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Posted at 09:12 PM on February 08, 2009
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http://www.newsday.com/services/newspaper/printedition/saturday/longisland/ny-lisold076027143feb07,0,1628739.story
Hospital exec: Soldiers' treatment needs funds
BY MARTIN C. EVANS |martin.evans@newsday.com February 7, 2009
A
former chief executive of Beth Israel Medical Center says a federal law
that blocks Defense Department funding for methadone and other
treatment programs is jeopardizing the health of soldiers battling
post-traumatic stress disorder or pain-related heroin addictions.
Dr. Robert Newman, now director of Beth Israel's International Center
for Advancement of Addiction Treatment, said drug substitution programs
for opiate addictions have become "the gold standard" during their
decades of clinical use.
"There is a potentially deadly,
societally hurtful condition we know can be successfully treated but is
being denied by the DOD's health plan," Newman said.
"Obviously
this is a particularly serious exclusion because of the predisposition
of veterans to try to self-medicate to deal with PTSD, or for injured
soldiers who become dependent during months or years of being
appropriately prescribed for opiate painkillers," Newman said.A spokeswoman for TRICARE, the Defense Department program that covers
private-sector medical treatment for active-duty troops, National Guard
personnel, and retired military and dependents, said federal law bars
TRICARE from covering methadone and related programs.
"This is something we are prohibited from doing," spokeswoman Bonnie Powell said.
Newman spoke out in reaction to an article in Thursday's Newsday that
recounted the heroin overdose death of Robert Cafici, 23, a former
Marine from Oak Beach. Cafici was being treated for PTSD at a Northport
Veterans Administration Medical Center outpatient clinic but had not
sought drug treatment, according to his parents, who are suing the VA
over his death.
Military and veterans advocates have been
increasingly critical of what they say is an inadequate federal
response to the health needs of current and former military personnel,
whose numbers are rising quickly because of the ongoing conflicts in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
Last month, USA Today reported the number
of U.S. soldiers seeking help for substance abuse climbed by 25 percent
since U.S. forces were sent to Iraq in 2003.