DAVID EUGENE LONG 1972-2012

While this has nothing to do with anything I normally write about, I feel compelled to voice it. Some of you may have heard that my stepson David was shot while grocery shopping August 11th. The young girl (19) who did it was mentally deranged and wounded two other men as well. Apparently she had it in for men that day. It was a sad case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Nothing more and nothing less can be read into it. I’m sure we’ll never learn all the particulars but it would not shed any new light on what ensued. Suffice it to say that things happen- and invariably to those who do not deserve it or earn it.

David was severely wounded and lost a kidney. The bullet traversed his arm and chest, hitting most major organs including his liver and lungs. He had survived that and was well on his way to a recovery. A mass in the lower lung indicated one last surgery was needed as it appeared there was something amiss. While preparing him for surgery, the nurse gave him a shot of Vitamin K to reverse the effects of Heparin. He immediately went into anaphylactic shock and flatlined. Unfortunately, they didn’t ensure his airway was open and it appears that he went without oxygen for some time during the resuscitation efforts.

David never regained consciousness and slowly slipped away from us over the last week. After a meeting with doctors yesterday morning, it was decided to take him off the ventilator to see if he could survive. His EEGs indicated there was very little meaningful brain activity. After a short (18 hour) battle, he succumbed this morning at 0815. He will be sorely missed. I will never be able to express that in written words. I don’t think it’s possible to do so.

David suffered a form of Phenylketonuria called PKU disease and was developmentally disabled from birth. His mother, my ex-wife, passed suddenly in 2001 and we moved him up here to be near his remaining family. He was happy and had recently purchased a home near the grocery store for convenience’ sake. He didn’t drive. He had a job to occupy him and was well on his way to settling in to a peaceful, rural life.

David was born 45 days before I returned from Southeast Asia. He and his mother came into my life in late 1973, six months after the Air Force and I parted company. He and I shared the same birthday and, as I joked recently, we both also shared the fact that he’d been shot now, too. In spite of our divorce, David was always a part of my life just as my daughter was. You don’t buy Christmas gifts for one child and ignore the other simply because he did not issue from your own loins. Children do not understand that concept, nor should they be expected to.  In the absence of his biological father, I was his “dad”. As a child, David was no different than his peers. He liked Tarzan, Batman, horses, and all the other things children his age thrived on. When he was 10 or 11, he fell from a barn roof and severely injured his left arm. Due to gangrene, the injury was extensive and permanent. It never slowed him down. The glass was always half-full and he insured that it stayed that way. I never heard him complain of his lot in life. He even learned to play a guitar in spite of this handicap.

David turned forty this year with great expectations of many more years. He is now off to a new adventure in another plane of existence. Some have voiced anger over the fact that this young lady had access to a gun. She didn’t, per se. She absconded with it from her grandparents’ home that day unbeknownst to them. I’m sure they were not anticipating this but they should have. They will journey through their own private hell for that and I feel their confusion and pain. I feel they were irresponsible for having the gun accessible but that won’t bring David back. As we have seen in the news frequently, reaching for a gun seems to be a way to get your fifteen minutes of Andy Warhol fame. We do not seem to be teaching our children well in this important respect. Quite the contrary. By denigrating guns and their mere existence, we ostracize an object rather than a philosophy. This transfers blame to an inanimate item and somehow absolves the miscreant because he or she was somehow “abused” as a youngster. Using this perceived abuse as a yardstick,  by rights each and every one of us should be irreparably damaged.

DSC00604

January 14th, 2014- Still there.

This is not about guns. It is, at best, about mental illness and supervising those who suffer from it. I certainly don’t blame the manufacturer of the revolver. The bullet is not the culprit either. The problem developed a score or more years ago when the legislators in my state opted to close mental health facilities and employ the sink or swim philosophy. Only the most severely afflicted were committed.  The monies were appropriated for other , more politically correct and “necessary” endeavours leaving the mentally disabled to fend for themselves. Absent a proven danger to others, they were set free in droves. This put tremendous pressure on families to take care of their own. The mother of this young woman petitioned our Governor in a personal letter and warned of this eventuality over a year ago. Sadly, her worst fears came true August 11th. Staying home to supervise her adult daughter was not an option. She had to put food on the table and keep the lights on. Nevertheless, she inadvertently enabled her daughter by handing her the car keys.  Nothing about this crime was simple or straightforward. It rarely is.

