Title: VETERANS HEALTH ALLIANCE
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2- VETERANS HEALTH ALLIANCE
- OF LONG ISLAND
-
- John A. Javis
- Director of Special Projects
- (MHA Nassau County)
- PHONE (516) 489-1120 ext. 1101
- E-MAIL jjavis_at_mhanc.org
3- WELCOME
- HOME!
- THANK YOU
- FOR
- YOUR SERVICE!
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6PURPOSE OF PRESENTATION
- (1) To provide an overview of the military
culture in regards to substances - (a) Public perception of substance
abuse / mental health issues - (b) Accurate / Inaccurate media
portrayals of alcohol use and the military - (2) To discuss readjustment issues
- (3) To discuss addictions and resources
7- WHATS THE FIRST THOUGHT OR IMAGE THAT COMES INTO
YOUR MIND WHEN YOU THINK ABOUT MENTAL HEALTH OR
SUBSTANCE ABUSE ISSUES? (IN GENERAL)
8- If this briefing does not apply to you at the
present time You may be able to use this
information to help a buddy, or a soldier you are
responsible for.
9COMMUNTY RESPONSE TO RETURNING VETERANS
- First reports of unusually high levels of PTSD
began hitting the media in mid-late 2006. - Media publicity surrounding the Walter Reed and
VA scandals in the Winter of 2007 resulted in a
flood of reporting and studies.
10- INTRODUCTION OF THE ALLIANCE
- The Veterans Health Alliance is a collaborative
effort of over 70 mental health and substance
abuse providers, county and state mental health
and substance abuse oversight bodies, the VA, VET
Centers, county Veterans Service Agencies,
veterans organizations, elected officials and
other stakeholders.
11MISSION OF THE ALLIANCE
- To promote the health and well-being of Veterans
and their Families through advocacy, and a broad
array of services
12VISION OF THE ALLIANCE
- YOU SERVED YOUR COUNTRY, NOW LET YOUR COMMUNITY
SUPPORT YOU
13- New York is home to over 1,000,000 veterans and
has the 4th largest number of veterans in the
U.S. - The Long Island area is 2nd only to San Diego in
the percentage of veterans among its citizens.
(Suffolk is 1 in terms of numbers of veterans.) - Over 18,000 New Yorkers have returned home from
service on OEF / OIF
14- HAVE YOU SEEN YOUR COUNTY VETERANS SERVICE
AGENCY? - HAVE YOU REGISTERED WITH THE VA?
- NEW YORK STATE DIVISION OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
(http//veterans.state.ny.us)
15BASIC PRINCIPLES
- It is normal for one to have trouble after the
experience of combat. It would be abnormal not to
have trouble. Colonel George Patrin (SAMHSA
Conference August 2008)
16But Not Everyone Will Require Services
- Of OEF / OIF Veterans seeking help from the VA
- 38 were diagnosed with a mental health
condition - 17 had substance abuse issues
- 11 had a Traumatic Brain Injury
17- RECOVERY FROM COMBAT RELATED TRAUMA AND SUBSTANCE
ABUSE ISSUES IS POSSIBLE.
18SUBSTANCES AND THE MILITARY CULTURE
- WORLD WAR II (Crash of Ruin, Peter Schrijvers)
- In Europe water shortages formed the perfect
excuse for GIs to justify drinking alcohol - A soldier in Germany in 1945 wrote home to tell
his parents he couldnt access good drinking
water, so he says he, Wet my whistle with wine
and champagne. (p. 166)
19WORLD WAR II (Continued)
- Cartoonist Bill Mauldin remarked, Drinking was a
big thing in a dogfaces life. (p. 166) - Surgeons of the 326 Airborne Medical Company
during the invasion of Normandy carried with them
92 quarts of whiskey. (p. 166) - During the siege of Bastogne, General McAuliffe
said to give the wounded, Booze for comfort.
(p.166)
20WORLD WAR II (Continued)
- At that time, Europe was more liberal with
alcohol consumption than the U.S. - It was indeed quite a sensation for GIs who
were attached to British Troops in North Africa
to line up for the rum rations in the morning.
(p.167)
21Character of CPT. Lewis Nixon Pending divorce at
home Guilt for not having fired his weapon in
combat drove his alcohol habit.
22KOREAN WAR
- Korean War, Paul Edwards
- Cigarettes were provided in C Rations.
