From the President
Honoring and Helping Veterans
By Elvira Craig de Silva, DSW, ACSW
Regardless
of how different people may look at or feel about war, the majority
of the public manifests respect and empathy for veterans and the
monumental changes they go through while serving our country.
It is only fitting that in the month of November — when we honor
our country's veterans — we talk about ways social workers can
help these committed citizens and their families.
The veteran reentry process is challenging, often painful, and
sometimes ends in tragedy. Invariably, family and support systems
suffer as well, so it is very important for veterans and their
loved ones to recognize signs of distress and seek help.
Our profession's role is to help foster greater understanding
of the many issues facing the returning veteran, including the
effects of war on family life, workplace readjustment, rebuilding
self-image and gaining a sense of place in society. Our role must
be to advocate, coordinate and provide necessary services to help
veterans regain control of their lives.
During my 14 years as a social worker and research specialist
at the Clemente J. Zablocki VA Medical Center in Milwaukee, Wis.,
I was privileged to work with veterans. Some were outpatients,
and others were residents in the nursing home care unit.
Watching their interactions, I learned about resilience, faith
and unselfishness. Many would take time to cheer up their fellow
veterans, even when they could not be as positive about their
own situations.
I witnessed the dedication of the families, which often included
distant relatives and even divorced partners, who chose to look
after them. In the social work department, we always said that
the most valuable resources were our patients' human resources.
I also saw the misery of lives shattered when war could not be
left behind, either emotionally or physically, and our frustration
when we could not facilitate a satisfactory resolution.
Perhaps one skill that served us best was to let our patients
and clients decide where their capabilities could take them. We
had to recognize the diversity of the veteran population, and
we needed to be flexible and able to change as we moved through
the path that the patient drew us along. Veterans have a lot to
teach us about letting go, reinventing oneself and digging deep
to find new connections with a world that seems out of touch.
The profile in our most recent National Social Work Public Education
Campaign advertisement is a perfect example of this strength.
This month, millions of readers of O, The Oprah Magazine will
learn about Army National Guard Specialist and Iraq Veteran Chuck
Ross who got help from clinical social worker Rick Selig [see
story in this issue].
Chuck had made a commitment to his wife Jennifer that he would
seek counseling when he returned from his Iraq tour of duty. Both
of their fathers had been Vietnam veterans and Chuck's father
eventually committed suicide. Chuck agreed to have his story told
in the social work campaign because he wants other military personnel
who experience combat stress to be honest and deal with it.
After seeing a fellow soldier blown up or shot, or realizing
that they have killed an Iraqi child, many soldiers choose to
suffer in silence.
Social workers give voice to countless children, victims of abuse,
patients, substance users, struggling parents and older adults.
In our service men and women, we will find a growing group of
highly vulnerable individuals as well.
According to VA figures, the number of veterans from all areas
treated by the VA for post-traumatic stress disorder jumped 30
percent from 2003 to 2005. But a study in the New England Journal
of Medicine revealed that enormous numbers of soldiers won't see
therapists. It showed that 38 percent of soldiers thought to be
mentally ill did not trust therapists, 50 percent worried that
seeing one could harm their careers, and 65 percent feared being
seen as weak. Barriers to therapy and assistance for some won't
be overcome soon, but an increase in cases like Chuck Ross's do
provide hope.
Also, thanks to the leadership of VA Social Work Services Director
Jill Manske, her deputy Kristin Day and the more than 4,400 social
workers employed through the VA system, it's getting easier for
vets and their families to get the help they need. Last year,
the VA partnered with the Department of Defense to launch the
social worker-led Seamless Transition Program. The program incorporates
VA social workers into all DOD military treatment facilities to
address needs of veterans and families from a broad biopsychosocial
perspective.
Every one of us needs to bear a bit of the responsibility of
helping our soldiers and returning civilians with their reentry
into ordinary life. We all benefit when they are able to live
in and contribute to their communities.
To our colleagues who have worked to make this happen for countless
veterans and their families, and to those who have served themselves,
thank you, and Happy Veterans Day.
To comment to Elvira Craig de Silva: president@naswdc.org
From November 2006 NASW News. © 2006 National
Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. NASW News
articles may be copied for personal use, but proper notice of
copyright and credit to the NASW News must appear on all copies
made. This permission does not apply to reproduction for advertising,
promotion, resale, or other commercial purposes.
|