One out of the six into the floor

One out of the six into the floor

The detectives investigating this case were apprised of David’s almost certain demise yesterday and immediately began their plans to charge her with his death. They congregated at the hospital for several hours but eventually departed. They will return today with the Medical Examiner and perform an autopsy.  What a horrific waste of life and potential for all concerned. What is paramount in all this and all the more reprehensible is the practice of robbing Peter to pay for Paul’s social programs. The cause du jour varies from day to day but the consequences of legislators’ actions have come home to roost in our small, rural community and I am not happy. No political party is to blame. It is a product of an ever-expanding government attempting to cast its net wide and encompass all ills. Some problems such as mental illness are perennial and cannot be absorbed by families. They are not equipped to handle it. That fact was recognized over a century ago and sadly is now on the wane as vocal lobbyists’ pet social needs burden the system. Medications are no panacea for schizophrenia if the patient fails to take them. You certainly can’t blame the patient or their family either.  That’s why we invested our tax dollars in psychiatric hospitals. Valium and Xanax cannot supplant brick and mortar where the safety of society is concerned.

As this post (I hate the term blog) is read by many of my friends in our community, I wish to thank all of you for your extremely wonderful gift of the benefit held for David last Saturday at the Civic Center. Your generosity was boundless and your coming together in our time of trouble was deeply appreciated.  I only wish that this had turned out for the better. We as a family could not ask for a better community of caring neighbors.  Total strangers we have never met were there to offer their condolences and help. Thank you all  for your efforts. Our wounds will heal in time and David will always be in our thoughts. I pray his death will not be in vain. This should be a wake up call to those who continue to dismember the wisely contemplated and carefully crafted social net that was designed to catch and help the mentally challenged.

Posted in Milestones | 11 Comments

BVA–HAV SPREAD BY HAVING SEX; HCV?NOT SO MUCH

How’s this for the most defective diagnosis in the history of Hep. Keep in mind that Wonder Woman had to go back to college to get this right.  Exactly which college is not specified.

The examiner provided an addendum report in September

2011. She stated that further research of the literature

regarding hepatitis C had yielded information that resolved

earlier concerns and led her to revise her former

conclusions with supporting evidence. The examiner first

noted that it could be stated with “reasonable certainty”

that it was not at least likely as not that the Veteran’s

chronic hepatitis C was caused by [gosh, nobody said it

was] his acute episode of hepatitis in 1969. She reasoned

that while an acute case of hepatitis could not be classified

with certainty at the time of illness without testing for

specific viruses, the tests of which were not available back

in 1969, there were many epidemiologic factors that

make it more likely that the 1969 infection was hepatitis

A and not related to the Veteran’s subsequent hepatitis

C. As to the epidemiologic factors, the examiner detailed

that hepatitis A was endemic in Southeast Asian (sic) and

very commonly encountered. It was easily spread by

fecal-oral contact and commonly by food or water,

making it likely that sexual contact even with the use

of condoms could result in transmission. The Veteran

indicated that he had no risk factors for hepatitis C, which

was transmitted by blood, with the only risk factor being

sharing razors and having multiple sexual partners with

use of condoms. The examiner noted that hepatitis C was

not usually spread by sexual contact and the casual

sharing of razors would not likely result in transmission.

She further found that the Veteran’s statement that

several buddies may have developed hepatitis around

the same time strongly demonstrated that he did indeed

have hepatitis A. The examiner also indicated that due

to the Veteran’s history of hepatitis B (he has antibodies

to hepatitis B showing that he had a resolved hepatitis B

infection) raised a possibility of hepatitis B at the time

of his acute illness. [but not C].

So a quick recap. Hep A is oral-fecal but somehow gets in the semen? Hep C does not. Razor blade sharing is not a risk factor even though vA maintains it is. Last but not least, Hepatitis A has been known to penetrate condoms. Oh and one last one- HAV does not cause HCV. Boy am I glad we pay this medical whizbang big bucks to keep up with current medical dictum.

But wait. Capt. Obvious has more to impart:

The examiner further noted that another factor

strongly against the Veteran’s initial illness being

due to hepatitis C was that the acute infection with

hepatitis C is usually clinically asymptomatic with

only 40 percent or less of patients have jaundice

at that time. She commented that studies have shown

that those with symptomatic illness with jaundice

initially are much less likely to develop chronic

hepatitis C than those who have clinically silent disease.

