Author Topic: It's called Scheduling  (Read 1403 times)

Offline Vudu15

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Re: It's called Scheduling
« Reply #15 on: October 04, 2016, 02:32:29 PM »
I wont go to them, I thank the good lord I had no injuries when I got out in 2013.
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Offline Traveler

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Re: It's called Scheduling
« Reply #16 on: October 07, 2016, 09:16:37 AM »
Traveler, you did the right and only thing not waiting for the VA and going private.  Did they cover the Emergency procedures or did they make you pay since it wasn't 'service connected' ?  I have never yet had an ER visit paid even though I am 4 hrs away from a VA hospital ER, always because of non service connected issue.  I went thru roughly the same thing as you and like you it was all scheduling.  They didn't pay for it either even though it was service connected and they considered it non emergency.  My body was rejecting a 35yr old chunk of shrapnel in my leg and developing a very fast growing tumor in my leg.  It was marble size when they found it and by the time I saw a VA surgeon 3 months later had grown to the size of an orange and I could barely walk.  Like with you, VA surgeon said they have to get it out asap so the closest surgery date I could get was 11 months away. Went to a local hospital, saw a surgeon, he removed it in day surgery 2 weeks later.  Was worth it since I don't know how big it would have grown the speed it was going.  I'm glad your surgery was successful as your liver was going to shut down on you eventually.  I was just major pissed off at VA because I had a service connected issue and they still let 'scheduling' stand in the way, the doctors were ready to go to work on it just couldn't get the facilities faster.

I too have been sheeding steel since 69.  finding it's not the steel that is the issue but the tumors that form around the shrapnel and any sourounding orgaines.  I've lost my left adrenial gland in 2000 that way.  If you were wounded as I was, it's pretty clear cut  it's service connected, unless you were wounded with shrapnel prior to your enlistment.  I'd have a conversation with your senator or congressman.  Remember when you enlisted and they took all those xrays and that induction medical exam.  Well that is what they compair your discharge xray and medical exam to.  They note all the scares and your service medical record shows treatment of all wounds and injures.  I was wounded a total of three time in two different engagments.  The VA could provide the best health care in the world, but they chose not to, and the government pays them a bonus based on their poor performance.  To this day, despite the news reports and outcrys for help from Vets nothing has changed, not one person was fired, not one.  Vets still die waiting for care that they have been scheduled for.
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Offline redcatcherb412

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Re: It's called Scheduling
« Reply #17 on: October 07, 2016, 12:36:09 PM »
I too have been sheeding steel since 69.  finding it's not the steel that is the issue but the tumors that form around the shrapnel and any sourounding orgaines.  I've lost my left adrenial gland in 2000 that way.  If you were wounded as I was, it's pretty clear cut  it's service connected, unless you were wounded with shrapnel prior to your enlistment.  I'd have a conversation with your senator or congressman.  Remember when you enlisted and they took all those xrays and that induction medical exam.  Well that is what they compair your discharge xray and medical exam to.  They note all the scares and your service medical record shows treatment of all wounds and injures.  I was wounded a total of three time in two different engagments.  The VA could provide the best health care in the world, but they chose not to, and the government pays them a bonus based on their poor performance.  To this day, despite the news reports and outcrys for help from Vets nothing has changed, not one person was fired, not one.  Vets still die waiting for care that they have been scheduled for.
The shrapnel was from the 2nd Tet battles in May '68, I made it thru the first Tet battle untouched even in the Saigon Cholon battle to kick the VC out of Saigon. You're right, for some reason the tumors pick the metal to encompass to protect the other tissues. but cause more problems themselves.  The one good thing the tumor in the leg caused was the VA for the next year watched the shrapnel in my lung a little closer to make sure the body wasn't growing anything around it, but after a year they stopped monitoring it too.  For as big an outfit as the VA is with whole departments devoted to scheduling, you would think that would be an area they excel in, but nope, it isn't.
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Offline Traveler

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Re: It's called Scheduling
« Reply #18 on: October 07, 2016, 01:36:38 PM »
The shrapnel was from the 2nd Tet battles in May '68, I made it thru the first Tet battle untouched even in the Saigon Cholon battle to kick the VC out of Saigon. You're right, for some reason the tumors pick the metal to encompass to protect the other tissues. but cause more problems themselves.  The one good thing the tumor in the leg caused was the VA for the next year watched the shrapnel in my lung a little closer to make sure the body wasn't growing anything around it, but after a year they stopped monitoring it too.  For as big an outfit as the VA is with whole departments devoted to scheduling, you would think that would be an area they excel in, but nope, it isn't.

you might also want to use the MYHealthvet.gov.  Get a user ID if you don't have one.   gives you access to all your records including scheduled appointments, what I discovered are the errors, where they had me scheduled for something and never notified me of that appointment and then when I didn't arrive for the appointment that I didn't know about, put in an entry that I failed to make the scheduled appointment.   A lot of guys have found entries like that.  I spent 3 months compairing my records with the VA's documentation and developed a long and detailed doucment showing in detail, how screwed up their doucments and process was for me.  I shared that with my sentor and congressman.  My point is they may have not just givin up on monitoring you, but failed to notify you of appointments and if you miss three scheduled appointments, you get dropped.  I made them correct every error in my file and screamed, shouted, and threatended them, one of the benefits of PTSD, that if they didn't I'd make them wish they had.  Yea, I was there from November 67 through May 69. Tet, I was at Lang Vei, 5th Special Forces camp 101, they over ran us, with those tanks that they didn't have.  Unfortunitly our fall back position was a Marine fire base about 15 miles east of Lang Vei, called Khe Sanh.  I was lucky, I was one of the medics and wounded and our skipper ordered me to Khe Sanh with the first bunch of wounded orther wise I'd be dead. 
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Offline redcatcherb412

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Re: It's called Scheduling
« Reply #19 on: October 07, 2016, 02:02:56 PM »
LOL on the tanks they didn't have  :x.

With us down south it was "the VC have no organization or numbers'  as they threw our battalion against the  5 to 6 Batallions of the 274th and 275th Regiments that had taken the Saigon Phu Tho racetrack as their HQ and Cholon district of Saigon.  We air mobiled right into the center of their racetrack HQ. Fun times in our younger years  :salute

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