VA– We’re Fixing It.

This is the actual gist of what Mr. Murphy said at the House Veterans Committee the other day. I must hand it to VA. It was said by none other than Samuel Clemons (Mark Twain) a mistruth could make it half way around the world before the truth got out of bed. I may have garbled that and feel morally superior to correct me if so. I don’t mind. The sad fact is that we have heard the same thing so many times in so many administrations that we are all becoming residents of Missouri. I, for one, will never believe we’ll get justice. It will be a speedier form of denial with even more errors. In the event you present a “virtually complete” claim that only needs a simple yes or no, the denial will lightspeed. The calibre of justice is flawed by the approach to the claim.

A claim is unique. There are no convenient compartments or categories all vets can fit into. There simply are no square and round holes with corresponding pegs. Starting with a negative precept and trying to work towards a positive outcome is always offset early. This creates the situation of garbage in, garbage out. A claim cannot be fed to the M-21 computer and digested. One minor error, one overlooked medical report, one blood lab that wasn’t included in the C-file accidentally and bingo. It’s done. You now can expect 3 years to pass before the thing unwinds in D.C. Imagine a claims process where they did what they said they do. A positive report supporting the claim in the pile on the left. A report of willful misconduct in the pile on the right and so on and so forth. At the end, a weighing of the positive and the negative. So simple but so unattainable. Yet they and their VSO minions crow about how it’s the neatest thing since the wheel. And, like the wheel, any moment now you’ll see the momentum build and the backlog evaporate.

Notice the motif below Federal Computer Week? Strategy and Business Management for Government Leaders.  This must be their retreat magazine in the event they feel abused and picked on. Alice (the author) is doing yeoman service with her shrink couch. VA might actually begin to beleive what they’re saying if they get enough positive feedback.

Backlog solved.

Posted in All about Veterans, Complaints Department, Uncategorized, VA BACKLOG, vA news, Veterans Law | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Phone From Hell

Member Cal sent me this. No, he’s not from Californicatia. That’s his Christian name. Not Calvert or Calvin. Just plain old Cal. I didn’t buy that so  I asked to check his birth certificate, too. He refused just like they all do. It’s not like I’m nosy but since all that birther nonsense one can’t be too careful.

Vets should have one of these. It’s the next big step in interactive hardware.

Phone From Hell

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BVA–Worthless VA Medical Opinions

As I get older, I read BVA HCV decisions and see errors so egregious they make my hair stand on end. What passes for Independent Medical Opinions requested by BVA VLJs to facilitate adjudications is going downhill rapidly. The following decision is a classic example.

When you go through the grinder, one thing you assume is that the VA will at least use viable, truthful medical science to deny you. Summonsing hocus-pocus jibber jabber and framing it as cutting edge literature on the subject never crossed my mind. Would it yours?

Let’s start with the possibility that the Veteran could have picked this up in service. Is it plausible? Was he involved in something that could foreseeably herald a risk? The Vet had a background in Mortuary science-as in dead people being put in boxes. I’d give him a pass so far. He even claimed needle sticks which I would say qualifies him, too.

If you are unfamiliar with ELISA Tests and blots, I will give you a brief education. Dr. Edwin Southern, a molecular biologist, discovered the technique and perfected it. It was called the Southern blot in his memory. Further experimenting resulted in a “western blot” which was used to identify the DNA sequences for AIDS, mad cow disease (BSE) , HBV and lyme disease. In a crowning triumph, the northern blot isolated RNA molecular material which was instrumental in finding HCV. The reason is simple. HCV is an RNA-based virus. HBV and AIDS are DNA-based viruses. Therefore, you will never identify HCV by using western or southern blot-whether in conjunction with the ELISA test or not. Simple? Painfully so.

Southern Blot

Western Blot

Northern Blot

So what should surface  in this Veteran’s decision but the following.

In March 1985, the Veteran was treated for venereal disease. In December 1987, while in the Reserve, an ELISA test with western blot was negative. In March 1988, the Veteran tested positive for venereal disease.

