DISABLED AMERICAN VETERANS
807 Maine Ave., SW · Washington, D.C.
20024 · Phone (202)
554-3501 ·
Fax (202) 863-0233
News
Release
Contact: David E. Autry FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(202) 314-5219 March 2, 2007
Pentagon
Urged to Move Walter Reed Patients to VA Facilities Closer to Home
WASHINGTON—The
Disabled American Veterans (DAV) has called upon Defense Secretary Robert Gates
to take immediate action to provide decent, sanitary housing for recuperating
soldiers at Walter Reed Army Medical Center and to consider moving them to Department of Veterans Affairs facilities closer to their
homes.
In a forceful letter to Secretary Gates, DAV
National Commander Bradley S. Barton expressed the organization’s concerns
raised in articles published by the Washington Post about the appalling
living conditions for wounded veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan while they
undergo outpatient care and discharge and medical retirement out-processing at
Walter Reed Army Medical Center.
The articles document benign neglect affecting
hundreds, and over time, thousands, of soldiers at what has often been touted
as the Army’s premier medical treatment facility.
“If the Defense Department can’t or won’t
provide our injured soldiers with the decent living conditions they need and
deserve, they should be given the option of moving to VA facilities closer to
their homes where they can receive top-notch health care and rehabilitation
services that will improve their quality of life,” said Commander Barton.
The VA is well-suited to provide services to these
soldiers and already has agreements in place with the Defense Department to
care for military personnel. There are
hundreds of soldiers being treated today at VA poly-trauma centers and other
medical facilities as inpatients and outpatients.
Barton also noted that the VA consistently sets the
benchmark for patient satisfaction, according to the American Customer
Satisfaction Index developed by the University of
Michigan Business School. The Institute
of Medicine has recognized the VA as one of the best in the nation for its
integrated health information system. And
a comprehensive study by Harvard Medical School found
that federal hospitals, including those run by the VA, provide the best care
available anywhere for some of the most common life-threatening illnesses.
“Keeping our wounded soldiers on
outpatient status in sub-standard living conditions for months or years is
disgraceful and demeaning. No wonder
many of them feel betrayed and abandoned by a government that claims to support
our troops while leaving them to languish in moldy, vermin-infested housing,”
Barton said.
“The brave men and women who have served
and sacrificed for our nation deserve to be treated with dignity and respect,”
Barton said. “It is a travesty to treat
them this way when there are much better options available.”
The
1.3 million-member Disabled American Veterans, a non-profit organization
founded in 1920 and chartered by the U.S. Congress in 1932, represents this
nation’s disabled veterans. It is dedicated to a
single purpose: building better lives for our nation’s disabled veterans and
their families. For more information, visit the
organization’s Web site www.dav.org.
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Chapter 43 Legislative Affairs Officer Comments: I fully concur with the above. I can’t speak for all VA facilities but mine
is one of the best and we who volunteer there can attest to the fact that our
American veterans would be welcomed with open arms and positive recognition. Not to mention the facility is one of the
best in the USA, the facility I am talking about is the Asheville North
Carolina Veterans Administrations Medical Center located at Oteen, NC. Please bring our vets home and allow us to
help them properly. We vets take great
pride in how we can help each other, never forget, once a vet, always a
vet. God Bless America and her veterans
all over the world.