And we hear that from the veterans and we also  hear that from VA staff themselves at the facilities, that there's a shortage.     Thomas Zampieri: Same thing. The major centers, both the military  polytrauma centers, Walter Reed, Bethesda, Brooke Army Medical Center, Balboa  out in San Diego, or you go to any of the four VA polytrauma centers, it's  amazing. I think everybody gets seen by everybody.  I mean it's not unusual to  have a team of thirty different specialists seeing a patient  and the hand off  has improved dramatically since 2005 when I was sitting in this room, I think,  with a couple of things. One is that we're always concerned with everybody  focuses on -- the famous beat-up in this town is Walter Reed.  You know, when  something goes wrong and the universe focuses there. But the patients who are  evacuated back through Landstuhl come back into the United States, I think  there's a misperception that everybody goes through Bethesda or Walter Reed and  actuality, some people will admit that about thirty percent of all the wounded  and walking wounded actually go back to the original home platform base of  deployment. So if you go to Fort Drum or Fort Carson, Coloardo or Fort Gordon,  Georgia or -- just name a base. Fort Hood, Texas.  You'll find individuals who  are evacced back through the system that didn't get seen in one of these highly  specialized centers. And some of those are the ones that we find that have a  vision problem -- you know, they didn't have a lot of other severe injuries so  they were evacced back and then they sort of get lost. Somebody on one side  doesn't notify the VA Blind Rehab Services or the local VIST coordinator that  they have somebody that's experiencing vision problems and that there's  treatment available, that there's specialized devices from prosthetics that are  available to help them in their recovery and treatment. And so that's why the  visions centers of excellence is important -- because it isn't just the major  trauma severe cases that need to be tracked, it's all of the types of injuries  -- mild, moderate, severe -- as far as vision goes -- that need to be carefully  tracked and followed and the providers need to be able to exchange the  information between them -- between the VA providers, the opthamologists and the  military, their colleagues, and the military treatment facilities. Because,  again, a person at Fort Drum, New York may suddently have somebody come in that  was evacced back from Landstuhl with injuries and that's where one of the  problems is. Thank you.        CNN reports, "The Senate passed an emergency  supplemental spending bill to fund the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, setting  aside a House package that includes additional social spending." So the  Democratically-controlled Senate is sending the war supplemental -- which Barack  swore would take place once and only once in 2009 and never again under his  watch -- back to the Democratically House and welcome to Bizarro World. Michael  Steele, chair of the GOP, calls the Afghanistan War Barack's war and he's only  'wrong' in that he forgot the Iraq War. They're both Barack's wars. And welcome  to Bizarro World. Governors do photo ops in Iraq and praise the conditions there  -- and they're Democrats -- like Governor Tim  Pawlenty . And Governor Jim Douglas . And welcome to Bizarro World. Michael Bell (Globe  and Mail) writes  a strong column which opens with, "The American-led  interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq are failing." A UN report this week, [PDF  format warning] "Regional Response Plan for Iraqi Refugees ,"  explains that Iraq continues to be unstable, that "human rights violations  continue, including illegal detention, targeted killing, kidnapping and  discrimination. The formation of a new Government following the Parliamentary  elections in March continues to be delayed and the political vacuum may continue  until August or September 2010."  And, for those wondering, the Green Party  continues to refuse to mount a left critique of Barack yet again signaling that  they are content to forever be the kid sister of the Democratic Party.     Still on peace news, Peace Mom Cindy Sheehan notes in "Myth America II: FREE PDF FILE " (Cindy Sheehan's  Soapbox), "Last year in January, I found myself in an awkward place--being  pro-peace in a nation that had seemed to have turned itself upside down either  in questionable euphoria or abject fear because a new member of the elite class  had been installed as president of the United States." Cindy's offering Myth  America as a PDF for free or for a donation to Cindy Sheehan's Soapbox .  TV notes. On PBS' Washington Week, Michael Duffy (Time magazine),  John Harwood (New York Times and CNBC) and Dana Priest (Washington Post) join  Gwen. This week, Bonnie  Erbe will sit down with Melinda  Henneberger, Eleanor Holmes Norton, Tara Setmayer and Genevieve Wood on the  latest broadcast of PBS' To The  Contrary to discuss the week's events. And  at the website each week, there's an extra just for the web from the previous  week's show and this week's online bonus is a discussion of women  priests.  Need To  Know is PBS' new program covering current events. This week's hour long  broadcast (Fridays on most PBS stations -- but check local listings) features  Bob Ivry on the financial-reform bill. And turning to broadcast TV, Sunday CBS' 60 Minutes  offers:     The NarrativeA former member of a Muslim extremist group tells  Lesley Stahl the reason for the increase in home-grown jihadists like the U.S.  Army major accused of shooting 13 at Ft. Hood is an ideology called "the  Narrative," which states America is at war with Islam. | Watch Video
 
 Growing Body PartsMorley Safer reports on the emerging  technology of growing body parts from human cells taken directly from patients,  providing new hope for amputees and patients on organ-transplant lists. |  Watch Video
 
 Tyler PerryWhen Hollywood refused to produce his films his  way, Tyler Perry started his own studio in Atlanta and now his movies -  including the popular "Madea" series - are drawing huge audiences. Byron Pitts  profiles the new and unlikely movie mogul. | Watch Video
 
 60 Minutes, Sunday, July 25, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.  |