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Suicidal vet was "begging for help, and [VA] kicked him to the curb"

A few months ago, when I interviewed Josh, an Iraq War veteran, about his struggles with a traumatic brain injury and PTSD that he was affected with in Iraq, and which followed him home to Wisconsin, he told me that it had taken him 2 years to receive treatment for his conditions. His girlfriend told me that she was grateful that Josh was not one of the approximate 1,000 veterans who attempt suicide a month.

"Hundreds of thousands of soldiers who need it aren't even getting taken care of by the VA, and thousands more are attempting to commit suicide under their care. Not only that, but when I went there as 'a danger to myself and other people,' they said it was in the past and that it didn't mean that I was still. They didn't want me to be there and they didn't know what to do with me. It's no wonder they wanted to 'Shhh...' the numbers of veterans attempting to commit suicide under their care."


All I could think was, Josh saw this coming, how come the VA couldn't?

Lucas Senescall, a Navy veteran, took his life just two hours after he was released from the VA medical center in Spokane, WA on July 7th . He hanged himself with an electrical cord. He was last seen alive by his father, Steven Senescall, who picked him up from the facility. "He was holding his hands in his mouth just to keep from screaming," said Steven.

Yet despite Lucas' state of agitation and weeping, despite his history of bipolar disorder, substance abuse and multiple suicide attempts, despite his having been diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder, and despite reports quoting Lucas as saying "I don't want to exist right now," and "My heart just wants to leave my body," Lucas was assessed by the VA as a non-suicide risk and was released from VA suicide watch.

How, you may ask? The social worker's suicide risk management inventory, a standardized questionnaire used to screen patients capable of harming themselves, noted suicidal thoughts and multiple stressors, then concluded, "Risk low. Patient commits to safety plan."

Josh warned that many VA risk assessment procedures are conducted via standardized questionnaire. Lucas Senescall's suicide confirms Josh's concern. In such life and death matters, especially concerning the well-being of the young men and women who have served our country, a standardized questionnaire just doesn't cut it.

Our veterans deserve better. Sign Progressive Future's petition to increase veterans' mental health care.



Comments (3)

Oh, god... :-(

"He was holding his hands in his mouth just to keep from screaming,"

That is a mental/psychic image that will live with me forever, I'm afraid.

Thank you again, Kate. I appreciate your work, and your contributions to this site.

I meet more and more people all the time concerned with veteran suicide. The stories are wrenching and seem even worse than what I was hearing in the middle and late seventies.

I am now a pretty tuff old self-centered codger but these stories break my heart and well tears in my eyes. My anger is great of those responsible for doing this to our volunteers, and of those who facilitated it by either their involvement in this administration or by virtue of their vote.

How can these people sleep at night? With even the public's minimal awareness and the MSMs minimal exposure, rationalizing away feelings of personal responsibility must be putting a tremendous strain on the right side of our political geography.

It's horrible that these men and women stand up to defend our country, and we treat them like theyre just a number. What would you do if you went to a therapist and their only method of assessment was to have you fill out a standardized questionnaire?

Thank you for expressing your concern and compassion for this issue. I hope other will stand with you as well.

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