Thanks Brenda!!!!!!! What a great victory in spite of the IOM. I also wonder how many of that 1.6 increase were Herbicide Veterans from 1962 to 1975 but we will never know.
Victory for Veterans with ALS
See below announcement
Victory for
vets with ALS
Posted by: "Robert F. White" etihwr2@verizon.net myfranks
Date: Tue Jul 15, 2008 4:41 am ((PDT))
Victory for vets with ALS
Retired general who fought for cause thrilled to learn of new VA disability
designation
By Jill Coley
The Post and Courier
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Wade Spees
The Post and Courier
Retired Air Force Brig. Gen. Tom Mikolajciks efforts to make officials more
aware of a higher incidence of ALS has paid off. Last year, Mikolajcik traveled
to Washington, D.C., to visit lawmakers.
Mic Smith
The Post and Courier
Mikolajcik
Previous ALS/general stories
Mission of Hope: ALS has weakened retired Air Force Brig. Gen. Thomas
Mikolajcik's muscles and sapped his energy. But he's committed to helping his
fellow veterans, published 5/14/06
Stricken general keeps up the fight, published 07/27/07
General wins key campaign, published 10/18/07
Mikolajcik attacks ALS head-on by taking part in study to help some patients
breathe easier, published 1/21/08
Gen. Mikolajcik's Congressional testimony
Gen. Mikolajcik's letter to Secretary James Peake, M. D., Department of Veterans
Affairs
Two years of hard work came to fruition Monday in a move that could benefit
thousands of veterans who suffer from Lou Gehrig's disease.
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
will grant a service-connected disability, the highest category of disability,
to all veterans with ALS, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a degenerative
disease that affects veterans at a rate at 1.6 times the general population.
The news came during a conference call among Dr. James Peake, secretary of
Veterans Affairs, Sen. Lindsey Graham and retired Air Force Brig. Gen. Tom
Mikolajcik, who suffers from ALS and spoke from his Mount Pleasant home.
Mikolajcik cried when he heard the news. He deflected credit for the policy
change and praised Peake and South Carolina legislators, including Graham, Rep.
Henry Brown and Sen. Jim DeMint. "This will impact thousands of veterans,"
Mikolajcik said. "This is a reason to have hope hope meaning helping other
people endure."
ALS strikes about 15 Americans daily, shutting down nerve cells responsible for
movement. Limbs weaken and atrophy before paralysis spreads to the trunk of the
body. Seventy percent of people with ALS die within five years.
Mikolajcik was diagnosed almost six years ago. He still breathes on his own and
gets out "a little bit," he said. In January, he was implanted with
diaphragm-pacing stimulators to help maintain muscles used in breathing.
Previously, only veterans of the first Gulf War received full benefits for ALS.
The new designation should take effect
in August, Mikolajcik said.
There are eight categories of care in the VA system. A catastrophic illness
could give a veteran Category 4 status, Mikolajcik said, and will
provide medication and some equipment.
"There's a huge difference between Category 4 and 1," Mikolajcik said. That
difference, that could mean a disability pension, help with transportation and
grants for home modification, he said.
Mikolajcik, who receives full benefits, said that he could not maintain his
standard of living without the VA's help. And seeing other veterans go without
those same benefits drove him to continue his campaign with legislators and
officials.
"Patients with ALS ought to have an opportunity to have a quality of life," he
said. "While I can't go to the beach and watch my grandchildren draw in the
sand, they can be with me, and I can still have joy and quality of life. While
my body's dead, I am not."
Why veterans are more likely to get the disease is unknown, Mikolajcik said. A
voluntary registry of veterans with ALS recorded 2,117 people from 2003-07.
Those are only the veterans who knew of the registry and made the call, he said.
Today, only 800 of them are alive.
Mikolajcik met with the previous VA secretary in 2007, and he was told more
studies were needed. In April, the retired general met with the new secretary,
Peake, when he visited Charleston with Brown.
The former commander of Charleston Air Force Base has visited Congress three
times to push for ALS research and testified before a congressional committee
last summer.
"'No' is not an acceptable answer, not when it affects the lives of people who
have served their country so bravely and valiantly," Mikolajcik said.
Reach Jill Coley at 937-5719 or jcoley@postandcourier.com.