Are War Veterans Getting the Treatment they Need?
A veteran is “a person who has served in the armed forces.” This is the dictionaries definition of a veteran. An unknown author wrote “a veteran is someone who, at one point in his/her life, wrote a blank check payable to ‘The United States of America,’ for an amount of ‘up to and including my life,’” but not everyone has the same definition for a veteran, so what is yours? Veterans have not been treated the best after they have come back home from the military. They could come back home with mental illnesses or disabilities or, for others, they could come home to financial problems. Some veterans end up homeless because they have no money when they get home. Others could end up in depression. Veterans do not just come home and go back to their normal lives like some people think they do. So, for the good of American war veterans and other American citizens, these veterans need improved therapy and treatment than what they are receiving currently. In 2013, 57,849 homeless veterans were estimated in the US. This is just 12% of all homeless adults and just under 8% of homeless veterans are female. Homelessness come from all sorts of things when veterans return home. They could have financial problems,
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It is 300% the national average. This accounts for 30% of the United States suicides, annually. Suicide from a veterans most likely has something to do with their health. The could have disabilities they could not handle, PTSD, or it could be that they do not have any money and have to live on the streets. When veterans come home they do not feel like what they did before they were in the military. They had a close bond with other people in the military that they do not have in a community. They do not feel like they belong, so they fall into depression and sometimes into drugs and alcohol. This will lead to not wanting to seek treatment and things will just get
FACTS: VA estimates that 107,000 veterans are homeless on any given night, and over the course of a year, approximately twice that many experience homelessness. Only eight percent of the general population can claim veteran status, but nearly one-fifth of the homeless population are veterans.
Veterans. Those people are the reason why we are living and free. Don’t you ever think about the wounded veterans that put their whole life on the line for you to be safe? For their sacrifices they deserve the best and we can help by donating to wounded warrior project. The wounded troops should have the help to overcome their physical and mental obstacles. I Joey Drana believe that wounded warrior project is one of the best charities to donate to.
The issue being addressed in this study is veteran’s rights, most notably homelessness and suicide rates. The subject of veteran’s rights overall is still being pursued. Along with the mindset of the American public, to the cases presented before Congress, this is an ongoing dilemma. Caring for our brothers and sisters in arms is the socially responsible thing to do. Ensuring the public is aware, and promoting campaigns to raise awareness, this is what the paper will touch on.
Homeless veterans seem to be a defenseless population by definition, as they are a subgroup in the population that is likely to have health problems or worse health challenges because of exposure to risks unlike the rest of the population. Many research undertaken to differentiate health problems linked to homeless veterans. They are vulnerable to co-morbidity of abuse of substances, mental, physical health infections and disorders than the common homeless population. Their inability to get or refuse treatment worsens their exposure to complications.
The majority of homeless veterans have service connected disabilities that are a direct result of military service; this contributes to a high risk of homelessness among veterans. Unique military skills that are non-essential in the civilian sector, combat related health issues, fractured family relationships and the lack of affordable housing are other factors. Many of them lack a social support network and/or someone to assist them with getting assistance from the government. They may be unaware of the different services they require and are
The Housing Urban Development (HUD) released a report; called the Annual Homeless Assessment Report (AHAR) this report has facts about the homelessness among veterans. “Hsu, 2014 talks about how the AHAR shows there is a 10 percent of veterans are living on the streets at any giving night”. (p. 18) “Larger number of homeless veterans’ dwell in residential, emergency, and traditional housing that is available to the veterans that is in need.” (HSU,2014(p. 18)
Imagine as an immigrant one enters into a new life unfamiliar to the culture and the expectations of a new society. Faced with so many challenges and uncertainties, how does one fit into a new environment or align oneself with existing resources for a successful cultural transition? Veterans transitioning into civilian life may experience similar challenges and may require a multidisciplinary approach consisting of improved communication, understanding and the perception of the underlying issues which contribute to the challenges veterans face with assimilating to the civilian life. Although, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is the most talked about issue with returning veterans, there are many more issues that ensue. For example,
A freedom I enjoy because of veterans sacrifice is freedom of speech. With freedom of speech you can basically say whatever you want when you want it. If you don't like a person running for a place in office or something, you are allowed to say you don't like them, without getting in trouble. If you want to protest something you are also able to do so. You can go out into the streets or on social media and protest whatever you want with freedom of speech. Your allowed to voice your opinion. People in the army go out of the country and risk their lives everyday for us to have freedom of speech.
Veteran's Day is a special time. I have family or had family in the service. My Grandpa Harry Iunghuhn was in the Navy. My Grandpa Sir Schweier served in WW1. Now my cousin Emily Fay. She is in the Navy. Veteran's Day to means to honer men and women who have served for our country.
Approximately 12% or 49,933 of the adult homeless population are veterans in the United States (Olenick, Flowers, & Diaz, 2015, p. 637). The average age for homeless veterans is 49 years old compared to 30 years old for non-veterans (Ritter, 2014, p. 19). The homeless veterans are very similar to the homeless non-veteran population. They tend to struggle with the same difficulties like mental illness, substance abuse and unemployment (Olenick, Flowers, & Diaz, 2015, p. 637). According to the book Homeless Veterans and Health: A Resource Guide for Providers, research shows that military service is not the major cause of the homelessness among veterans, it has more to do with their social support, income, lack of affordable housing, addictions, physical and mental health and social isolation when they get back from serving overseas (McMurray-Avila, 2001, p. 1). Unemployment is common among veterans because military skills do not always transfer to civilian work, making it tougher to find a job and possibly keep a job (Olenick, Flowers, & Diaz, 2015, p. 636-637).
Firstly, a soldier picks up everything to go overseas and protect the country. This alone is not an easy thing to do. And in addition to this, when they return, most have nothing waiting for them. In the article, “Homeless Veterans Deserve a Place in the American Dream” by Marla Cuomo Cole, the author states, “50,000 veterans who are homeless, or 1.4 million who are considered at risk of homelessness on any given day, due to poverty, lack of support networks, and marginal living conditions in substandard housing, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development” (1). So, when veterans return they are at a high risk for many things because they cannot find jobs or the help they need. When soldiers return, they are expected to keep the people they are responsible for, afloat, while they deal with the adjustments. Secondly, veterans struggle to get back on their feet when they return. Veterans deal with problems that most
According to the latest statistics, military veterans account for 23% of the homeless population. In addition, the Department of Veterans Affairs reports that 200,000 military Veterans could become homeless at any given time (from VA Dept. Web). This should be our concerns to prevent such latest prediction becoming one of the realities of our times. Moreover, a report from the VA Department of Housing and Urban Development reveals there are over 67,000 Veterans who struggle with
A lot of homeless people are veterans that served to protect us. Around 40%of homeless me are veterans. They can’t go back to living a normal life because of the things they have seen at war. Most Veterans are aged from 18-30.
Back in 2007, the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty reported that roughly 3.5 million people are likely to be homeless in a given year and the National Coalition for the Homeless in 2009 states that between one fifth and one fourth of all homeless people are veterans. Besides the numbers gathered by the above organizations,
The homeless veterans should be really important to the broader community because we as humans should help the people who want to be helped, and help them as much as possible. Out of the 610,042 homeless people that Veteran Affairs estimated, the 2013 Annual Homeless Assessment Report (AHAR) to Congress in 2013 stated that