The Veteran had an acute illness characterized by jaundice

and fatigue lasting for six months, which was not unusual

for any type of hepatitis. The examiner found the

Veteran’s account of taking six months to recover

from fatigue from the initial episode was not

significant. [???????]

Yes sir, this babe should be a judge. She could merely look at the claimant and ascertain all she needs to know to make an insightful ruling (which would be 98% correct and occur in 125 days or less.) I don’t make this stuff up. It’s positively insane. What hurts is Tommy Havatampa here was repped by the famous American Legion. Now, who allowed him get to the BVA with this bogus vARO nexus in his C-file? This isn’t justice. It’s copy and paste nexus and not even believable. I smell bonus in the vA examiner’s Christmas paycheck. That or she went to Orlando to teach others this new technique.

Next week– Hepatitis A transmission by alien abduction after service (shared straws with the aliens) and how to write it up properly to avoid remand.

Posted in BvA HCV decisions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

BVA–vA’S MOST EXCELLENT GRAYBAR HOTEL COMPUTER

I have to say that some in the past doubted my word that vA was very inquisitive about your life post-service and often goes afield looking for you or a footprint in the sand to show your passing.

The CAVC has repeatedly admonished the vA that they are allowed to collect evidence in the normal course of their investigation of your claim but under no circumstances are they allowed to ever go out and purposefully develop negative evidence . Basically, they are required to play fetch with anything you identify and inform them of. That’s why the vA has Form 21-4142. Private expeditions are frowned on. Strike that. They are forbidden. This has rarely deterred the boys and their exploits are legend as are their losses at the Big House up at 625 Wagon Burner Ave. NW.

So what did my eagle eye run over and back up to for a second gander? Why, the apparent ignoring of this important precedent in search of something useful enough to convene a good old fashioned Florida necktie party with one of St. Pete’s finest as the guest of honor.

The Board notes that, in a May 2008 notice letter that

describes VA’s duty to assist in the development of his

claim, the RO requested that the Veteran complete a

hepatitis C risk factor questionnaire. The letter was

returned by the United States Post Office as not

deliverable as addressed.

In his May 2008 substantive appeal, the Veteran

said that he did not receive a hepatitis C questionnaire

In December 2008, the RO resent its notice letter to

the Veteran and requested that he provide information

regarding his risk factors for hepatitis C. That letter was

returned by the United States Post Office as attempted

but (addressee) unknown. In a May 7, 2010 signed

statement, the Veteran provided VA with his current

address change. The Veteran should be provided with new

notice letter that includes a hepatitis C risk factor

questionnaire sent to his most current address of record.

A December 2008 VA and SSA State Prisoner

Computer Match shows that the Veteran was

incarcerated in the Central Florida Reception Center,

PO Box 628040, Orlando, Florida, from September

[redacted], 2005 to December [redacted], 2006. All

medical records associated with his incarceration

should be obtained.

The law is quite explicit on this. If you do not submit evidence requested, they rate on what they have to go by. They are not entitled to flit about in the field and go on a fishing expedition. Why would they be searching the VA ‘s State Prisons Computer Match if this was a truly nonadversarial  environment in which the Veteran is accorded every benefit of the doubt? Why would they need a computer database search capability or more appropriately, under what tortured interpretation of the regulations would they be allowed to go fishing for his medrecs while he was incarcerated? Please also note the date of the request. It’s the same month as his substantive appeal. If you fail to give them evidence, they deny-period. Wait. That is an oxymoron. They always deny but if you don’t send in what they need, they are under no obligation to go out of their way to help. Absent a request to look, trying to find anything out is unheard of. They roll up the file and stamp denied on it. What they sure as hell never do is start trying to find out how to find you to mail you a copy of a denial.

I couldn’t beg loudly enough or in earnest to sufficiently arouse the interest (seven times) of the RO to go back to Thailand to find my medrecs-even after I gave them a small sample proving their existence in 1991. Here we have the the jackbooted vA Gestapo off the reservation trolling  for anything useful to give our Tampa Vet a compensation haircut.

I rest my case.

Notice any similarity?

