source GAIA package: Sx_MilitaryTimes_M6201010008120325_5675.zip Origin key: Sx_MilitaryTimes_M6201010008120325 imported at Fri Jan 8 18:18:03 2016

Two years ago, under congressional pressure, the military changed its policy on separating troops dealing with combat stress for pre-existing personality disorders — an administrative discharge that left those veterans without medical care or other benefits.

Now, veterans advocates say, the personality-disorder discharges have been replaced with similar discharges for "adjustment disorder." And once again, Congress seems poised to jump in.

Sen. Christopher "Kit" Bond, R-Mo., plans to send a letter to President Obama asking that the military provide detailed data showing how many people have been discharged for adjustment disorders. In the meantime, Bond's staff has been gathering more general data that shows discharges for "other designated physical or mental conditions not amounting to disability" — a broad category that includes adjustment disorder — have increased from 1,453 in 2006 to 3,844 last year, an increase of 165 percent.

Over the same time, discharges for personality disorder dropped from 1,072 in 2006 to 260 last year.

"We request your assistance to ensure that a new loophole has not been created that abuses the administrative discharge system by erroneously discharging members of the armed forces who are experiencing symptoms of PTSD and/or TBI, rather than providing them with compassionate medical care worthy of their service and sacrifice," states a draft copy of Bond's letter.

The letter asks that the military provide the number of adjustment disorder discharges, by rank, with deployment information.

Shana Marchio, Bond's spokesperson, said the issue initially was brought to the senator's attention by Steve Robinson, a former Army ranger who has been active in veterans issues and now works as a veterans advocate.

"We're hoping to create another good, bipartisan coalition to address this issue," Marchio said. "The good news is that the Pentagon has moved away from personality disorders, but we feel this could be another piece of the same problem."

Marchio expects the letter to go out after Labor Day.

She said the biggest issue is that these troops don't get the treatment they need for post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injury.

According to the psychiatric manual used to diagnose mental health issues, the DSM-IV, adjustment disorder occurs when someone has difficulty dealing with a life event, such as a new job or a divorce, or after someone has been exposed to a traumatic event. The symptoms can be the same as for post-traumatic stress disorder: flashbacks, nightmares, sleeplessness, irritability, anger and avoidance.

According to military and Veterans Affairs Department policy, if those symptoms last longer than six months, the diagnosis should be changed to PTSD. With a PTSD diagnosis, a person may be medically retired with an honorable discharge, a disability rating of at least 50 percent, and medical care.

"This is a case of inappropriate discharges," Robinson said. "There are no medical benefits for these guys, and there are hundreds of cases."

Pentagon officials did not respond to requests for comment for this story, but Marchio said Army representatives talked to congressional staff members about the issue last week.

"While this was a positive step, our office didn't hear the answers we needed to hear about the rise of the discharges and has asked for additional information," she said. "The Army has since assured Senator Bond's office that they will provide, no later than the day after Labor Day, our office the data needed to evaluate the rapid rise in the use of these discharges."

'Tools to self-destruct'

During his 2008 deployment to Iraq, Army Pfc. Michael Nahas, 22, said he lived through two roadside bomb explosions and one rocket-propelled grenade attack, and watched people die in another explosion in Mosul, where he served with the 4th Infantry Division.

Two months after he returned home to Fort Carson, Colo., he said he began feeling anxious and guilty about people who he believed had died needlessly.

He went to the post mental health clinic for help. Over the course of three weeks, he had three appointments — and a lot of medication, including 14 milligrams of Xanax a day, he said.

"I was drooling on myself," he said. "I could barely function."

His mother and veterans' advocates verified his doses.

After enlisted supervisors in his chain of command found out he was going to behavioral health, Nahas said they made fun of him, including calling him "crazy" and telling him daily to kill himself so he'd no longer be a problem to the unit.

A division spokesman declined to address Nahas's account in detail.

"The allegations made by Mr. Nahas were thoroughly investigated," said Army Lt. Col. Steve Wollman. "Some of the allegations were unsubstantiated and some of them were substantiated. Appropriate corrective actions were made and the investigation is closed. Due to the nature of individual cases we do not talk specifics out of respect for the privacy of the soldier."

Nahas said the stress and a subsequent reaction to his medication led him to attempt suicide in February by jabbing IV needles into his arms to bleed out.

"I tried to kill myself," he said. "I was so out of it I was drawing pictures on the wall with my own blood."

In a photo of the aftermath provided by his family, blood fills a bathtub and a red smiley face gazes down from the tile.

His wife found him curled up on the floor and called for help, and Nahas survived.

After his suicide attempt, he spent time in an inpatient clinic where he was diagnosed with PTSD, and then went back to his unit. But rather than beginning the medical evaluation and retirement process for PTSD, his battalion chain of command gave him an administrative discharge for adjustment disorder at the end of April, and sent him back to civilian life.

"I don't understand it," Nahas said. "I was told I had PTSD, and then I was told I didn't. I always tried — I was a good soldier. I mean, they told me that."

His mother, Mary Nahas, said her son is now being treated at a VA center, and will undergo testing for traumatic brain injury in August.

"They give them the tools to self destruct," she said of the Army. "He's broken. He joined to become something."

Retired Army Lt. Col. Mike Parker, a veterans' advocate who specializes in the military disability process, said he has seen several cases of PTSD being called "adjustment disorder" or "chronic adjustment disorder."

"The problem is when you see people having adjustment disorders because they're adjusting after combat," Parker said. "That should be called PTSD."

Geor-Andreas Pogany, a former soldier who was medically discharged for a brain injury, said he is working with five service members with combat experience who are in the process of being discharged for adjustment disorders.

One of them is Spc. Daniel Upshaw, who served in Rustimiya, Iraq with the 1st Battalion, 66th Armor Regiment as a Bradley mechanic in 2008.

Upshaw said that for about a month after he came home to Fort Carson, everything seemed fine.

"Then it started," he said. He had nightmares and problems sleeping, and he started drinking a bottle of booze every night. "I'd drink until I knocked myself out. One night, I finished a bottle and then went to sleep with a loaded gun in my hand, hoping I'd shoot myself in my sleep."

He sought help, and his chain of command sent him to behavioral health. At an inpatient clinic, he was diagnosed with PTSD by a psychiatrist. Then, he said, a counselor at behavioral health changed his diagnosis to adjustment disorder and recommended an administrative discharge.

His case manager and Pogany fought that decision, and Upshaw is now waiting for a medical discharge at Fort Carson's Warrior Transition Unit, and a 90-day treatment program through VA.

"The whole thing was extremely stressful," he said. "They want to know why the suicide rate is so high. I can tell them."

Jason Perry, a former Army JAG who helps people with their medical retirement cases, said he has seen "dozens" of similar cases.

"It's very common," he said, "and it's completely illegal."

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