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Monday, April 14, 2014

WND EXCLUSIVE Fort Hood Post Mortem: Crisis In Psych Testing {The Real Enemy Is Contained in the D.C. Beltway}


 Soldiers assigned to the 1st Cavalry Division’s Company F, 3rd Assault Helicopter Battalion, 227th Aviation Regiment, 1st Air Cavalry Brigade. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Travis Zielinski)
Soldiers assigned to the 1st Cavalry Division's Company F, 3rd Assault Helicopter Battalion, 227th Aviation Regiment, 1st Air Cavalry Brigade. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Travis Zielinski)
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2014/04/fort-hood-post-mortem-crisis-in-psych-testing/#cHpd24TxzOU8wM9S.99
Top doctor warns, ‘There’s no way to keep up with the workload’
 Chelsea Schilling
The Army terminated its psychological testing contract at Fort Hood, Texas, only seven months before Spc. Ivan Lopez’s eight-minute shooting rampage that left Lopez and three other soldiers dead and 16 more wounded on April 2, WND has learned.
Instead, Fort Hood – one of the largest military installations in the world and the primary hub for deploying U.S. soldiers overseas – has been using free tests it finds on the Internet to evaluate soldiers’ psychological health and only employs a single neuropsychologist to treat up to 500 soldiers a month.
And while the post’s traumatic brain injury clinic has a brand-new hot tub in storage, it receives little money to test soldiers for psychological trauma.

Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2014/04/fort-hood-post-mortem-crisis-in-psych-testing/

The Army terminated its psychological testing contract at Fort Hood, Texas, only seven months before Spc. Ivan Lopez’s eight-minute shooting rampage that left Lopez and three other soldiers dead and 16 more wounded on April 2, WND has learned.
Instead, Fort Hood – one of the largest military installations in the world and the primary hub for deploying U.S. soldiers overseas – has been using free tests it finds on the Internet to evaluate soldiers’ psychological health and only employs a single neuropsychologist to treat up to 500 soldiers a month.
And while the post’s traumatic brain injury clinic has a brand-new hot tub in storage, it receives little money to test soldiers for psychological trauma.
The senior neuropsychologist in charge of Fort Hood’s outpatient psychiatry clinic – who resigned from his position only two months ago – tells WND the post has insufficient resources to treat soldiers seeking psychological help, including:
  • Inferior testing and evaluation procedures,
  • Lack of adequate funding for clinic services,
  • Senior mental health professionals forced into retirement by the Army,
  • Months-long wait times for soldiers seeking evaluation and treatment for psychological conditions,
  • Only one trained clinical neuropsychologist for more than 50,000 soldiers
Lopez, who had been assigned to Fort Hood in February, was in treatment for anxiety and depression, among other health problems, and was being evaluated for post-traumatic stress disorder, Army officials said. Lopez claimed to have suffered a traumatic brain injury while he was deployed to Iraq from August to December 2011.

Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2014/04/fort-hood-post-mortem-crisis-in-psych-testing/#cHpd24TxzOU8wM9S.99
Top doctor warns, 'There's no way to keep up with the workload'
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2014/04/fort-hood-post-mortem-crisis-in-psych-testing/#cHpd24TxzOU8wM9S.99

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