quinta-feira, 24 de junho de 2010

$65 million TBI center opens in Bethesda


BETHESDA, Md. — A premier brain injury and traumatic stress treatment center opened Thursday amid news that the head of the military’s oft-criticized mental health efforts had abruptly stepped down.
Brig. Gen. Loree Sutton resigned earlier this week as the director of the Defense Center of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury. Sutton had often taken heat over charges that the military wasn’t doing enough to diagnosis and treat traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder.
That criticism led to the new National Intrepid Center of Excellence on the campus of the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, which was built entirely by private initiative.
The entryway to the state-of-the art facility bears the inscription: “A Place to Heal the Invisible Wounds of War. From the American People and the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund”.
Arnold Fisher, honorary chairman of the fund and the force behind the center’s conception, said he was fed up with seeing the military put a Band-Aid on servicemembers with the signature wounds of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and send them out to fend for themselves.
“No more of that,” he said in an interview before the ceremony. “Sometimes you have to kick-start the government”.
The $65 million to build the center came from 125,000 Americans, including donations as small as $10. The project broke ground in December 2008. When the Intrepid fund was in danger of missing its fundraising mark this spring, Bob Barker of “The Price is Right” fame stepped in and donated $3 million.
The ribbon-cutting ceremony Thursday officially transferred control and operation of the 72,000-square-foot facility to the Defense Department. Sutton was in the audience rather than behind the podium as originally planned, but was thanked for her contributions in getting the Intrepid Center off the ground.
She was instrumental in creating the Defense Centers of Excellence -- the heart of the military’s efforts to address psychological and brain injury-related diagnostics, treatment, prevention and research -- and has held the top job ever since.
Her departure comes after legislators recently questioned her ability to follow through on that mission, according to a report on the ProPublica website.
At an April hearing of a House Armed Services subcommittee, Rep. Susan Davis, D-Calif., said that the center had failed to carry out its role.
“The Defense Center of Excellence, while having achieved some notable small scale successes, has not inspired great confidence or enthusiasm thus far. ... The center has also made some serious management missteps that call into question its ability to properly administer such a large and important function”.
Col. Robert Saum has taken over as director of the Defense Center for Excellence, and Sutton has moved to the Army Surgeon General’s office. Her new role is unclear; Sutton declined to comment.
Since 2000, more than 150,000 servicemembers were diagnosed with TBI, and experts believe thousands more with mild symptoms go undiagnosed. Post-traumatic stress disorder affects about 30 percent of returning servicemembers, according to a study last year by RAND.