Aftermath
The Washington Post stories on Walter Reed Army Medical Center have continued. The story which appeared on Sunday stunned many people.
Yesterday’s installment brought more personal stories which reveal a broken down bureaucracy with misplaced priorities and families whose resources are stretched beyond their limits trying to care for their injured family members.
<!The conflict in Iraq has hatched a virtual town of desperation and dysfunction, clinging to the pilings of Walter Reed. The wounded are socked away for months and years in random buildings and barracks in and around this military post.
The luckiest stay at Mologne House, a four-story hotel on a grassy slope behind the hospital. Mologne House opened 10 years ago as a short-term lodging facility for military personnel, retirees and their family members. Then came Sept. 11 and five years of sustained warfare. ... Two Washington Post reporters spent hundreds of hours in Mologne House documenting the intimate struggles of the wounded who live there. The reporting was done without the knowledge or permission of Walter Reed officials, but all those directly quoted in this article agreed to be interviewed.
...Here at Hotel Aftermath, a crash of dishes in the cafeteria can induce seizures in the combat-addled. If a taxi arrives and the driver looks Middle Eastern, soldiers refuse to get in. Even among the gazebos and tranquility of the Walter Reed campus in upper Northwest Washington, manhole covers are sidestepped for fear of bombs and rooftops are scanned for snipers.
Bomb blasts are the most common cause of injury in Iraq, and nearly 60 percent of the blast victims also suffer from traumatic brain injury, according to Walter Reed’s studies, which explains why some at Mologne House wander the hallways trying to remember their room numbers.
Some soldiers and Marines have been here for 18 months or longer. Doctor’s appointments and evaluations are routinely dragged out and difficult to get. A board of physicians must review hundreds of pages of medical records to determine whether a soldier is fit to return to duty. If not, the Physical Evaluation Board must decide whether to assign a rating for disability compensation. For many, this is the start of a new and bitter battle.
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While Mologne House has a full bar, there is not one counselor or psychologist assigned there to assist soldiers and families in crisis—an idea proposed by Walter Reed social workers but rejected by the military command that runs the post.
After a while, the bizarre becomes routine. On Friday nights, antiwar protesters stand outside the gates of Walter Reed holding signs that say “Love Troops, Hate War, Bring them Home Now.” Inside the gates, doctors in white coats wait at the hospital entrance for the incoming bus full of newly wounded soldiers who’ve just landed at Andrews Air Force Base.
The photo slideshow brings the impact home.
Today’s Report
Today’s Washington Post reports that Building 18, featured in Sunday’s report, has received a great deal of attention from the Army and the DOD in the last 48 hours.
The facility’s commander, Maj. Gen. George W. Weightman, said Army staff members inspected each of the 54 rooms at the building and discovered that outstanding repair orders for half the rooms had not been completed. He said that mold removal had begun on several rooms and that holes in ceilings, stained carpets and leaking faucets were being fixed.
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Yesterday, Weightman said a broken elevator in the building had been repaired and soldiers were working to improve the outside of the building, including removing ice and snow. The slippery conditions have kept some soldiers in their rooms. A garage door that has been broken for months will soon be repaired as well.
Spec. Jeremy Duncan, whose room has a moldy wall that was featured in one photograph in the Post series, has been moved to another room while workers make repairs. Duncan will be able to return to his room when the work is completed, Weightman said.
Walter Reed and Army officials have been “meeting continuously for three days” since the articles began appearing, Weightman said. A large roundtable meeting with Army and Defense Department officials will take place at the Pentagon early this morning to continue talks about improvements in the outpatient system, he added.
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Social workers will now be stationed around the clock at Mologne House, the 200-room hotel on the post where many of the outpatients live. Plans are being developed to better train other staff members who deal with outpatient needs.
We owe our gratitude to Dana Priest and Ann Hull and those who worked with them to bring this story to light. It is good to know that the spotlight of the press will improve conditions in this particular location.
Questions Remain
But questions remain to be asked. Why did it happen in the first place? If these conditions could develop at the premier medical care site of the Army, is it possible similar conditions exist elsewhere? What happens when these soldiers move from the Army’s care to the VA? What is the funding situation for the VA?
How much longer are we going to engage our soldiers in a conflict situation in which there are no winners, only losers?
It is important that we take care of those who have sacrificed their mental and physical well-being on our behalf. And it is vitally important that we set a deadline and stop putting our soldiers at risk.


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I was wondering if you might want to crosspost some of this diary that’s on the rec list at DKos--sort of a “dirty dozen” of Senators who are awful on veteran’s issues. Ralph Parrot and his organization are targeting them in the ‘08 election. Let’s see how many of them we can get out of office!
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2007/2/20/91939/0056
VoteVets.org chairman Jon Soltz talks about armor for the troops and Vet care on Countdown: