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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, March 26, 2007

War wounded straining hospital

By Tony Perry
Los Angeles Times

SAN DIEGO — Four years ago this month, Marines from Camp Pendleton were the first conventional troops to surge into Iraq at the start of the U.S.-led assault. They were greeted by Navy SEALs from Coronado, Calif., who had slipped across the border to gather intelligence days earlier.

By any measure, the San Diego region has played a prominent role at each step of the war: troops on the ground, troops killed, joyous returns, mournful funerals, medals awarded for bravery, courts-martial for alleged abuse of Iraqi civilians.

Even President Bush's politically controversial "Mission Accomplished" aircraft-carrier landing took place off the San Diego coast.

Now, with public focus on how the wounded are being cared for in the wake of the scandal about shoddy outpatient care at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., San Diego is once again on the front lines.

Officials at the Naval Medical Center San Diego and Veterans Affairs Medical Center in La Jolla, Calif., expect visits from the commission assigned by Bush to examine medical care for veterans. Numbers alone would seem to dictate them.

"We're right in the middle of the hot zone," said Gary J. Rossio, chief executive of the VA medical center in La Jolla.

Each year, 24,000 military personnel leave active duty in San Diego County.

The VA medical center in La Jolla has seen a near-50-percent increase in patients in nine years. The VA center, next to the University of California-San Diego, is treating 4,500 Iraq war veterans, most as outpatients, with nearly 100 new veterans a month registering for care.

The Navy medical center sees more patients — active duty, retirees and their family members — than Walter Reed and the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., combined.

With an upgrade in facilities and personnel, wounded troops since July can be airlifted directly to San Diego from the military hospital in Landstuhl, Germany, rather than spend months away from their families at Reed, Bethesda or Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio.

Officials at the VA and Navy centers concede that they have had to scramble to accommodate a larger number of wounded personnel than anyone anticipated 48 months ago, when the Marines crossed the so-called Line of Departure into Iraq. The injuries have been more severe, with more amputations and more traumatic brain injuries.

Both centers also have had to increase counseling for patients with post-traumatic stress disorder. Some Vietnam veterans are suffering PTSD after watching TV news accounts of Iraq.

"It really is a wave," said psychologist Jeffrey Matloff of the VA medical center in La Jolla, who added, "I don't think we've seen the big wave. That we'll see in coming years."

The VA is adding case managers so that veterans do not slip through the cracks in the Department of Defense, Department of Veterans Affairs and private healthcare systems.

In July, Naval Medical Center San Diego hopes to open a 23,000-square-foot space with exercise and therapy rooms, a climbing wall, prosthetics lab and diagnostic facilities tailored to the severely wounded from Iraq and Afghanistan. Fifty new employees are being added.

"We anticipate this will be part of our mission for a long time," said Navy Capt. David Tam, the center's deputy commander.

Both centers have faced problems with an increasing patient load and a finite budget.

At the VA medical center in La Jolla, the top complaint of patients is difficulty scheduling timely appointments. Last fall, the Naval Medical Center announced that, temporarily, nonemergency appointments would have to be delayed or outsourced until more doctors could be hired.

Retired Marine Lt. Col. Tom Richards, chairman of the San Diego Veterans Council, says the quality of medicine at both facilities is high but that quantity lags.

"They need more — more doctors, more nurses, more everything," he said. "Washington has never followed through on its promises about medical care for veterans."