Disabled American Veterans, Dept of Florida

Disabled American Veterans, Dept of Florida Provides Services to disabled veterans and their families

08/11/2016

Multisymptom Illness Still Plagues Gulf War Vets

American veterans who served in the 1990-1991 Gulf War continue to face higher rates of chronic and mysterious mental and physical ailments, compared to veterans of other recent wars in the Middle East.

In fact, according to an updated review in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, researchers found that veterans of the Gulf War are more than twice as likely to suffer from a variety of medically unexplained symptoms known as “multisymptom illness,” compared to Iraq/Afghanistan War veterans.

Multisymptom illness (MSI), previously known as the Gulf War Syndrome, refers to chronic, unexplained symptoms that affect a variety of body systems. These may include symptoms such as fatigue, headaches, insomnia, indigestion, dizziness, respiratory issues, mood or cognitive (thinking) problems, and joint and muscle pain.

The origin of this mysterious illness is still unknown, although it has been attributed to exposure to a combination of pesticides, vaccines, and other chemicals.

“Gulf War deployment continues to be strongly associated with increased MSI, affecting a considerable proportion of Gulf War veterans,” write Dr. Stella M. Gwini and colleagues of Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.

For the review, the researchers looked at data from seven previous studies analyzing the prevalence of MSI among veterans of the 1990-91 Gulf War as well as the Afghanistan and Iraq Wars. In addition to including some more recent, higher-quality studies, the review added an Australian study to previous data from the United States and the United Kingdom.

Although estimates varied widely, MSI prevalence was consistently quite a bit higher in veterans of the Gulf War: 26 to 65 percent, compared with 12 to 37 percent in Iraq/Afghanistan War veterans. On pooled data analysis, the odds of MSI were 2.5 times higher in Gulf War veterans versus other military groups. The odds were slightly lower in higher-quality studies.

Furthermore, veterans who had been deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan were more likely to have MSI than nondeployed personnel, but their risk was still lower than veterans who had been deployed to the Gulf War.

The new findings offer “updated and more robust estimates” of the risk of MSI in Gulf War veterans, compared to other military personnel.

Gwini and coauthors conclude that their findings “highlight the continuing problem and magnitude of MSI in Gulf War veterans, calling for ongoing awareness of the need for timely health assessments and health care.”

Source: Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine

08/11/2016

HELP SUPPORT THE DEPARTMENT OF FLORIDA THROUGH AMAZONSMILE. PLEASE SHARE THIS WITH ALL YOUR FRIENDS.

Each quarter, the AmazonSmile Foundation makes donations to eligible charitable organizations by electronic funds transfer. Donations will be transferred approximately 45 days after the end of each calendar quarter. To account for Product returns, a portion of the quarterly donations will be withheld until the next donation cycle, subject to any reduction due to returns from prior quarters.

How does AmazonSmile work?
When first visiting AmazonSmile, customers are prompted to select a charitable organization from almost one million eligible organizations. In order to browse or shop at AmazonSmile, customers must first select a charitable organization. For eligible purchases at AmazonSmile, the AmazonSmile Foundation will donate 0.5% of the purchase price to the customer’s selected charitable organization.

The attached link should direct you to the necessary page.
https://smile.amazon.com/ch/59-3059133.

When you shop at AmazonSmile, Amazon will donate to Disabled American Veterans Department of Florida Service. Support us every time you shop.

08/10/2016

VA’s Million Veteran Program (MVP) has reached an important milestone when an Army Veteran from Montgomery, Alabama, became the 500,000th to voluntarily enroll in the research database program – making MVP the largest genomic database in the world.

Launched in 2011, and part of the White House Precision Medicine Initiative, participants donate blood from which DNA is extracted. A baseline and periodic follow-up surveys track Veterans’ military experiences, health and lifestyles. Researchers believe the information contained in the database could hold the key to preventing and treating diseases.

“Our Veterans continue to demonstrate their selfless sacrifice, and the nation has yet another reason to owe them a debt of gratitude,” said VA Secretary Bob McDonald. “Many of our Veterans have saved lives on the battlefield and because of their participation in MVP, their participation has the potential to save countless lives – now and for generations to come.”

As part of the program, participating Veterans grant researchers secure access to their electronic health records and agree to be contacted about participating in future research. Samples and data used are coded to protect participants’ identification and privacy.

Research using MVP data is already underway, studying a range of medical issues like mental illness and heart and kidney diseases. The program also has rich data on various health conditions that are common in Veterans. Approximately 62 percent of MVP enrollees report a current or past diagnosis of high blood pressure and about a third report tinnitus. Also, nearly a third or 32 percent of Veterans present with a history or current diagnosis of cancer.

“We believe MVP will accelerate our understanding of disease detection, progression, prevention and treatment by combining this rich clinical, environmental and genomic data,” said Dr. David J. Shulkin, VA Under Secretary for Health. “VA has a deep history of innovation and research. MVP will allow the nation’s top researchers to perform the most cutting-edge science to treat some of the nation’s most troubling diseases.”