- Army Manuals urged leaders to encourage the
soldiers to smoke. - When unavailable, it lead to whole platoons of
men going through withdrawal. (p.155)
23Continued
- Beer was provided rather routinely for the
enlisted men, along with candy and cigarettes.
(p.155) - Issue with drinking was not so much drinking to
excess on a regular basis, but binge drinking
during periods of RR. (Rest and Relaxation)
24 MASH
25CARL STINER (Shadow Warriors, with Tom Clancy)
- When reporting to his Special Forces assignment
- The last thing you need to know is we get
together every Friday afternoon at four oclock
for happy hour. Youre expected to bring your
wife, and your expected to have a 3rd Special
Forces Group mug which I just happen to sell
for three dollarsThis little ritual of happy
hours and mugs might jar people in these
politically correct times, but that was the way
the Army was back then. (p. 130)
26- The social culture in the Army as a whole was
far less structured than it is nowSocializing
tended to focus on gatherings where everyone
drank Friday afternoon happy hours were the
norm. (p. 130) - Remember that were talking about only a few
years after the end of the Korean War. Or
example, in those days commanders were not nearly
as involved in the training of soldiers or in the
taking care of families. That culture did not
really begin evolving until the draft was done
away with and we became a volunteer force.
(p.131)
27- Instead Commanders tend to host dinner parties
at home for the officers and their spouses. Its
relatively relaxed and informal, and drinking is
limited. There are pluses and minuses in all
this. We probably dont have as much spontaneity
in todays Army as we did back then, and thats a
loss but fewer people make fools of themselves,
and thats a gain.
28VIETNAM WAR
- GENERAL NORMAN SCHWARZKOPF (Vietnam)
- Upon Taking Command of His Battalion
- The outgoing battalion commandersought me
outCome back to my hooch, he said. I need to
talk to you a little. On the table sat a bottle
of Johnnie Walker Black label scotch. This is
for you, he said. Youre gonna need it. (It
Doesnt Take a Hero, p. 175)
29- I was expecting a two or three hour discussion
of the battalion, its officers, its NCOs, its
mission but he only said, Well I hope you do
better than I didthis is a lousy battalion. Its
got lousy morale. Its got a lousy mission. Good
luck to you. With that he shook my hand and
walked out. (It Doesnt Take a Hero, p. 175)
30AFTER THE BATTLE OF IA DRANG VALLEY
- Pleiku The Dawn of Helicopter Warfare in Vietnam
(J.D. Coleman) - When they walked up to the bar the bartender
told them he couldnt serve them because Moore
was too dirtyMoore patiently explained that they
had just come out of the field and would really
appreciate a drink. - The bartender refused to serve them and told them
to leave.
31- So Moore unslung his M-16 and laid it on the
bar. Mills and Crandall solemnly following suit
with their .38s. Moore than said, Youve got
exactly thirty seconds to get some drinks on the
bar or Im going to clear house. The bartender
got smart and served the drinks. By this time the
club officer had arrived. He had heard all about
the fight in the valleyso did most of the
customers in the club. From then on the trio
couldnt buy a drink.
32ALCOHOL / DRUG USE IN VIETNAM
- From American Psychiatry After World War II,
Menninger and Case - Of 610 soldiers treated by 1 psychiatrist in
country, 113 had an alcohol problem. - In 1970 an anonymous questionnaire indicated that
29 admitted to using marijuana in country. (p.23)
33(Continued)
- Between 1969 1971, 9 10 of lower enlisted
soldiers reported daily marijuana use. - By 1970, 90 96 pure heroin became readily
available. By 1971, 44 of lower enlisted had
used heroin. - By 1971 there were more evacuations due to drugs
than to combat wounds. (p. 24) - There were 75 confirmed or suspected opiate
deaths from Aug. 1 Oct. 1970. (p. 23)
34 PLATOON
35New York Times Article (March 13, 2007) For US
Troops at War, Liquor is Spur to Crime
- Commanders have not always regarded drinking as
a problem. The Army was a culture in the 1970s
that encouraged drinking, said a retired Army
colonel. Youd go out drinking together and
youd find your buddy hugging the toilet at the
officers club and think nothing of it.
36CONSEQUENCES
- In 2007 NYS OASAS (Office of Alcoholism and
Substance Abuse Services) served nearly 14,000
veterans - 14 under age 35, 19 over 55 years of age.
