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Death by suicide, or by being abandoned by the VA system?

 
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PostPosted: Thu Feb 01, 2007 2:28 pm    Post subject: Death by suicide, or by being abandoned by the VA system? Reply with quote

from greasy:

Would someone from the Stewart, Minn. area please make sure that the US Representative and Minnesota Senators are aware of this? A congressional investigation must be done on this case and see what failed in the VA Hospital system. We expected to be killed in combat and if we lived to be cared for by the VA Hospital if we needed medical or mental help. We did not expect the VA system to let us die this way.
Danny "Greasy" Belcher, Executive Director
Task Force Omega of KY Inc.
Vietnam Infantry Sgt. 68-69
"D" Troop 7th Sqdn. 1st Air Cav

St. Cloud Times | WWW.SCTIMES.COM Latest news: Casualty of war, delayed
January 27, 2007

STEWART, Minn. (AP) — Jonathan Schulze tried to live with the nightmares and grief he brought home after serving as a U.S. Marine in Iraq, but it overwhelmed him. And he didn’t get the help he needed to survive, his family claims.

Two weeks ago, Schulze told a staff member at the VA hospital in St. Cloud that he was thinking of killing himself and asked to be admitted, according to his father and stepmother, who accompanied him. They said he was told he couldn’t be admitted that day. The next day, a counselor told him over the phone that he was No. 26 on the waiting list, his parents said.

Four days later, Schulze committed suicide in his New Prague home. He was 25.

“He was a delayed casualty of the Iraq war,” his father, Jim Schulze, said of Jonathan.

Veterans Affairs officials, citing privacy laws, wouldn’t comment on the case or confirm or deny the Schulze family’s account.

However, Dr. Sherrie Herendeen, line director for mental health services at the St. Cloud hospital, said Thursday that under VA policy, a veteran talking about suicide would immediately be escorted into the hospital’s locked mental health unit for treatment. She said the hospital was now reviewing its procedures.

Schulze’s father and stepmother, Marianne Schulze, who live in rural Stewart, said their son would still be alive if the VA had acted on his pleas for admittance. They said they heard him tell VA staff in St. Cloud that he felt suicidal — in person on Jan. 11 at the hospital, and over the phone on Jan. 12.

On the evening of Jan. 16, Schulze called family and friends to tell them that he was preparing to kill himself. They called the New Prague police, who smashed in the door and found him hanging from an electrical cord. Police attempted to resuscitate him, but it was too late.

‘Classic’ PTSD case

Schulze’s family doctor, Dr. William Phillips of Stewart, said he was convinced that Schulze suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, a disabling mental condition that can result from military combat.

“Jonathan was a classic,” said Phillips, who first examined Schulze in October 2004 when Schulze was home on leave from Marine duty.

Phillips said Schulze was reliving combat in his sleep, had flashbacks, couldn’t eat, felt paranoid, struggled with relationships and admitted to drinking alcohol excessively. Phillips prescribed medication to calm his nerves and help him sleep.

He also asked Schulze to seek counseling at Camp Pendleton, the Marine Corps base in California where he was assigned. Phillips said he was unable to learn whether Schulze had done so.

“We don’t have a system for this,” Phillips said. “The VA is overwhelmed, and we’re rural doctors out here trying to deal with this. Unfortunately, we’re going to see a lot of Jonathans.”

Maj. Cynthia Rasmussen, the combat stress officer for the 88th Regional Readiness Command at Fort Snelling, said veterans returning to Minnesota who have problems often don’t seek help until their civilian lives begin to fall apart. “Soldiers think if they go to get help that they’re going to be seen as weak, but they also think their command won’t have faith in them,” she said.

Flashbacks

After Schulze left the Marines in late 2005, he continued to have aching memories of combat. “When he got back from Iraq he was mentally scattered,” said his older brother Travis, who also served there with the Marines.

Much of Jonathan Schulze’s anguish seemed to relate to combat in Ramadi in April 2004.

Schulze, who carried a machine gun, wrote his parents that 16 Marines, many of them close friends, had died in two afternoons of firefights and bombings. Twice he was wounded but didn’t tell his parents, not wanting them to worry. He wrote about dismembered bodies, youth and combat and disillusionment. And about the bombs.

“I pray so much over here and ask God to keep me out of harm’s way and to make it back home alive and in one piece,” he wrote Jim and Marianne in May 2004. “I bet I easily pray over a dozen times a day and I always pray while I am on patrol as I am terrified of getting hit by an IED aka a bomb. Our vehicle elements and Marines on patrols are getting hit hard by these bombs the Iraqis plant all over and hide on the ground.”

Schulze, who had a young daughter, Kaley Marie, carried guilt that fellow Marines died. He wanted to return to Iraq to somehow redeem himself, said his father, who did three tours of duty in Vietnam.

Because of that, Schulze at first resisted counseling, Jim Schulze said. “Being a Marine, he was too proud to get help,” he said. “They want to make you impervious of any emotion. And when you get out it’s almost impossible to put it back the way it was.”


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