Posted in BvA HCV decisions, Tips and Tricks | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

FOOTLOCKER–WGM’s TREASURES

Finally something to put into the footlocker. Hardly. These are beautiful hand-knapped arrowheads that WGM made personally. He mailed me the first black, obsidian glass head when he won. It’s an apt artistic expression of the war-like nature needed to pursue our claims. Likewise it’s neighbors which he sent recently after playing Interferon Wheel of Fortune.

What WGM doesn’t realize is I have to find an appraiser to value these items and remunerate him suitably or run the risk of accepting monies for my judicial services to a Vet. As I am unlicensed and not affiliated with any VSO, I am in violation of a million 38 CFRs and will go to Hell.  What am I saying? Hell was predetermined 40 years ago. We’re just arguing which of  Dante’s nine levels now.

In all fairness, I cannot hide these gems. They are being ensconced in a glass picture frame with a dark velvet background and will be placed in our cabinet in the foyer. That’s right. Cupcake made me build her a foyer. I consider it the biggest waste of 16X14 feet I’ve ever seen. Of course, my taste has been determined to reside mostly in my mouth-more so since I quit smoking. Therefore you will not hear me opine on the usefulness of foyers.

Ladies and gentlemen Vets, I introduce you to WGM’s art.

 

 

I hold these in trust for all members of HCVets. Other gifts which also have been contributed consist of both the 2010 and 2011 versions of the Veterans Benefits Manual which I pour out onto these pages as frequently as possible. In addition, Cupcake and I were treated to lunch with Peter and his wife as well as a lovely dinner with AZJen’smom and her husband Tom.  Remember, any time you’re in the Emerald City, we’d sure like to strap on the old feed buckets with you. Besides, I need pictures for my Trophy Wall.

Posted in From the footlocker, Inspirational Veterans | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Free: science reference book for judges

It’s been many years since I sat through 9th grade biology class learning about frogs and ponds.  I admit to being scientifically illiterate.  But my lack of science acumen is not disturbing to anyone but myself since the public is not likely to be hurt by my lack of knowledge

Veteran’s families do need to be very concerned and angry about the science illiteracy of judges, lawyers and the “experts” they hire.

The Reference Manual for Scientific Evidence: Third Edition has been published to help judges.  It’s freely available to read (or skim) online or download as a pdf.  The introduction by Associate Supreme Court Justice Stephen Beyer makes the case for science:

…Our decisions should reflect a proper scientific and technical understanding so that the law can respond to the needs of the public.

…The search is not for scientific precision. We cannot hope to investigate all the subtleties that characterize good scientific work. A judge is not a scientist, and a courtroom is not a scientific laboratory. But consider the remark made by the physicist Wolfgang Paul. After a colleague asked whether a certain scientific paper was wrong, Pauli  replied, “That paper isn’t even good enough to be wrong!” Our objective is to avoid legal decisions that reflect the paper’s so-called science. The law must seek decisions that fall within the boundaries of scientifically sound knowledge.

We’ve read a lot of junk science that has been used against veterans in the BVA decisions and encoded into VA manuals.  This ASKNOD post, BVA–Worthless Medical Decisions (4/21/12),  comes to mind as particularly egregious.  To paraphrase Pauli, most decisions I’ve read aren’t even good enough to be wrong. 

Authoring organizations: Federal Judical Center (.gov) and National Research Council.  It’s over 1000 pages but you can select chapters to download if you don’t need the whole text.  Nice!

Let’s get smarter about science.  The life you save may be your own.

Posted in Guest authors, Medical News, Veterans Law | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

HCV–CLOSING IN ON THE BEAST

Member KC sends me these two articles on HCV treatment. I knew we’d see significant progress towards some new form of treatment considering this is America and home of the 1a genotype. The first treatment discussion is a true, Interferon-free idea and one even I might be capable of tackling. It involves a more nuanced, Plan B attack on the disease shortly after its conception, but before it can take over the body and become an unwanted resident. It shows promise in reducing viral loads (but not a complete cure ) for those of us with a prolonged, on-going infection and poor sustained viral response(uncured).

The second article is more focused on adding or tampering with the ingredients that make up the current cocktail of Teleprevir (or Boceprevir), Ribivirin and Interferon. This triple-tipped pitchfork is what constitutes what we call the Vertex regimen. For those of us with an autoimmune system dysfunction, this still remains as the poison that will kill us.