- 59 seen for alcohol
- 17 Crack / Cocaine
- 17 Heroin / Opiates
- 5 Marijuana / Hash
37CONSEQUENCES (Continued)
- 22 Were Employed
- 30 Unemployed
- 48 Report Not in Labor Force
- 31 had Criminal Justice involvement
- 24 Homeless
- 40 had also been treated at some point for a
mental health issue
38NY Times Article (Continued)
- Command tolerance for such behavior began
changing in the 1980s and by the 1990s. If you
had more than a couple of drinks at the club,
people started looking at you strange, the
retired colonel said.
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40NY Times Article, After the Battle, Fighting the
Bottle at Home (July 8, 2008)
- In recent years the military has worked to
transform a culture that once indulged heavy
drinking as part of its warrior ethos into one
that discourages it and encourages service
members to seek help.
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44WARRIOR PRIDE MESSAGES
- Maintain your Warrior Pride Dont Drink and
Drive! - Dont leave a Soldier behind on the battlefield,
in a bar or at a party. - I am a Warrior - I am Drug Free.
- Warrior Pride 0-0-1 Warriors have ZERO DUIs,
ZERO underage drinking incidents, and dont drink
more than ONE drink per hour
45Continued (Fort Drum)
- In late 2007 soldiers from the 10th Mountain
Division returned after 15 months in Iraq. Some
had served 3 and 4 tours. - Many also did what generations of homecoming
soldiers have done they salved their wounds in
local bars. With drinking off-limits in Iraq, at
least openly, they were that much more likely to
binge, that much less able to tolerate it.
46(Continued) FORT DRUM, NY
- A 23 year old soldier at Ft. Drum, New York,
interviewed by Reuters said, The first month
back, everybody got drunk, pretty much.Youve
been gone 15 months and thats what everybody
wants to do.
47(Continued) FORT DRUM
- The base commander, MAJ. GEN. Michael Oates
ordered post newspaper to publish names and
photographs of all soldiers charged with drunken
driving 116 appeared - Im not a teetotaler. Im not against people
drinking. Im against misconduct.
48(Continued) HEAVY DRINKING
- 2005 Army Survey found that nearly 25 of
soldiers described themselves as heavy drinkers
(i.e. Having 5 drinks at 1 sitting once a week) - 18 25 year old Soldiers and Marines are 2X as
likely to be heavy drinkers than their civilian
counterparts.
49(Continued) Lack of Substance Abuse Treatment
- New Jersey National Guard
- 37 had problem drinking
- 55 for those with PTSD
- Of those reporting both, 41 received mental
health treatment only 9 received help for
substance abuse.
50HOMECOMING / TRANSITION (Dan Taslitz, One
Freedom, SAMHSA August 08)
- In combat, life is Either Or
- Either Im Safe OR Im in danger kill
- Civilian world is not Either Or (ex. Being
insulted by someone is not a life threatening
experience - Sleeping is dangerous in combat zone - how to
sleep when home?
51BOREDOM
- Deployment / Combat is an adrenaline high.
- Reintegration
- Less Excitement
- Normal Responsibilities (i.e. Take out the
trash!) - Boring Job
- May seek out thrills Driving fast / Spending
recklessly / Risky Sex / Use substances
52HOMECOMING ISSUES (MAJ. DAVINA FRENCH, SAMHSA
CONF. AUG. 08)
- While deployed, Cant wait to get home and see
my kids.It will be great. While deployed in
Iraq may have spent a lot of time being around
children - When home, veteran may feel smothered by their
child and pull away Veteran may be distracted
by thoughts of their comrades who are still
deployed.
53MAJ. French (Continued) HOMECOMING
- WHO IS THE HERO?
- Returning veterans may be treated to parades,
parties, banners etc. but may not feel heroic. - May feel that those killed are the true heroes.
54Capella University Study (June, 2008) FAMILY
PREPAREDNESS
- Returning Servicemembers to Community Heres
How You Can Help - Only 3 of servicemembers felt the typical
military family was very prepared to help them
transition from combat duty. - More than 50 felt that families were not at all
prepared to help with the transition.
55RELUCTANCE TO SEEK HELP (Capella Study)
- (1) Concern about negative impact on military
career. - (2) No help was offered me.
- (3) No one with combat experience available to
help me. - (4) Concern loved ones would lose respect for
me. - (5) Not enough access to community mental health
resources.