For more information about MVP, including how to participate, visit http://www.research.va.gov/MVP/. For information about the 52 VA sites currently enrolled in the program, visit www.research.va.gov/MVP/all-clinics.cfm.

Million Veteran Program (MVP)

08/10/2016

DAV Elects National Officers for 2016-2017 at Atlanta Convention

At its National Convention in Atlanta DAV elected National Officers for the upcoming year.

Elected as National Commander was David Riley of Alabama.

Elected as National Senior Vice Commander was Delphine Metcalf-Foster of California.

Elected as National 1st Junior Vice Commander was Dennis Nixon of Texas.

Elected as National 2nd Junior Vice Commander was Stephen Whitehead of Minnesota.

Elected as National 3rd Junior Vice Commander was Donald Day of New York.

Elected as National 4th Junior Vice Commander was Andy Marshall of Florida.

Re-Elected as National Chaplain was Michael Dover of Georgia.

Re-Elected as National Judge Advocate was Mike Dobmeier of North Dakota

08/10/2016

With help from national and local partners, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has launched a new site titled "Information for Veterans". The page is designed to provide timely federal tax-related information to Veterans about tax credits and benefits, free tax preparation, financial education and asset-building opportunities available to Veterans.

Learn more about Veteran specific information by visiting the new webpage: https://www.irs.gov/individuals/information-for-veterans

The Internal Revenue Service is committed to providing assistance to all Veterans. We work with community and government partners to provide timely federal tax-related information to Veterans about tax credits and benefits, free tax preparation, financial education and asset-building opportunities a...

08/10/2016

Join the Burn Pit Registry to document your exposures and health concerns, obtain a free health evaluation by a VA or DoD provider, and stay informed of VA’s research. The registry is your opportunity to help answer the question of what burn pit exposure could mean for your health and that of fellow Veterans in the future. Over 80,000 Veterans have already joined the registry, but we have only just begun. www.publichealth.va.gov/exposures/burnpits/registry.asp.

08/10/2016

Disabled veterans are eligible to receive an increase in their benefits next year. The Veterans' Compensation COLA Act of 2016 directs the Department of Veterans Affairs to increase, as of Dec. 1, the rates of veterans' disability compensation, additional compensation for dependents, the clothing allowance for certain disabled veterans, and dependency and indemnity compensation for surviving spouses. The amount of the increase will be equivalent to the increase provided under Title II of the Social Security Act. The precise amount of the adjustment will not be known until the end of the calendar year.

07/28/2016

DAV Convention Speakers

Speakers at this year's DAV National Convention in Atlanta include Honorable Robert McDonald, Secretary of Veterans Affairs on Sunday, July 31, 2016 and President Barack Obama on Monday, August 1, 2016.

07/28/2016

DAV Mission Statement

Fulfilling our promises to the men and women who served.

We are dedicated to a single purpose: empowering veterans to lead high-quality lives with respect and dignity. We accomplish this by ensuring that veterans and their families can access the full range of benefits available to them; fighting for the interests of America’s injured heroes on Capitol Hill; and educating the public about the great sacrifices and needs of veterans transitioning back to civilian life.

•Providing free, professional assistance to veterans and their families in obtaining benefits and services earned through military service and provided by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and other agencies of government.
•Providing outreach concerning its program services to the American people generally, and to disabled veterans and their families specifically.
•Representing the interests of disabled veterans, their families, their widowed spouses and their orphans before Congress, the White House and the Judicial Branch, as well as state and local government.
•Extending DAV’s mission of hope into the communities where these veterans and their families live through a network of state-level Departments and local Chapters.
•Providing a structure through which disabled veterans can express their compassion for their fellow veterans through a variety of volunteer programs.

07/27/2016

AT&T offers up to a 15% Discpount to eligible active duty, retirees and veterans.
How to enroll in the AT&T military discount program:



Current AT&T customers can bring any of the following to a local AT&T store or participating dealer:
•Active duty military personnel: valid government employee ID card or paystub
•Military veterans: Department of Defense Form DD214 indicating an honorable discharge or a valid retired military ID or current AMVETS membership card
•Spouses of active duty or deceased military service personnel: valid Department of Defense sponsorship card

Not a current AT&T customer? A store associate can help you transfer your number or purchase a new device, and enroll with one of the identification options listed above.

Already an AT&T customer and enrolled in the discount program? Log in to start shopping.

07/27/2016

The nation’s leading veteran services organizations are rallying behind the Department of Veterans Affairs and its beleaguered health care system, touting the experience of staff, the breadth of services and its holistic approach to care delivery that they argue the private sector cannot match.

