Navajo Interagency service sees increase in veterans

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Since the signing of an interagency agreement between the Northern Arizona Veterans Administration Health Care System and the Navajo Area Indian Health Service in April, the Fort Defiance IHS is seeing a gradual increase in veterans seeking post-traumatic stress disorder counseling. That’s according to George Lawson, a licensed social worker, who is a member of the PTSD outreach team.

By Marley Shebala- Navajo Times-WINDOW ROCK,

     

On April 17, Franklin Freeland, Fort Defiance IHS chief executive officer; Michael Belgarde, Navajo Area IHS CEO; Ron Tso, Chinle Comprehensive Health Care Facility CEO; John Hubbard, Navajo Area IHS director, and Susan Angell, Northern Arizona system director signed the interagency agreement to provide outreach services to veterans on the Navajo Reservation.

Lawson, with Fort Defiance IHS, said on Wednesday that the PTSD counseling is primarily for the younger men and women returning from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

But he said he’s seeing veterans from the Korean War, Vietnam War and a few from World War II.

Lawson, who has worked with the federal Veterans Administration for 20 years, said that there aren’t enough veterans from one war era to begin group sessions, which is why he only provides one-on-one counseling.

He explained that he didn’t want to mix the war eras because of generational issues and the different "theater of operation or war zones."

Lawson said Vietnam was fought in the jungle and was an undeclared war, as opposed to Iraq and Afghanistan, which are being fought in the desert.

"Korea, of course, began a different era," he explained. "Some called it the forgotten war and lot of Korean War veterans are sensitive to the war being called forgotten."

Lawson said the Korean War happened between World War II and Vietnam and Americans remember those two wars but they seem to have forgotten the Korean War.

"But it was a war," he noted. "That’s for sure."

Lawson said that as part of his individual PTSD counseling with veterans he’s referring some veterans to in-service PTSD treatment in Tucson, Denver or Topeka, Kan.

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