The body’s autoimmune function is a finely tuned device. It runs around checking out suspicious subjects in your system like Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s policemen. Anyone without papers gets sacked. Even some with marginal paperwork get the ax too. Adding Interferon sends the AI process into overdrive. HCV normally mutates so rapidly that the body has a hard time recognizing new replicas of the virus and developing the proper white blood cells to kill them. With Interferon added, the white blood cell count is multiplied a thousandfold and the body begins a concerted sweep to eliminate anything suspicious. The idea is to attack everything everywhere simultaneously again and again until there is simply nothing left. If you are extremely healthy, this is feasible but it still exacts a tremendous toll on some, such as permanently impaired vision, fuzzy brain,  major malaise, and fatigue which often never abate. This is why I am not a big fan of the drug. I have seen first hand the effects on many of you. The early versions were the worst. Doctors would hose us with this in unheard-of quantities in the early 90s and pretend to be astounded when our hair fell out and we went clinically blind. They had enough evidence from the test protocols of the 80s to know better, too.

For those of us who have an autoimmune disorder, our system is constantly ramped up to the point that our body’s defense is gestapo-like. Even innocent cells and organs are inadvertently attacked. It’s akin to a rabid dog chasing its tail. Thus you have situations like Fibromyalgia, Rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease and a host of others that manifest early in life and compound your misery. Throwing Interferon in on top of this is akin to dropping Napalm on a well-engaged house fire. Not only does it kill the Hepatitis, but virtually everything else-including you. Many do not know that Interferon was manufactured in the 1980s as a potential cure for cancer. It worked so well it often killed the host as well as the infection. When hepatitis showed up, they dragged it back off the shelf and touted it as the “new” wündercure.

My one and only encounter April 12th, 2007 was devastating. It might seem criminal to some, but in his haste to hose me with the IFN/Ribavirin cocktail, my hepatologist overlooked my ANA (anti-nuclear antibodies) test which clearly showed an autoimmune process at work (1:320). That one dose provoked a response of epic proportions culminating in my year’s staycation at the Seattle VAMC and four operations. My ANA shot up to 1:2510. It ignited autoimmune hepatitis because my body’s defenses decided that the liver (and the HCV inside) had to go. The gamma globulins (IgG) shot up to record levels (2514) and remain there to this day. They signal to doctors that my autoimmune system is now in high gear and busy attacking anything and everything that appears to be an invader. Where most of you simply suffer the gradual, measured march towards cirrhosis, my liver is being decimated from two different directions simultaneously. Admittedly my viral count stays low due to my AI response, but the Battle in Seattle over my liver is losing ground at twice the normal speed.

After the Interferon subsided, the HCV ran amuck. My viral load jumped from 227,000 to 8.5 million. My Crohn’s, in remission since 1996, came back with a passion and promptly collapsed another 30 cm. of my small bowel. And on and on. What is most frightening is that further testing shows the disease is merely similar to Crohn’s and mimics it. Several specialists attribute this to my two years of Agent Orange and Agent Blue exposure. vA will never acknowledge the role AO and its rainbow flavors play in ramping up the autoimmune disorders but they do not have to. I read in the BVA decisions which we can now view, a host of new outbreaks of Crohn’s (or Crohn’s-like)  diseases and Vets’ doctors are pointing to AO as the culprit. Crohn’s and its brother Ulcerative Colitis (the same thing in the large intestine) are young people’s diseases, usually manifesting before age 25. Virtually all the cases we are seeing in Vets are AO-exposed Vietnam troops over 55- hardly the cohort expected or predicted by virologists and gastroenterologists. All the nexus letters in the world are going to be ignored because the Nehmer Gods have spoken. Crohn’s and it’s progeny are not on the 38 CFR § 3.309(e) list. One hundred years from now scientists will be doing the V-8 headslap and saying “Jez. What were they smoking back then? That shit was lethal. Couldn’t they see that?”

