Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you folks for coming today.
On page 25 you put as your second bullet point that the suicide rate is lower than that of the general population. I ask this in a very respectful manner: Why did you put that in there? Why did you say that?
I had a brief of this and I showed it to a family going through these problems, and they were very pissed off, to be honest with you. It almost makes it look like, “Oh, it's okay”. You said that one suicide is too many, so I highly recommend that you take that out of there; it's not fair to compare the military service with the general population.
Second, a lot of veterans I've been dealing with lately are complaining about the fact that they're not getting help regarding their teeth problems--because as you know, they're grinding their teeth--and their sleep apnea problems. Both of these concerns are very serious for people who have PTSD. They have to go back to DVA, get another assessment, and it literally takes months and months before they get adjudicated once again on these claims.
Is there is a way DVA can balance all of the concerns of post-traumatic stress disorder and the symptoms arising from it together, so that if a person has PTSD and claims they have sleep apnea, they should automatically have the programs available to help them immediately, without having to be re-assessed once again?
My last point is that I noticed that a lot of this is based on our modern-day veterans from Afghanistan and Bosnia. But I'm going to give you the case of Stanley Eisen, from Nova Scotia. He was an 86- or 87-year-old World War II veteran. He claimed he had post-traumatic stress disorder from his World War II experience, and his claim was flatly denied. He died shortly afterwards.
I know many World War II and Korean War veterans who, because of the news from our military in Afghanistan, every time we lose one of our soldiers, relive that moment. They're suffering just as much. But I don't see the department reaching out to World War II and Korean War veterans and those who served from say 1953 to 1994. A lot of those individuals are suffering as well, and I don't see a reach-out to them looking for assistance.
I just put that out as a comment to you. I do thank you for coming.