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Politics & Government

Panetta orders another PTSD review for Madigan Army Medical Center

Adam Ashton - The (Tacoma) News Tribune

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February 29, 2012 07:37 AM

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta Tuesday announced a new layer in the Army's investigations into a Madigan Army Medical Center behavioral health program that changed post traumatic stress disorder diagnoses for certain soldiers who were seeking medical retirements at the Army base south of Tacoma.

Panetta told a Senate committee that he asked a Defense Department undersecretary to look at whether the military is diagnosing post traumatic stress consistently.

It was not clear Tuesday whether that inquiry overlaps with at least two other ongoing investigations into Madigan’s forensic psychiatry unit. Pentagon and Army Medical Command spokesmen were not able to describe the latest investigation.

Panetta’s remarks came at a defense budget hearing at which Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., pressed him about his knowledge of the forensic psychiatry team at Madigan, on the grounds of Joint Base Lewis-McChord. That unit, created in 2008, reviewed PTSD diagnoses and sometimes adjusted them to other diagnoses.

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The decisions were costly to some service members who were no longer entitled to the level of disability benefits the government provides to soldiers who suffer from PTSD. One psychiatrist in the forensic unit this fall encouraged other behavioral health specialists not to be a “rubber stamp,” and said a PTSD diagnosis could cost taxpayers $1.5 million in benefits over the lifetime of a retired soldier.

“I never want to hear anyone in any service say we’re not going to give you a PTSD diagnosis because we have a budget problem,” Murray said at Tuesday’s hearing.

Panetta replied that he was troubled by the Madigan reports and said he asked his undersecretary for personnel, Dr. Jo Anne Rooney, to look into the situation at Madigan.

“I was very concerned when I got the report about what happened at Madigan, and it reflects the fact that we have not learned how to deal with that, and we have to,” he said. He agreed with Murray when she said she wanted consistent standards.

The Army has reinstated PTSD diagnoses for six soldiers who raised complaints about the Madigan unit. In eight other cases, a team at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Maryland upheld the adjusted diagnoses reached by the forensic review team.

Madigan commander Col. Dallas Homas is on leave while the Army completes its investigations.

To read more, visit www.thenewstribune.com.

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