56BATTLEMIND Alcohol Transition
- www.battlemind.army.mil
- Alcohol Transition In Combat access to alcohol
is limited At Home access is plentiful
57HOMECOMING
- HOLIDAYS
- FAMILY FUNCTIONS
- SEE OLD FRIENDS
- GO OUT
- INCREASE ACCESS TO ALCOHOL / DRUGS
58ALCOHOL TOLERANCE
- When you first started drinking you may have
felt drunk after 2 beers. - When you build up alcohol tolerance it may have
taken you a six-pack to feel that way. - Body can be fooled into getting a DUI because
you dont feel drunk. - Since you have been away from alcohol while
deployed, your tolerance may be back down to 2
3 beers again before you show signs of
intoxication.
59BLOOD ALCOHOL CONCENTRATION (HOT TOPICS Current
Issues for Army Leaders Volume 7, No. 1 2005
p.5)
- The amount of alcohol in the bloodstream,
measured in percentage. Actual effect on
performance and judgement is different for every
person. - .02 No loss of coordination, slight euphoria
- .05 Legal limit for military personnel on duty
- .08 Judgement, self-control, caution and reason
impaired Legal limit in most states - .15 Difficulty standing, walking and talking
- .40 Loss of consciousness
- .50 Death
60- WHAT ARE SIGNS
- OF PROBLEM
- DRINKING?
61SIGNS OF PROBLEM DRINKING CAGE Questions
- C Have you ever felt that you should Cut down
on your drinking? - A Have people Annoyed you by criticizing your
drinking? - G Have you ever felt bad or Guilty about your
drinking? - E Have you ever had a drink first thing in the
morning to steady your nerves or get rid of a
hangover (i.e. as an Eye-Opener)?
62CAGE QUESTIONS (Iraq War Clinicians Guide)
- SCORE of 3 or 4 most likely indicates alcohol
dependence - SCORE of 1 or 2 may indicate alcohol abuse
63SHORT TERM EFFECTS OF HEAVY DRINKING(Hot Topics,
p.8)
- Affects vision
- Black-outs
- Loss of coordination
- Altered perception emotions
- Impaired judgement
- Stomach irritation
- Increased urination
64EFFECTS OF LONG TERM DRINKING
- Loss of appetite, weight loss
- Ulcer
- Cancer of liver, throat
- Heart Disease
- Sexual Impotence
- Personality changes
65OTHER SIGNS OF PROBLEM DRINKING
- Unable to stop drinking
- Causing trouble at home
- Missing work due to drinking
- Blackouts
- DUI Arrest
- Vomiting
- Fighting
- Financial Problems
66PROBLEM DRINKING (Continued)
- Spouse / Child Abuse
- Injury
- Decreased performance at work
- Loss of Control Doing Stupid things
- Unprotected sex / Unwanted Sex
- Unexpected guest for breakfast
67Problem Drinking
- Cant remember how much they drank
- Drinking alone
- Drink prior to social event or drink to excess at
events - Pass out after drinking
- Drink to cope with stressful situations
68ALCOHOL DEPENDENCY (HOT TOPICS, p.11)
- Physiological Tolerance Need to drink more to
get a buzz - Physical Dependence Need to drink to feel OK
- Addiction
- Withdrawal feel depressed, have hallucinations
or delusions when one stops drinking
69BEHAVIOR CHANGES (HOT Topics, p.9)
- Separation / distance from family
- Borrowing of
- Stealing
- Drinking in Secret
- Neglect personal appearance
- Revolve life around alcohol events
70Signs of Drug Abuse Problems
- In addition to many of the same issues with
problem drinking - Purposely misusing prescription medications
- Blackouts or Flashbacks
- Engaged in illegal activities to obtain drugs
- Withdrawal symptoms
- Medical problems due to drug use
71HALT (Never Drink if You are) (HOT TOPICS, p.6)
- H ungry
- A ngry
- L onely
- T ired
72EFFECTS ON THE FAMILY
- FAMILY SYSTEMS THERAPY
- Prior approaches used a remove and replace
approach. (i.e. Remove the substance abuser
(detox / rehab), fix them and return them to
the family) - Family systems therapy looks at family as a
childs mobile (i.e. If you shake one part,
the whole mobile shakes seeks a balance.)