I suspect this may be in part what WGM ran into when he attempted this a month or so ago. His exposure, and indeed, all of ours over many years, tends to exacerbate the body’s response to anything this insulting. Face it, a megadose of rat piss, with a side of Teleprevir salad, is often too much for even the heartiest 60 year old. He did it twice. I did it once. I considered myself in the prime of health (or as near to it as possible) when I started. Within six months my ALT was pushing 620 and the AST was following close behind. I turned into a slug and slept all day for a year before relapsing to Crohn’s and  going to the hospital. I have to hand it to any of you who could not only do it for 40 weeks but even contemplated a do-over again when it failed. The fact that any of you are alive to talk about it is astounding.

The recipe (if there is such) to turning off the AI response is to hose you with prednisone and azathioprine (Imuran) in hopes of turning off the adverse reaction. Be careful. Use of this drug so suppresses the immune system that you are susceptible to the slightest opportunistic infection that comes along. Think colds, flu and especially MRSA/e. coli. The vAMC, in its inimitable wisdom, elected (or neglected) to take me off these two medications when they did surgery. What most do not know (and doctors do) is that prednisone weakens the fabric of the skin-all skin. Skin inside you that comprises the small bowel, for instance. This is theorized as to why my small bowel resection (anastomosis) failed (twice). It took vA doctors almost 3 months following my ileostomy before someone noticed I was still on this stuff and they opted to discontinue it. Believe it or not, I was queried as to why I had not mentioned it or brought it to their attention. Another classic example of blame the Vet.

While I rejoice every time I hear of some great stride forward in the bug war, I remain convinced that they will have to invent a new wheel. The DRACO protocols look the best so far but I hope for a cure that coats or wraps the virus up and prevents it from reproducing.  DRACO causes cell suicide in RNA viruses which would appear right down HCV’s alley. Whether it will induce Vet suicide is the great unknown. Next up would have to be a way to regenerate the liver or convince it to repair itself. It’s the one organ we have that is capable of doing so spontaneously without any persuasion. This assumes there is something left to regenerate and that the disease has not progressed so far as to preclude it. What the hey! That’s what transplants are for. The second article addresses that scenario, too.

So thank you, KC, for spotting these new protocols. Would that those of us too sick or incapable of utilizing Vertex could be the guinea pigs. Time is running short for many as witnessed by our ever-smaller numbers of long-term survivors. I would also suggest being very wary of vA ARNPs bearing Vertex gifts and trying to induce you into attempting it. Vertex still embraces the Interferon blowtorch.  If you were not a candidate for IFN treatment before, adding the Teleprevir will not make it more palatable or feasible. Uneducated vA chuckleheads may not be aware of this. My vA pseudohepatologist in training seemed to think I could hack Vertex. I had to remind her why I wasn’t going to be a guinea pig yet again. Remember folks-they are practicing medicine. This is a far cry from performing it. Be your own best medical defense. If I had read the small print on the circular that comes with the Pegintron autoinjector styrette, I would have known it was “contraindicated” in patients who have a systemic AI issue. Too bad my doctor didn’t read that.

Remember full well there are highly-trained vA  medical personnel out there who continue to hold that absence of evidence of HCV in 1970’s medical records is conclusive proof that Vets were not infected in service. Some of these VHA experts have gone on to say that the fact that HCV was not diagnosed until 2007 when the Vet finally went in to get tested is conclusive proof of recent infection. Now, compound that with the same experts opining that a negative Northern Blot test result (for HIV) is definitive proof that a Vet was not HCV-infected in 1988. The Southern Blot was developed in 1989 and was the first proven test to identify HCV as a separate and distinct RNA virus. Having a degree in medicine is no guarantee your doctor is playing with a full deck.  The sheer volume of defective logic that emanates from the pie-holes of vHA experts is ample proof of a denial agenda in their machinations. Stage/Grade determinations from liver biopsies are still the gold standard for determining the age of an infection. Most accomplished doctors are aware of this but then again it appears most accomplished doctors are never found within miles of VAMCs.

 

vHA Experts

Posted in AO, HCV Health, Interferon claims, Medical News, Vietnam Disease Issues | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

VACO*–THE NEVERLAND RANCH IN ORLANDO

As the HR honcho queried, ” Have you had a good time? Is this the best conference ever? Yeaaaaah!” For $5 million US, it better have been. The Under Secretary for Karaoke  Allison Hickey was even there. Absent from the video was any mention of whether anything was actually accomplished. Watch as your compensation and pension denials are carefully rolled over and compounded with cocktails and hors d’ oeuvres. Witness the stunning shift in Veterans Benefits from Veterans to vA employees. Listen to testimonials from breathless VA employees as they recount memorable “networking ” experiences at SeaWorld and Universal Studios.

