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Vietnam Women's Memorial, Washington, DC

Vietnam Women’s Memorial, Washington, DC

I am a veteran. I was a member of the Army Nurse Corps during the Vietnam War era, as payback for the Army paying for my nursing education. I was not a supporter of the war and, in fact, was tear gassed for protesting the war during my senior year at West Virginia University. I resigned my commission when my three years of military service were done, wanting to leave the experience behind me.

But it was a complicated experience. I served three years at Fort Dix, NJ, and never set foot in Vietnam.  I learned a great deal about myself, about nursing, and about serving outside of a war zone. I struggled with why nurses would choose to remain in the military until I talked with Diane Carlson Evans and some other military nurses who talked about the importance of wounded and dying soldiers being entitled to the best care that nurses can offer. And I wondered, who cares for these caregivers?

Diane Carlson Evans is a veteran of the Vietnam War. Years ago, 60 Minutes interviewed her about experiences in Vietnam and coming home that reflected the struggles of many veterans who were returning from an unpopular war. Repeatedly, she witnessed the honoring and acknowledging of the men who served, while women went unmentioned. Among the women who served in that war were Army, Navy and Air Force nurses who tended to soldiers in their last moments of life, helped to save the life and limbs of those who survived, and encouraged the wounded veterans to believe in their capacity to be whole again.

The Vietnam War Statue was a structural reminder of the invisibility of the women who served. It showed only men and President’s Reagan’s remarks at the memorial spoke only of men. Diane and a number of other women and nurses who served in Vietnam made a commitment to see a nurses’ or women’s memorial in Washington. Her long and hard efforts resulted in the Vietnam Women’s Memorial on the Mall.

The Washington Post featured an interview with Diane Carlson Evans that focuses on her life story and her struggles with getting the Women’s Memorial built. It’s worth reading.

Diane and her colleagues are responsible for bringing the role of nurses as healers during war out of the shadows. I hate war but I’m glad that there are nurses who are committed to caring for the men and women who do battle.

Diana J. Mason, PhD, RN, FAAN, Rudin Professor of Nursing

[caption id="attachment_9939" align="aligncenter" width="600"] Vietnam Women's Memorial,

Young people just aren’t buying it.

Young Americans, almost 20 million uninsured 18-34 year olds,  aren’t signing on for affordable health insurance through the health insurance exchanges as hoped.

The administration is expected to report on the number of Americans who have signed up for health insurance on the federal exchange this week. But the estimates aren’t great, and young, healthy people are needed to balance the risk pool.

Cost has been the greatest inhibitor to reducing young adults uninsurance rates. 

A recent HHS report states that some young adults eligible for health insurance marketplace could pay $50 or less per month for coverage in 2014.

hya-bannerThe Young Invincibles, in collaboration with HHS, has a #GetCovered campaign and just launched a video contest, “Healthy Young Americans Video Contest” to engage this group and get buy-in.  The results of the winner will be announced Friday, November 15th.

Will writing in the facts about the benefits of the Affordable Care Act into television plot lines work to get them to enroll?  Mediate reported on a $500,000 grant from the California Endowment to the University Southern California’s Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism’s  Lear Center’s Hollywood Health & Society to do just that. The Center provides entertainment industry professionals accurate and updated information on health and climate change. This grant will allow them to provide information on the ACA and it’s implementation. The full press release can be found here.

Then there’s the Koch-funded Generation Opportunity, an anti-Obamacare group, reaching out to this age group telling them not to buy health insurance.

Media does have a social impact.

No one thought this would be an impulse buy. Is this procrastination? Hold outs because the penalty in the first year is just $95?

How do we get a Millennial to take action and purchase health insurance?

Beats me.

 

 

Young people just aren't buying it. Young Americans,

This article is written by Lily Casura, a freelance journalist and founder of  HealingCombatTrauma.com and reposted from today’s Houston Chronicle.

c146959001bacd1b53103228867f385c_reasonably_smallWith Veterans Day, our thoughts turn typically to “him who has borne the battle,” in the immortal words of Abraham Lincoln, which are now enshrined above the entrance to the Department of Veterans Affairs in Washington, D.C.

Yes, veterans are usually “him,” but increasingly also a “her,” thanks to more women serving today, estimated at 15 percent of the Armed Forces. But something we’re even less likely to “see” when we focus on the veteran in the picture is the unsung hero standing right behind him or her – the military caregiver, often a spouse or partner, sometimes a parent.

The Rand Corp., acknowledging the unavoidable imprecision in estimating the number of military caregivers, in a 2013 report estimated that somewhere between 250,000 and possibly as many as 1 million Americans are serving or have served as caregivers to Iraq and Afghanistan veterans. Not all injuries are immediately apparent, and care needs can fluctuate over time. That’s why the figure could be even higher, according to Rand. When you add in veterans from other wars, such as Vietnam, those figures keep climbing.

And some of the severely injured veterans, such as Houston native Anthony Thompson, a former Navy medic who served as a corpsman in Iraq, are so disabled by their injuries that they require around-the-clock care. Ivonne Estrada Thompson, a high school Spanish teacher and also a Houston native, was newly married to Anthony in 2007 when he left on his second deployment. She was also pregnant with their first child. (continue reading here)

 

This article is written by Lily Casura,