73CHILDREN OF DYSFUNCTIONAL FAMILIES
- Applies to both the children of the current user,
as well as to the current user if he / she grew
up in a home with a substance abuser. - 4 Common Roles
74- (1) HERO
- Takes over the Parental Role
- Gives families Self-worth
- Good Students / Sports stars
- Usually the oldest child
- As adult may be controlling or judgemental
- As adult may achieve success on outside but may
be cut off from inner emotions
75- (2) ACTING OUT CHILD
- Family is ashamed of them
- Acts out the tension in the family
- Get into trouble at school
- May resent the hero
- Self-hatred / destructive
- May be the addicted / arrested teen
- As adult may turn to drugs / alcohol
76- (3) CLOWN / MASCOT
- Divert families pain through humor
- Focus on others
- Give love, unable to receive love
- Usually the youngest child
77- (4) LOST / WITHDRAWN CHILD
- Invisible
- Lose selves in Fantasy / Books / TV
- Deny feelings
- Afraid of intimacy
- May turn to overeating or Drugs / Alcohol
78ADULT CHILDREN OF ALCOHOLICS
- Brought up in an alcoholic or other dysfunctional
households. - We became people pleasers
- We either became alcoholics ourselves, married
them, or both. Failing that, we found other
compulsive personalities, such as a workaholic,
to fulfill our sick need for abandonment.
79- We lived live from the standpoint of victims.
- (Co-Dependency) We were dependent personalities,
terrified of abandonment, willing to do almost
anything to hold on to a relationship in order
not to be abandoned. - We often confused love with pity, tending to love
those we could rescue. - Even more self-defeating, we became addicted to
excitement in all our affairs, preferring
constant upset to workable solutions.
80 81INPATIENT PROGRAM
- DETOXIFICATION Medically supervised
detoxification from alcohol and / or other drugs.
Detox is short term (3 5 Days) - REHABILITATION Structured environment to begin
the process of sobriety. Workshops, educational
and counseling sessions are offered. Rehab is
usually a few weeks in length.
82OUTPATIENT TREATMENT
- Person participates in any combination of
services which could include - Group therapy
- Individual sessions
- Family conferences
8312 STEP GROUPS
- ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
- NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS
- GAMBLERS ANONYMOUS
84- VARIOUS
- APPROACHES TO
- RECOVERY
85ABSTINENCE
- Traditional 12 Step Groups use an Abstinence
(i.e. Not using) approach. - One Day at a Time.
- People, Places and Things That Get You Into
Trouble. - 90 in 90.
86Confrontational Approaches
- Argues that the person has a problem and needs to
change. - Worker is the expert and does most of the
talking. - Imposes a diagnostic label.
- Worker behaves in a punitive or coercive manner.
- (Description taken from Addiction Technology
Transfer Center)
87HARM REDUCTION APPROACH
- The Harm Reduction approach was developed in
the 1980s and 1990s. - Harm Reduction has its origins in HIV / AIDS work
(i.e. Needle Exchanges)
88DEFINITION OF HARM REDUCTION
- Harm reduction is a set of strategies that reduce
negative consequences of the addiction. The
strategies range from safer use to abstinence.
Harm reduction meets people where theyre at.
(Harm Reduction Coalition)
89HARM REDUCTION (Continued)
- Accepts that the addiction is part of our world
chooses to minimize the harmful effects rather
than ignore or condemn them. - Acknowledges that some ways of using are clearly
safer than others. - The focus is on persons well-being not
necessarily on stopping the use.
90HARM REDUCTION (Continued)
- Recognizes that realities such as poverty, past
trauma, and other issues affect peoples ability
to deal with the addiction. - Does not attempt to minimize or ignore the real
and tragic harm and danger associated with the
addiction.
91MOTIVATIONAL INTERVIEWING
- Developed in 1990s as a response to frustrating
attempts to change harmful behavior. - Client-centered counseling style
- Motivation to change is not imposed on the
client by the worker the worker tries to
mobilize the clients strengths and values. - Relationship between client and worker is more
like a partnership than Expert Recipient
roles.
92LEADERS ROLE (HOT TOPICS, p.7)
- Understand the effect of substance abuse on
personal and mission readiness - Know about local resources for referrals
- Intervene BEFORE a problem develops
- Emphasize off-duty alternatives to substance use.
93HELPING OTHERS IN RECOVERY (Recoverforever.com)
- Help others find their talent and help them
emphasize it. - Spirituality is a help.
- Avoid cleaning up their mess.
- Let them know it is OK to feel
- Get them out of their heads
94CAPELLA STUDY What Helps
- 77 of service members seeking mental health
services said the assistance was helpful with
community mental health providers receiving
higher rankings than military providers. - 87 felt that setting a goal (Degree, new career)
was helpful.