U.S. Senators Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) and Patty Murray (D-Wash.) today wrote to Defense Secretary Robert Gates, urging him to launch an Inspector General’s investigation of the deplorable living conditions facing returning Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans at the Army’s flagship military hospital, Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C.
“If conditions at Walter Reed, the crown jewel of military health care facilities, have degraded to the point where mouse traps are handed out to patients, how can we feel confident that our troops and veterans truly have the care and transition assistance they have been promised at any facility across the country?” the Senators wrote.
The Senators also asked for an investigation into conditions at the Navy’s top hospital, Bethesda Naval Hospital. The letter follows an investigation by The Washington Post that revealed substandard living conditions, bureaucratic delays and inadequate benefits for seriously injured service members. Mikulski and Murray are both members of the Senate’s Defense Appropriations Subcommittee, which oversees funding for the two facilities.
Specifically, the Senators asked for:
* an inspection of each outpatient facility to assess their quality and safety.
* a report on the number of caseworkers and an assessment of their training and workload.
* a review of the paperwork requirements for recovering soldiers.
* a report on the accessibility and quality of psychological counseling for Soldiers and their families.
* a remediation plan, including a timeline and description of the steps the Department of Defense will take to improve outpatient care, and improve and simplify benefits for wounded military personnel.
The text of their letter follows:
ย
February 20, 2007
Secretary Robert Gates
1000 Defense Pentagon
Washington, DC 20301
Dear Secretary Gates:
We have seen first hand the excellent medical care that our troops receive at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. In many cases Walter Reed’s professional care and military expertise means the difference between life and death for our wounded combat heroes.
This is why we were so shocked and outraged to read the Washington Post’s weekend series on the dire conditions many of our military wounded face as they transition out of acute care and into outpatient care at Walter Reed. There is no more vivid image of the lack of planning by the Bush Administration for a prolonged military operation in Iraq than the neglect of our men and women in uniform when they come home.
We are writing today to demand an end to that neglect.
According to the Post series, members of our military suffering from devastating physical and mental wounds are left to navigate a system of dilapidated living quarters, bureaucratic nightmares, language barriers, inadequate and confusing benefits and neglect on virtually every level.
Over 700 soldiers are living as outpatients either on post or in apartments and hotels near by.
The Washington Post showed shocking pictures of Building 18 – which is infested with rodents, has
mold, broken doors and a broken elevator.
While we understand from subse

