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“Personality Disorder”:
A Deliberate Misdiagnosis To Avoid Veterans’ Health Care
Costs!
Washington, D.C. – Chairman Bob Filner (D-CA) held a hearing
to examine how the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
addresses the military diagnosis of Personality Disorder.
In the last six years, the military has discharged over
22,500 service members due to Personality Disorders. The
Committee found that once a service member is diagnosed with
a Personality Disorder, he or she has a much more difficult
time receiving benefits and treatment at the VA.
Service
members discharged due to a Personality Disorder, rather
than PTSD or some other mental health condition, are
generally not provided military disability benefits because
the military classifies Personality Disorders as existing
prior to entry into military service. The service member
must show that his prior existing condition was aggravated
or worsened by military service which is difficult to do.
Service members can seek veterans’ disability benefits, but
again they must show that their condition was aggravated by
military service.
“Providing veterans with the correct medical diagnosis is
important for a variety of reasons, ranging from receiving
proper treatment to eligibility for military and veterans
benefits,” said Chairman Filner. “My concern is that this
country is regressing and again ignoring the legitimate
claims of PTSD in favor of the time and money saving
diagnosis of Personality Disorder. I am not satisfied with
the standards by which the VA accepts or denies disability
claims from our veterans diagnosed with Personality
Disorders.”
Joshua
Kors, a journalist that been reporting on Personality
Disorder for the last ten months, stated that a Personality
Disorder discharge is a “contradiction in terms. Recruits
who have a severe, pre-existing condition like a Personality
Disorder do not pass the rigorous screening process and are
not accepted into the Army.” Kors interviewed soldiers that
passed the first screening and were accepted into the Army.
“They were deemed physically and psychologically fit in a
second screening as well, before being deployed to Iraq, and
served honorably there in combat,” said Kors. “In each
case, it was only when they came back physically or
psychologically wounded and sought benefits that their
pre-existing condition was discovered.”
The
committee also reviewed the recent report by the Institute
of Medicine on VA Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
claims and discussed the VA’s plan for implementation of
recommendations in the report. Current estimates show that
approximately one-third of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans may
show signs of PTSD.
“The
nation’s veterans’ health care system is strained to the
breaking point,” said Chairman Filner. “The Institute of
Medicine reports that the VA needs to replace its narrowly
defined and unevenly applied criteria for PTSD screening
with broader standards based on the latest knowledge about
psychiatry. I intend to work with the VA to address these
recommendations and provide the appropriate care for our
veterans.”
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