RE:
Soldiers Face Neglect, Frustration At Army's Top Medical
Facility
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/17/AR2007021701172_2.html

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Soldiers Face Neglect, Frustration At Army's Top Medical
Facility
This world is invisible to outsiders. Walter Reed
occasionally showcases the heroism of these wounded
soldiers and emphasizes that all is well under the
circumstances. President Bush, former defense secretary
Donald H. Rumsfeld and members of Congress have promised
the best care during their regular visits to the
hospital's spit-polished amputee unit, Ward 57.
"We owe them all we can give them," Bush said during his
last visit, a few days before Christmas. "Not only for
when they're in harm's way, but when they come home to
help them adjust if they have wounds, or help them
adjust after their time in service
Along with the government promises, the American public,
determined not to repeat the divisive Vietnam
experience, has embraced the soldiers even as the war
grows more controversial at home. Walter Reed is awash
in the generosity of volunteers, businesses and
celebrities who donate money, plane tickets, telephone
cards and steak dinners.
Yet at a deeper level, the soldiers say they feel alone
and frustrated. Seventy-five percent of the troops
polled by Walter Reed last March said their experience
was "stressful." Suicide attempts and unintentional
overdoses from prescription drugs and alcohol, which is
sold on post, are part of the narrative here.
Vera Heron spent 15 frustrating months living on post to
help care for her son. "It just absolutely took forever
to get anything done," Heron said. "They do the
paperwork, they lose the paperwork. Then they have to
redo the paperwork. You are talking about guys and girls
whose lives are disrupted for the rest of their lives,
and they don't put any priority on it."
Family members who speak only Spanish have had to rely
on Salvadoran housekeepers, a Cuban bus driver, the
Panamanian bartender and a Mexican floor cleaner for
help. Walter Reed maintains a list of bilingual
staffers, but they are rarely called on, according to
soldiers and families and Walter Reed staff members.
Evis Morales's severely wounded son was transferred to
the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda for
surgery shortly after she arrived at Walter Reed. She
had checked into her government-paid room on post, but
she slept in the lobby of the Bethesda hospital for two
weeks because no one told her there is a free shuttle
between the two facilities. "They just let me off the
bus and said 'Bye-bye,' " recalled Morales, a Puerto
Rico resident.
Morales found help after she ran out of money, when she
called a hotline number and a Spanish-speaking operator
happened to answer.
"If they can have Spanish-speaking recruits to convince
my son to go into the Army, why can't they have
Spanish-speaking translators when he's injured?" Morales
asked. "It's so confusing, so disorienting."
Soldiers, wives, mothers, social workers and the heads
of volunteer organizations have complained repeatedly to
the military command about what one called "The Handbook
No One Gets" that would explain life as an outpatient.
Most soldiers polled in the March survey said they got
their information from friends. Only 12 percent said any
Army literature had been helpful.
"They've been behind from Day One," said Rep. Thomas M.
Davis III (R-Va.), who headed the House Government
Reform Committee, which investigated problems at Walter
Reed and other Army facilities. "Even the stuff they've
fixed has only been patched."
Among the public, Davis said, "there's vast appreciation
for soldiers, but there's a lack of focus on what
happens to them" when they return. "It's awful."
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