• 📚 A new project from the admin: Check out PictureBooks.io, an AI storyteller that lets you build custom picture books for kids in seconds. Let me know what you think here!

20,000 vets' brain injuries not listed in Pentagon tally

FriendlyFire

Codex WMDicanious
Joined
Jan 4, 2002
Messages
21,761
Location
Sydney
20,000 vets' brain injuries not listed in Pentagon tally

By Gregg Zoroya, USA TODAY

At least 20,000 U.S. troops who were not classified as wounded during combat in Iraq and Afghanistan have been found with signs of brain injuries, according to military and veterans records compiled by USA TODAY.

The data, provided by the Army, Navy and Department of Veterans Affairs, show that about five times as many troops sustained brain trauma as the 4,471 officially listed by the Pentagon through Sept. 30. These cases also are not reflected in the Pentagon's official tally of wounded, which stands at 30,327.

The number of brain-injury cases were tabulated from records kept by the VA and four military bases that house units that have served multiple combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan.

One base released its count of brain injuries at a medical conference. The others provided their records at the request of USA TODAY, in some cases only after a Freedom of Information Act filing was submitted.

he data came from:

• Landstuhl Army Regional Medical Center in Germany, where troops evacuated from Iraq and Afghanistan for injury, illness or wounds are brought before going home. Since May 2006, more than 2,300 soldiers screened positive for brain injury, hospital spokeswoman Marie Shaw says.

• Fort Hood, Texas, home of the 4th Infantry Division, which returned from a second Iraq combat tour late last year. At least 2,700 soldiers suffered a combat brain injury, Lt. Col. Steve Stover says.

• Fort Carson, Colo., where more than 2,100 soldiers screened were found to have suffered a brain injury, according to remarks by Army Col. Heidi Terrio before a brain injury association seminar.

• Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, where 1,737 Marines were found to have suffered a brain injury, according to Navy Cmdr. Martin Holland, a neurosurgeon with the Naval Medical Center San Diego.

• VA hospitals, where Iraq and Afghanistan veterans have been screened for combat brain injuries since April. The VA found about 20% of 61,285 surveyed — or 11,804 veterans — with signs of brain injury, spokeswoman Alison Aikele says. VA doctors say more evaluation is necessary before a true diagnosis of brain injury can be confirmed in all these cases, Aikele says.

Soldiers and Marines whose wounds were discovered after they left Iraq are not added to the official casualty list, says Army Col. Robert Labutta, a neurologist and brain injury consultant for the Pentagon.

"We are working to do a better job of reflecting accurate data in the official casualty table," Labutta says.

Most of the new cases involve mild or moderate brain injuries, commonly from exposure to blasts.

More than 150,000 troops may have suffered head injuries in combat, says Rep. Bill Pascrell, D-N.J., founder of the Congressional Brain Injury Task Force.

"I am wary that the number of brain-injured troops far exceeds the total number reported injured," he says.

About 1.5 million troops have served in Iraq, where traumatic brain injury can occur despite heavy body armor worn by troops.

http://www.usatoday.com/news/military/2007-11-22-braininjuries_N.htm

I thought the US had finally completed rolling out life saving helmet liners this year ? someone can correct me if iam wrong on this. It could have been done faster given the complaints but at least they have them

I wonder what kind of brain injuries are we talking about here ? What i had read previously it includes, memory loss, co-ordination, speach impediments, disorientation, as well as general PTSD problems which may be infact minor brain-injury. It would be best to have this out in the open to deal with in a systematic fashion rather then keeping it secret.

Still it is worrying that such a high percentage are showing brain damage.
 
Brain damage especially sucks, because our society is ill-prepared for dealing with it properly. If a blind man can't do some vision-related task, everyone understands. If a person with a brain injury can't perform a cognitive task, people are tempted to blame it on a personality deficit.

This whole dualist notion of the mind really makes brain damage a hard thing for society to deal with.
 
Brain damage especially sucks, because our society is ill-prepared for dealing with it properly. If a blind man can't do some vision-related task, everyone understands. If a person with a brain injury can't perform a cognitive task, people are tempted to blame it on a personality deficit.

This whole dualist notion of the mind really makes brain damage a hard thing for society to deal with.

Its hard to understand and sometimes very hard to diagnose. Not every concussion leads to impairment.
 
The brain dead becoming more brain dead? Sterile too I hope.
 
Its hard to understand and sometimes very hard to diagnose. Not every concussion leads to impairment.

Yeah, they can be hard to diagnose: even harder if the proper resources aren't applied to the issue.

But societally we treat brain-injured vets differently than if they hard an outside organ damaged. No one really expects a double-amputee to make a living with manual labour (people are okay with subsidising his employer, or getting the GI a non-labour education, etc.); but if a GI loses brain tissue associated with decision making or attention-focus, society is less willing to look for physiological reasons and will just blame the personality.
 
Back
Top Bottom