Many would be quick to denigrate the hard work of our tireless HR workers at vA . Who could have known there were so many employed solely towards the endeavor of trying to hire others for this hard-working agency? The sheer numbers of them boggles the imagination. I wish to thank member Squidley (who wasn’t invited) for sharing this with us. I have asked him to keep his eyes peeled for the other 53 videos delivered to Congress. If they are as delightful and brimming with happy vA employees as this one was, we will sleep well knowing our benefits program is in good hands. It takes the wonder out trying to determine why we get a 20% rating for HCV or DM2 and they get the helicopter ride with the golf package.

Happy vA employees cost money. Surely Vets everywhere can comprehend the need for happiness. Channeling Michael Jackson costs money too. Developing videos to encourage others to become vA employees is a noble endeavor. Never forget it.

WE NEED YOUR MONEY

TO HIRE MORE FOLKS

SO BEAT IT – JUST BEAT IT

I look forward to viewing the video showing the homeless women Vets out in back of the Marriott World Center line dancing and picking through the dumpsters singing Just Beat It in sync with the amazing HR Karaoke Krewe.  Surely they filmed that, too? An interesting choice of song for an HR conference. Feel free to add some new lyrics below. Perhaps vA will be able to incorporate them in next years’s videos.

* VACO= vA Central Office (810 Vermin Ave, NW DC)

Posted in vA news | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

NPRS–1 POTATO, 2 POTATO, 3 POTATO, 4…

I was talking with the legal member of the Asknod family and we discussed the problems with getting useful documents from St. Louis. Then we discussed the matter of getting anything, useful or otherwise from them. Ladies and Gentlemen, take your protein pill and put your helmet on. Next recline the barcalounger and attach your three-point harness.

The National Personnel Records Center did have a catastrophic fire in 1973-July 12th to be exact. What burned up were a lot of personnel and outpatient medical records of Vets from the 1952-1960 era. The operable phrase is “personnel and outpatient medical records“.

Did you know if you were ever an inpatient in a military hospital that the NPRC has those records. All of them-even for Vietnam era Vets. Yes, you read that right.

Now cinch down the belt again. The NPRC also has your movement orders for the most part. If you were in the Air Force, Navy or Marines, oddly enough your PCS (permanent change of station) records-to include TDY records- are there. Army records are a bit more spotty, but they do exist.

Now why is it you never get them? Could it be you were not anally specific? Did you somehow fail to ask “Please, sir. Would you look in the medical inpatient records for Udorn Thani RTAFB Thailand for the period 1970-1971? Also, while you’re banging around in the back room, could I pester you to look through Air Force microfiche records for all my military files. I didn’t get them the last time I asked. Or the three times before that. Since I know you have them, I’ll try to be as clear and specific as possible for what I am requesting. If you have any questions you can contact me at 1-555-555-1212. My address is 1234 Yellowbrick Road, Oz, Kansas 60609. Now that I know how to ask, be a peach and be quick about it.  Your loyal fan. A. Nod.”

When vA went back in 1989, they raided my file and got the outpatient stuff-period. They took the only copies too. They did not get any military records even though they should have. They damn sure didn’t pester Air America or their employer for my off-road stuff. When I went fishing specifically to see if there were any military records, a wealth of stuff came back but all of it was sanitized. No evidence of moonlighting for Consolidated Industrial Airlines. I didn’t expect to find that. I have told thousands of Vets that if they didn’t keep TDY orders that sent you hither and yon for 60 to 180 days, they were gone. I lied. NPRS has them somewhere in those microfiche files. Getting the NPRC to get off their duffs is the problem.

The job order is about 15-20 records a day if you want to get the bonus. 15 DD214’s is a piece of cake. You can bring a blanket to work and find a quiet corner of the warehouse to  sack out in after 10 AM and still have ample time in the afternoon to update your Facebook page. Chances are most of those fellows and gals are quite adroit at the online games. Some may even have blogs. The long and the short is few of us have ever gotten all that they have to offer on us. How many of you have written two or three times and keep getting partial pieces of the puzzle each time with no duplications? The reason is simple. It has never been completely associated with your main files. If you’re Korean War Vet filing, this is good news. Your stuff, for the most part , is still intact and you didn’t have a clue. Neither did they.