In November 2010, the Board obtained an expert opinion from the Veterans Health Administration (VHA). The Board had asked the VHA expert, a specialist in infectious diseases, considering accepted medical principles and the medical literature and a review of the Veteran’s file, to express an opinion on the following question:

Whether it is more likely than not (probability greater than 50 percent), at least as likely as not (probability of 50 percent), less likely than not (probability less than 50 percent), or an opinion is not possible without resort to speculation that the current hepatitis C was related to the Veteran’s exposure to blood and body fluids as a trainee in mortuary science in service?

In formulating the opinion, the VHA expert was asked to comment on the clinical significance that the ELISA test with western blot in 1987 was negative and whether the ELISA screen would detect hepatitis C.

As most of us know, competent medical evidence means evidence provided by a person who is qualified through education, training, or experience to offer a medical diagnosis, statement, or opinion (38 C.F.R. § 3.159).  Thus it is very disturbing to see this Vet’s claim go down in smoke due to an “expert’s” testimony.

In November 2010, the VA expert, a board certified infectious disease specialist since 1986 and a physician in the infectious diseases section at a VA Medical Center, after reviewing the Veteran’s medical records and a literature search, expressed the opinion that it was less likely than not that the Veteran’s current hepatitis C infection was related to service including exposure to blood and body fluids as mortuary science trainee in 1973. The VHA expert explained that the negative result of the ELISA test in 1987, the first-generation screening test for detection of hepatitis C, had a sensitivity rate of 54 to 84 percent, citing three medical references. And that the negative western blot, also a first generation test, made the sensitivity even greater. The VHA expert therefore concluded that the likelihood that the Veteran acquired hepatitis C before December 1987 was low.

As we all know, VA will use any evidence of risk post service as the most likely reason for the disease. Knowing full well that the risk via sexual congress is extremely low (but not inconceivable), the VHA expert jumps in with both feet.

The VHA expert also found that the Veteran had tested positive for venereal disease in 1988 and that unprotected sexual practice was a risk factor for hepatitis C.

Were this a truly “independent foray” in IMOs there would seemingly be more discourse on this mode of transmission-perhaps a study or clinical paper with something to gnaw on? Nothing. Just an unsupported, conclusory statement with nothing to back it up. The Court, incidentally, has ruled this style of evidence inadmissible.

From this, the Board concludes that the VHA expert applied valid medical analysis to the significant facts of the case to reach the conclusion reached in the report. This evidence opposes, rather than supports, the claim.

This, ladies and gentlemen Vets, is why you will never get a fair shake at the hands of VHA “experts”. Who writes the paycheck?  To whom is their allegiance owed? Who endangers their future employment if they come up with the “wrong” analysis of the evidence?

I do believe you can get (or could in the recent past) a fair IMO from QTC if VA sent out for it. They are at least one step removed from the process. The VHA, on the other hand is at the beck and call of the VASEC. To cross swords with him is to invite problems best left sleeping like the oft-referred to dog in the proverb.

The teaching moment here is obvious to anyone. Do not, under any circumstances, accept the pablum handed down by experts. With our certain knowledge of all things via the internet, it is extremely easy to ferret out these untruths and misconceptions and counter them on appeal. You may not be a doctor or specialist, but you can readily ascertain whether the specialist inveighing on your claim is full of hooey or not. What is also a crime is that the VLJ bought it hook, line and sinker. Most do not know that VLJs have a cadre of 10-12 munchkins who do nothing but preparatory groundwork and research for him and present a decision that needs virtually nothing more than his review and signature. In this case, that’s exactly what the poor hapless vet got- a review and a signature with nothing in the way of confirmatory or corroborating evidence. This is VA Justice. Prepare for it. Expect it. Make plans to counter it. Assume it will happen.

http://www.va.gov/vetapp/wraper_bva.asp?file=/vetapp11/Files1/1108537.txt

Munchkins are also future VLJs in training. God help us.

Posted in BvA HCV decisions, Nexus Information, Tips and Tricks, Veterans Law | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Future Applesauce

I was working in the orchard on the grape vines yesterday and found something inexplicable. All the buds on my fruit trees start out as pink. Afterwards, the cherry and pear trees bloom pure white. Where’s the pink? 

