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Archive for July 2012

Don’t Call Me 'Mister': Report Says VA Needs Cultural Change in Women's Care

Cultural Change In the report, the Women Veterans Task Force also recognizes that creating an environment where women feel comfortable asking for and receiving healthcare services requires more than attention to staff numbers and room dividers. It...

Don’t Call Me 'Mister': Report Says VA Needs Cultural Change in Women's Care

The draft strategic plan also calls for the VHA, VBA and NCA to “ensure they have sufficient ability to accommodate women veterans who request access to staff of specific gender.” For women with MST, as well as some of those seeking obstetric or g...

Don't Call Me 'Mister': Report Says VA Needs Cultural Change in Women's Care

WASHINGTON — Female veterans experience more physical and mental health issues than male veterans, yet are 30% less likely to enroll in VA services than men. Part of the problem, according to a recently released report, is that the needs of women veterans differ substantially from those of their male counterparts and, historically, the VA has not offered gender-responsive services to meet those needs.

VA Partners with Heart Association to Educate Female Veterans about Cardiovascular Health

WASHINGTON — The VA is adding another tool in its arsenal to fight heart disease and strokes. The American Heart Association and the VA recently announced a new collaboration that will bring a heart association initiative known as the ”Go Red for Women” into the VA. Geared toward women, the initiative raises awareness of heart disease risk factors in women and provides additional tools for women already diagnosed with cardiac issues.

VA Seeks to Gather More Information on Women Veterans to Improve Care

Understanding The Population In 2009, VA conducted its National Survey of Women Veterans, looking at users and non-users of VA care across all generations of women veterans. The survey provided a much broader picture of the women veterans populati...

VA Seeks to Gather More Information on Women Veterans to Improve Care

WASHINGTON — With more women leaving the military and becoming healthcare-eligible veterans, VA is focusing more energy and funding than ever into women’s health research.. Despite spending more money on women’s healthcare research in the last few years than in the previous three decades combined, however, the agency still has substantial knowledge gaps it is anxious to fill in.

Medical Artifacts, Old and New, Have Place in National Health Museum

SILVER SPRING, MD — The conflict in Iraq may have recently ended, but it already has a place in military medical history. A piece of concrete floor of an Air Force tent hospital from Balad is on display on the newly-reopened National Museum of Health and Medicine.

Better Imaging Techniques Show Promise in Improving TBI Diagnosis and Treatment

Researchers at NIH and other federal agencies are developing more-sensitive methods of looking at atrophy, because not all structures in the brain show the same degree of atrophy in TBI patients; the amygdala, thalamus and hippocampus tend to show...

Better Imaging Techniques Show Promise in Improving TBI Diagnosis and Treatment

BETHESDA, MD — A number of drugs have been shown to have neuroprotective benefits in animal models of TBI. When studies have moved on to human subjects, however, most have had poor results.

June 2012

JUNE ISSUE U.S. MEDICINE NEWS UPDATE VA Announces Third Survey of Gulf War Era Veterans WASHINGTON—The VA announced that for the third time since the 1990-1991 Gulf War, its researchers will contact veterans from that conflict as part of ...
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