From the President
We Have Much to Offer Veterans
By James J.Kelly, Ph.D., ACSW, LCSW
One-fifth of the United States population, or roughly 61
million people, is made up of veterans and their
families. It is a special group with extraordinary challenges that continues to
grow and which will have an increasing need for social work services in the
coming years.
Social workers have been serving veterans since 1926, when the
first social work program in the Veterans Bureau was established. Social work
involvement began with patients with psychiatric issues and tuberculosis and
has expanded today to offer a variety of services to veterans and their
families including resource navigation, crisis intervention, advocacy, benefit
assistance, and mental health therapy for conditions such as depression, post
traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), traumatic brain injury (TBI), and drug and
alcohol addiction. The Department of Veterans Affairs also depends on social
workers to ensure continuity of care through the admission, evaluation, treatment,
and follow-up processes and is the largest employer of social workers in the
nation with social workers serving in every VA Medical Center, Vet Center, and
in many community-based clinics.
There are currently 23.6 million veterans in the United States,
1.8 million of which are female. There are approximately 37 million spouses and
dependent children of living and deceased veterans. Together, they represent 20
percent of the U.S. population. Social workers are going to assist many of them
including the 9.3 million veterans who are over the age of 65 and will
experience challenges not only related to their service but also to their age.
They will also work with the 6 million veterans who are dealing with a
disability and 5.7 percent who are living in poverty.
Although veterans comprise just 11 percent of the general
population, due to complex factors often including mental illness, they
comprise 23 percent of the homeless population. Over 33 percent of veterans
returning from Iraq and Afghanistan who have received care from the Department
of Veterans Affairs have been diagnosed with mental health or psychosocial
illness. PTSD, an anxiety disorder resulting from witnessing a traumatic event,
was the most common disorder, often leading to depression, substance abuse,
problems of memory and cognition, and other physical and mental health issues.
The number of Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans seeking treatment for PTSD has
risen almost 70 percent, and the total number of mental health cases among war
veterans grew by 58 percent. Veterans are seeking treatment for mental health
disorders due to the changing face of treatment as well as the growing
acceptance of these “invisible” wounds such as PTSD. Social workers are the
primary workforce tasked with serving them.
Due to the new ways in which military intervention and combat
is waged, often demanding multiple tours of duty, and the resultant effects on
veterans and their families, NASW is taking a renewed look at these outcomes
and determining the role that our professional organization will play in the
coming years. Our nation will feel the repercussions of Operation Enduring
Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom for generations, and we must ensure that
those who serve our country can expect competent care and support once they
arrive home.
NASW is committed to renewed advocacy to achieve this goal.
One important step we are taking is through our endorsement of Give an Hour, a
nonprofit organization dedicated to recruiting mental health professionals to
give one hour of their time each week to provide therapy to veterans and their
families. We are asking members who are licensed clinical social workers to
donate one hour per week to counsel a veteran or military family member. For
more information about this organization, or to volunteer your time to this
important cause, please visit www.giveanhour.org.
One of the many things I learned in my years working at a VA
hospital in the 1970s and ‘80s was the consequence of sacrifice in wartime. I
was privileged to serve Vietnam veterans. I would like to thank my fellow
social workers as they quietly (or loudly, as the case warrants) go about their
jobs trying to repair the emotional and social damage to clients and their
families. We have much to offer and much to do for those who risk everything in
service to our nation.
To comment to James J. Kelly: president@naswdc.org
From April 2009 NASW News. © 2009 National
Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. NASW News
articles may be copied for personal use, but proper notice of
copyright and credit to the NASW News must appear on all copies
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