What I can’t forgive Cupcake for is insisting on planting cheery trees that have no cherries. They look marvelous but leave me less than overwhelmed. No fruit = no sense.

While this has absolutely nothing to do with HCV, it’s wonderful food for the soul. One of our members, Leigh, has recently received a transplant and doesn’t have the opportunities we do to get out and see some of these sights. This is God’s idea of eye candy.

I have to disagree with the Christmas song. This, to me, is the most wonderful time of the year-bar none.

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M E AS FACT FINDER

This popped up on the Vet’s law library site a few weeks ago and it caught my eye. If you are reasonably good at digesting legal theory, this baby will give you cites and precedence to quote until you win. There’s no way VA can sand bag you when you delve down into the intricacies of credible testimony, negative evidence, absence of evidence etc.

Every major decision that touches on a nexus, why it’s probative, and the rationale for it from VA’s perspective is analyzed. Afterwards, everything that’s wrong or illegal about it as determined by the CAVC is then reviewed. The thesis goes on to investigate why, how, when and who is responsible, prohibited by or forbidden to do something. If you can’t find it here, you won’t or it doesn’t exist.

Medical Examiner Dos and Don’ts

This belongs next to your Nexus bible.

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PICTURE=1K WORDS

Member Jim sends me this in the morning’s inbox. I have no comments on the appropriateness or political aspersions this might engender. I see it as no more than a natural progression of a governmental snafu that wasn’t handled very well. We don’t live in the sixties anymore.

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VSOs–Their Role In Your Claim

Yesterday the House Veterans Affairs Committee got together for a martini and Morel mushrooms on  toastpoints après dejuner thing. Oh, and yes- they did discuss Veterans. I attach the link to the moaners and groaners. After the GSA debacle, I can’t believe these people don’t brown bag it.

VSOs <veteranszoom.com

I got as far as the blue line being over the pause/play button. I’m sorry. I’ve never heard such a well-polished Dog and Pony show in the last several years. The one I liked was the VFW gentleman telling us his outfit won 30% of their claims before the BVA. Really? 30%? And they are proud of that? They even crowed that that they had a better percentage of wins than lawyers. If they’ve been monkeying around with the claim for 5 years, I hope to smile that they would win 70% of them.

When asked if VA was now hiring more Vets, the DAV guy piped up and observed that they definitely were-why he even knew of a couple himself- an electrician and an orderly at a VAMC-so this was proof-positive that the process was working! They unfortunately didn’t think many were qualified or trainable as claims processors…

All in all, it seemed like the three stooges explaining why the VA was having so much trouble  and these guys are ostensibly their antagonists. The 125-day flying Unicorn was mentioned as was the eventual conquering of the mythic backlog. Louisville was commended and Oakland was besmirched. In sum? Nothing new. Everything is slowly coming together. Errors are few and far between. Communication between everyone (VA and VSOs) is  approaching 100%. What this doesn’t explain is why you and I cannot get them on the phone or to even return the call.

Posted in All about Veterans, General Messages, VA BACKLOG, vA news | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

The Alchemy Of Turning Baht Into Greenbacks

Back in January of this year I posted an entertaining blurb about fishing with hand grenades. It’s far easier that it sounds if one is careful.

https://asknod.wordpress.com/2012/01/24/dupont-spinners/

At the end I mentioned the irascible problem of converting local currencies (Kip or Baht) into greenbacks. Simply put, you couldn’t. The military was well aware that they had to control the black market, if for no other reason than to prevent GIs from stealing everything that wasn’t nailed down.

Being the entrepreneur that I was, I tried to convert baht for greenbacks at a bank off base at Udorn and almost landed in jail over it. I avoided an Article 15 by testifying that the currency was obtained by gambling on Beta (fighting fish). When I got my orders for Laos, I started piling up Baht (and then Kip) in alarmingly large amounts. My deliverance came quite by accident. Several AirAm pilots had “off the books enterprises” and readily told me how to cure the problem. I had to laugh at how easy it was. On one of our resupply missions which I always volunteered for, I hopped the embassy C-46 (with air-conditioning, no less) and headed south . I caught the C-130 Klong flight that went down to Bangkok daily.

