Tag: senate

  • Senate passes bipartisan veterans’ well being and suicide prevention laws

    Senate passes bipartisan veterans’ well being and suicide prevention laws

    The Commander John Scott Hannon Veterans Psychological Well being Care Enchancment Act, or S.785, was one of many first payments unanimously handed out of the Committee on Veterans’ Affairs in January following the appointment of Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., as committee chairman.

    TRUMP INTRODUCES INITIATIVE TO HELP VETERANS SUFFERING FROM MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES

    Hannon was a chief of SEAL Group Two, a member of SEAL Group Six and a Particular Operations and coverage employees officer at U.S. Particular Operations Command. He retired in 2012 after 23 years of service and died by suicide six years later.

    Decorated veteran's suicide puts spotlight on epidemic plaguing America's veterans Video

    Hannon had been receiving therapy for post-traumatic stress dysfunction, a traumatic mind damage, extreme melancholy and bipolar dysfunction by way of the Veterans Affairs well being care system in Montana, Connecting Vets reported.

    He was concerned with the Montana chapter of the Nationwide Alliance for Psychological Sickness, talking candidly about his wartime accidents.

    ARIZONA VETERAN ERVIN JULIAN — CARRIED TO SEAT AT TRUMP RALLY — DEAD AT 100: REPORT

    The laws named in Hannon’s honor is geared toward bettering psychological well being care supplied by the Division of Veterans Affairs by way of pathways equivalent to transition help, increasing care to former service members with other-than-honorable discharges, extending grant cash to native teams working to assist veterans and hiring extra suicide prevention coordinators for every VA care facility.

    The 2019 Nationwide Veteran Suicide Prevention Annual Report discovered that the variety of veteran suicides exceeded 6,000 yearly from 2008 by way of 2017 and famous {that a} 2014 report discovered a mean of 20 suicides per day when combining a depend of veterans, present service members and former Nationwide Guard or Reserve members who have been by no means federally activated.

    Regardless of quite a few large-scale Veterans Affairs applications geared toward discovering options, the suicide price has remained comparatively constant over the previous decade.

    President Trump displays his signed executive order establishing a "National Roadmap to Empower Veterans and End Veteran Suicide" in March 2019. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)

    President Trump shows his signed government order establishing a "Nationwide Roadmap to Empower Veterans and Finish Veteran Suicide" in March 2019. (AP Picture/ Evan Vucci)

    Final yr, President Trump signed an government order “issuing a nationwide name to motion” to proper the pattern.

    The President’s Roadmap to Empower Veterans and Finish a Nationwide Tragedy of Suicide (PREVENTS) — a federal endeavor to coordinate with state and native efforts — was touted by the administration as the primary complete federal strategy to ending the general public well being menace.

    S.785 is an extension of a brand new push this yr to comply with by way of on that mission. It now strikes to the Home of Representatives for consideration.

    Senate Veterans Affairs rating member Jon Tester, D-Mont., who launched the invoice in partnership with Moran, mentioned Wednesday that “there isn’t a higher means of supporting our veterans than passing this invoice” and advised lawmakers afterward they may very well be happy with taking actions that helped veterans and would transfer the nation ahead.

    Retired U.S. Marine walked more than 800 miles to raise awareness about veteran suicide Video

    “The elevated danger components coupled with the damaging results of the pandemic, may very well be an ideal storm for our veterans as researchers from the American Psychological Affiliation famous in a current article,” Moran identified, talking on the Senate flooring on the finish of July.

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP 

    “One veteran misplaced to suicide is one too many,” Moran advised lawmakers on Wednesday, urging them to again the measure and noting that COVID-19 and the ensuing isolation has exacerbated psychological well being issues for former army personnel.

    “Each day that we fail to behave, every single day, we lose one other 20 veterans to suicide,” he mentioned. “They want our assist.”

    Julia Musto is a reporter for Fox Information Digital. You’ll find her on Twitter at @JuliaElenaMusto.

  • CDC’s Walensky pressed on faculty distancing steerage: ‘It’s essential do it now’

    CDC’s Walensky pressed on faculty distancing steerage: ‘It’s essential do it now’

    “A hospital administrator in Maine stated that they’re having youngsters dropped off on the emergency room with behavioral issues, and the grandparents or dad or mum who drove them simply drives away simply leaving them there,” Collins stated. “We now have received to get the faculties reopened and also you’ve offered no timeline in any respect for doing that and the CDC suggestions notably on bodily distancing no less than 6 ft are simply not in sync with what most public well being consultants are recommending, so I’d wish to know what you’re going to do and when to get our colleges reopened.”

    Walensky has faced increasing pressure over the issue of distancing guidance as politicians call for an update so more students can return to in-person learning.

    Walensky has confronted growing stress over the problem of distancing steerage as politicians name for an replace so extra college students can return to in-person studying.
    (iStock)

    Collins’ questioning adopted Walensky’s testimony Wednesday that the company was “actively” taking a look at rising research on charges of coronavirus transmission at 3 ft versus 6 ft. When pressed on when the general public may see the company difficulty a change to present steerage she had stated the CDC is “seeking to do it quickly,” however stopped in need of giving a particular timeline. Collins’ query obtained the same reply, with Walensky emphasizing that the information is rising and that research are ongoing.

    CDC WILL ‘LIKELY’ CHANGE SCHOOL DISTANCING GUIDANCE TO 3 FEET, FAUCI SAYS

    “I perceive the psychological well being points, the schooling problem, that is pressing don’t get me flawed,” Walensky stated, including that when the preliminary 6 ft of distancing was really helpful it was based mostly on research that had been carried out throughout excessive charges of illness prevalence.

    GLOBAL RISE IN CHILDHOOD MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES ISSUES AMID PANDEMIC

    Walensky stated the preliminary steerage was meant for colleges to “lean in” and was supposed for districts that had been shuttered. Dr. Anthony Fauci, who additionally testified through the Senate Committee on Well being, Schooling, Labor and Pensions listening to entitled “Inspecting Our COVID-19 Response: An Replace from Federal Officers,” later echoed that getting youngsters again in colleges stays on the forefront of the nation’s priorities.

    Collins, who stated there may be sufficient knowledge at present accessible to alter the steerage, implored the company “to do it now.”

    CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

    The push to alter the steerage stems from rising knowledge together with a Massachusetts examine involving a district with practically 100% mask-wearing that discovered the charges of transmission amongst college students and lecturers at 3 ft in comparison with 6 ft remained the identical. Nonetheless, Walensky stated that different research involving districts with low percentages of mask-wearing confirmed flare-ups in instances and outbreaks, reminiscent of one involving Georgia elementary colleges.

    She stated the company plans to launch further research on the topic “within the subsequent a number of days.”