The VSOs are warning of politicians and groups with agendas that constantly criticize VA health care, refuse to acknowledge reforms and thus advance a camouflaged campaign to dismantle VA health care. They also say it is time to better educate their own members on actions being taken to improve to the healthcare system that millions of veterans rely upon.

The rally of vet groups is taking shape informally for now. It’s no coincidence that it occurs amid a presidential campaign, and with the congressionally chartered Commission on Care days away from releasing its report on modernizing veterans’ health services over the next 20 years.

Last March, seven of the 15 health advisors appointed to the commission backed a “strawman” proposal that would shut down all VA medical centers and outpatient services, and have their six million patients a year get medical care in the private sector.

Journalist Bryant Jordan of military.com first reported that the idea of shifting more veterans’ care into the private sector is now a draft bill of Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.), the Caring for Our Heroes in the 21st Century Act. It would turn the Veterans Health Administration into a federally chartered organization run by a board of directors, which would coordinate with for-profit insurance companies to offer veterans full access to private sector care as an alternative to their VA-provided care.
McMorris Rodgers’ “discussion draft” is defended by and likely was drafted by Concerned Veterans of America (CVA), a lobby group funded by the billionaire Koch brothers who seek to reduce VA costs and bureaucracy. CVA has influential backers among Republicans, including Rep. Jeff Miller (R-Fla.), chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, who has invited CVA representatives to testify alongside veteran service organizations.

Miller’s committee turned a national spotlight on the 2014 patient wait-list scandal uncovered at scores of VA hospitals and medical centers. Since then, it has demanded that VA officials be held accountable and that executives be jailed or at least fired for their wrongdoing. Meanwhile, VA leaders fumbled with a maze of employee protections and legal challenges.

Combined with some highly critical inspector general reports on VA health administration, the committee effectively branded the VA medical system as wasteful, poorly led and a danger to veterans. All of the hearings, investigations and negative news articles lent credibility to CVA’s narrative that the system can’t be repaired and so must be replaced.

CVA says the McMorris Rodgers bill is the “real reform” VA needs. It would curb costs for taxpayers, in part, because veterans who choose to use outside care would get only “premium support to help cover” their insurance.

The draft bill prompted Veterans of Foreign Wars to warn its members that “Politicians, pundits and politically-motivated organizations are using the national crisis in access to care” at VA to justify dismantling the healthcare system, privatizing care and “even proposing that veterans be charged for their service-connected care.”

When Paralyzed Veterans of America weighed in, CVA accused it of mischaracterizing the bill and said its “D.C. insider-leadership…is willing to lie and mislead veterans about the solutions being proposed to deliver more timely care.”

That attack on PVA put more veteran groups on a war footing. The American Legion wrote a letter to every member of Congress tearing into CVA, though without mentioning the Koch-funded group by name. Legion National Commander Dale Barnett complained of “egregious and politically-driven comments” from those claiming to represent veterans’ needs and yet showing “little concern for the millions of veterans who rely on VA care and support that they receive at their local facilities.”

The Legion becomes alarmed, Barnett wrote, “when politically-motivated groups masquerade as veteran-centric organizations, exploiting the public’s generosity and patriotism by broadcasting fallacies and spouting half-truths.” Groups like this exists “to influence policy decisions in favor of self-serving agendas to defund government programs, starting with VA.”

VA Secretary Bob McDonald, in a speech Monday, described progress in cutting wait times for health appointments as it relies more heavily on coordinated care in the private sector. In March, he said, VA approved 370,000 authorizations for private sector care, doubling the number from a year ago. Just the March authorizations, many to cover entire episodes of care, will result in a total of two million private sector appointments.

“So the idea that VA can’t be fixed, or that we’re not fixing it, is just nonsense. We are fixing it. We’re just not finished yet,” McDonald said.

Tuesday, at a summit on VA healthcare co-hosted by the AFL-CIO Union Veterans Council, more VSO executives touted the strength of their partnership with VA and its commitment to improving access and quality of care. Again, they were sharply critical of politicians and groups seeking to dismantle VA healthcare. Citing surveys showing that most veterans are satisfied with VA care and its holistic approach to overall health, the groups agreed they must challenge a false portrait of VA care as painted by recent scandals, partisan politicians and the drumbeat of negative news reports.

Garry Augustine, executive director of Disabled American Veterans, said he talked to an advisor to a presidential candidate “who told me I’m the first veteran he’s heard from that had anything good to say about the VA. That made me realize…the perception war is being lost.”

Augustine said he urged that adviser to be open to “a different perspective than what they are hearing in the news or from certain organizations that may have a political agenda. I’ve got to tell you, I don’t think I won that discussion,” he said.

Lauren Augustine, legislative associate with Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (no relation to Garry), said her advice to presidential candidates would start with a plea to understand “veterans are more than political chew toys. They are more than the two dominating narratives we hear in the media, of heroic [figure] or PTSD injured veteran. We are more than that and we need you…to seek our voice on the nation’s stage.”

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