A short taxi ride over to the Swiss Embassy for 12 Baht (60¢) and all my troubles were over. I walked in with about $650.00 the first trip. Thai currency’s largest denomination was a 100 Baht note ($5.00 US) so I was carrying a big wad of currency. The Swiss were more than willing to accept my deposits of both Kip and Baht at par and charged me nothing for the new numbered account.

By the time I left in May 1972 I had amassed in excess of $12K thanks to my local friends who were eager to purchase stereo, cigarettes and liquor. Similarly, I ended up with lots more from 30 round clips for M-16s which my sister sent me. The military had none then and they were a hot ticket. The canned spray cheese (needs no refrigeration) and Tabasco were also winners. As an example, a fifth of JW Black sold at the Class VI store for $12.00. I could sell it off base for $40 bucks all day long. A Sony or Teac reel to reel out of the PACEX catalog? $229.00. Offbase- $400.00. To avoid imperial entanglements, I had to have help ordering all this so I took a small hit for “dealer prep., destination and handling fees”. I’d have the holder of the ration card buy the stereo with my money and take possession when it arrived.

When I arrived at my new duty station at Edwards AFB in the Mojave Desert, I checked in with the Swiss Consulate in Los Angeles and they were more than happy to make me whole again-for a small handling fee, naturally.

The teaching lesson here is elementary. Laws were made for the rank and file. In order to succeed in life, you need a plan. Mine fell into my lap quite by accident although I had considered mailing all the Baht and Kip back to my sister at one point. I prefer to think that what I did was perfectly legal. Were it not, I’m sure the Swiss Embassy personnel would have brought it to my attention.

 As a P.S. to this, I just received an email from WGM who obviously comprehends how an AF mind works. Someone even went to far as to summarize this wisdom…

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Happy Endings

Member Jim contributed this gem. As I know him personally, I know this fate did not befall him. Nevertheless, it’s food for thought if you get your walking papers…

On the first day, he sadly packed his belongings into boxes, crates and suitcases.

On the second day, he had the movers come and collect his things.

On the third day, he sat down for the last time at their beautiful dining-room table, by candle-light; he put on some soft background music on his Ipod, and feasted on a pound of shrimp, a jar of caviar, and a bottle of Dom Perignon.

When he’d finished, he went into each and every room and deposited a few half-eaten shrimps dipped in caviar into the hollow center of the curtain rods.

He then cleaned up the kitchen and left.

On the fourth day, the wife came back with her new boyfriend, and at first, all was bliss.

Then, slowly, the house began to smell.

They tried everything; cleaning, mopping, and airing-out the place.

Exterminators were called to check vents for dead rodents, and carpets were steam cleaned.

Air fresheners were hung everywhere. Exterminators were brought  in yet again to set off gas canisters, during which time the two had to move out for a few days. In the end, they even paid to replace the expensive wool carpeting. Nothing worked! People stopped coming over to visit.

Repairmen refused to work in the house.The maid quit.

Finally, they couldn’t take the stench any longer, and decided they had to move, but a month later – even though they’d cut their price in half – they couldn’t find a buyer for such a stinky house.

Word got out, and eventually even the local realtors refused to return their calls.

Finally, unable to wait any longer for a purchaser, they had to borrow a huge sum of money from the bank to purchase a new place.

Then the ex called the woman and asked how things were going. She told him the saga of the rotting house. He listened politely and said that he missed his old home terribly and would be willing to reduce his divorce settlement in exchange for having the house.

Knowing he could have no idea how bad the smell really was, she agreed on a price that was only a tenth of what the house had been worth … but only if he would sign the papers that very day.

He agreed, and within two hours her lawyers delivered the completed paperwork.

A week later the woman and her boyfriend stood smiling as they watched the moving company pack everything to take to their new home ……

and to spite her ex-husband, she took everything- lock, stock and barrel-even the curtain rods.

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Growth Hormone Responsible For Liver Cancer

Patricia sends us this. She is the expert on all things HCV.

http://hepatitiscresearchandnewsupdates.blogspot.com/2012/04/liver-cancer-can-be-caused-by-excess.html

Posted in General Messages, HCV Health, Medical News, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment