Tuesday, January 31, 2012

After war, a new fight begins


Houma native Brad Hebert was a Marine corporal during the siege of Fallujah in 2004 when he was injured by a roadside bomb that fractured his back, blew out his knee and left him with a traumatic brain injury.
When he got home, he faced a new struggle familiar to many veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan: He had trouble selling himself to potential employers.
“When I first got out, I went on several job interviews. They always ask what your work experience is, and I was a machine gunner. So they'd ask, ‘How does that relate to what you want to do now?' It doesn't. I wanted to expand my horizons, to try something new,” Hebert said. “But if your prior work experience doesn't qualify you, if you've been in for four, eight, 12 years and it doesn't relate to the job you're applying for, you probably won't get the position.”
Hebert eventually found work as an audio-visual integrator specializing in video conferencing, but his injuries have worsened, and he has moved to New Orleans to be closer to the Veterans Affairs Hospital as he seeks treatment to avoid getting risky back surgery.
Cara Bayles

Monday, January 30, 2012

Vet Families Can Access Mental Health Tools Online


MONTROSE, N.Y. – The VA Medical Center in Montrose has become the epicenter for a new online veteran’s mental health initiative. “Family of Heroes” is a website which uses avatars, realistic animations of people, to allow people to anonymously work through conversations with veterans recently returned from deployment.
“We’re trying to help families attain some skills,” said Benny Linneman, a therapist for residents of the Montrose VA. “A lot of vets think the problem is theirs, and that they can deal with it,” he said about veterans afflicted with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). The program was launched on Veterans Day, Nov. 11.
Family of Heroes”is meant to provide those who know a veteran recently returned from deployment with the skills to defuse arguments, approach a veteran who may need help and recognize signs of PTSD. The metropolitan area has about 34,000 veterans home from theaters of war, according to Linneman, and there are about two million veterans nationwide who served in both the Iraq and Afghanistan theaters.
“Family of Heroes” is only available to residents of southern New York and New Jersey as it undergoes development.