So keep this in mind when you write. List anything. Everything. Be specific about milrecs -especially the microfiched ones. You may be pleasantly surprised.

Go Fishing at the NPRC Carnival.

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2009 VA flu video

A 2009 VA Channel video on Youtube (1-minute) shows Secretary Erik Shinseki, and other VA employees, getting flu vaccinations.  They’re doing it the only safe wayone needle, one syringe, only one time.  The drug delivery method used in this example of mass immunization is vastly safer in comparison to the era of mass immunizations by filthy jet gun devices.

Suppose that the medical device delivering the 2009 flu vaccines was a MUNJI (jet gun) and suppose Sec. Shinseki knew that the employee in front of him had HIV, HCV or HIV & HCV, would he still get that flu vaccination?  We know the answer would be NO, NO, and NO.

Oddly, when I view this video in full screen, I don’t actually see the needle going into Sec. Shinseki’s skin (at 22-23 seconds).  Maybe it’s my eyesight, the editing, or it’s a pretend shot.  In any case, the video is a reminder to get a flu shot this year.  It’s free at the VA so don’t wait!  Another resource is: http://www.flu.gov/

Posted in Guest authors, Medical News, vA news | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

BVA–ST. PETE VETS GET NO RESPECT

I leave you with this one tonight. Vet goes to Subic Bay. Being typical Navy, he cavorts with prostitutes and gets tattoos. Vet has HCV  flu-type symptoms several times in Subic Bay after cavorting exercises. Vet comes down with HCV symptoms of fatigue and malaise  in 1998 (right on time-25 years). vA examiner, who has extensive clinical experience doing  B/P and  rectal temperature readings opines thusly:

In this regard, the Board observes that the Veteran was afforded a VA examination in October 2008 in order to determine the current nature and etiology of his hepatitis C. At such time, the examiner noted that the Veteran’s June 1973 enlistment examination showed no tattoos, whereas his March 1974 discharge examination showed that he had received tattoos. The VA examiner found that no hepatitis or other liver conditions were noted during the Veteran’s active duty, and that he was initially diagnosed with hepatitis C in 1998. The examiner observed that the Veteran reported that the onset of his actual illness came in 1998, at which time he had fatigue and no energy, and became unable to do his job normally. The examiner further noted the Veteran’s responses that he had obtained tattoos during and after service, and that he had engaged in high risk sexual practices during service. The examiner also noted the Veteran’s response that he had not had any blood exposure. The examiner diagnosed the Veteran with hepatitis C. Etiologically, the VA examiner opined that the Veteran’s hepatitis C was less likely than not (less than 50/50 probability) caused by or a result of his in-service events or risk factors. The examiner based this conclusion on a review of medical literature and records, his own clinical experience, the absence of any diagnosis of or treatment for hepatitis C or any other liver condition during active duty, the Veteran’s admission of receiving tattoos after service (as well as during service), the fact that his other risk factors between his release from active duty in 1974 and his initial diagnosis of hepatitis C in 1998 are unknown, and the fact that his 1988 abnormal liver function lab test is not specific to hepatitis C. 

Well, shoot, Pilgrim. How can you argue with that insightful, well-reasoned theory? No HCV in the 1973 records is a smoking gun. That abnormal LFT in 88? Why, no HCV flies on him.  He should have waited until 1989 for the definitive Northern Blot Test. If you didn’t know any better , you’d think they are pulling this Vet’s leg because he’s from St. Pete. Newsflash. He isn’t the first to get this “unknown risks after service”  tar and feather approach. Remember, absence of evidence in vAland is negative evidence. We all cheat, lie and dissemble in hopes of getting on this Gravy Train. Look at the benefits package.  Scratch that. Look at the free medical for anything you are service connected for. You pay for the rest out of pocket but it’s chump change-just like the compensation payment. If you’re really disabled, the free $10,000 whole life 401K is the ultimate golden parachute. Where could you get a better deal than this? Be fair. Aside from never getting ill in the military, you’d have to continue to work at a comfortable wage with a nice medical benefits package at a real hospital. Getting an appointment would not entail waiting for 3 months but if its free so what’s the bitch?

Posted in BvA HCV decisions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment