Clinical Assessment and Care Planning for Vietnam Veterans

Bernard Lee, MD, US Army Veteran MJHS Hospice and Palliative Care Director of Palliative Provider Services

Joseph Vitti, MBA-HCM, US Army Veteran VNSNY Hospice and Palliative Care Veterans Programs Director

Enrique Aguilar, RN, CHPN, US Army Veteran MJHS Hospice and Palliative Care On Call Service Manager

July 22, 2020 Acknowledgement

VNSNY Hospice and Palliative Care

MJHS Hospice and Palliative Care

Hospice and Palliative Care Association of New York State (HPCANYS)

National Hospice & Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO)

We Honor Veteran Program Objectives

• Provide a basic understanding of military culture

• Review historical data of the

• Review Vietnam related presumptive illnesses and service related injuries.

• Discuss challenges faced by service members returning from Vietnam war.

• Review a physical and psychosocial assessment focused on special needs of Vietnam Veterans U.S. Military Culture • Not just a job, but a way of life. • Reason for joining the military • Military Mission • Military branches • Military status • Military rank structure • Military occupation • Civilian vs. military structure. • Military core values • Soldier’s creed 15 THINGS VETERANS WANT YOU TO KNOW

• Reinforces the identity of being a veteran • Differences in culture and personal identity from being in specific branches (i.e. being called a Marine vs. Soldier) • Influence on personalities from being certain ranks and years of service delegating to subordinates • How MOS can influence this • Different war/service eras and it’s influences on one’s perspectives/thoughts • How to break the stereotypes of veterans • Hardship of being caregivers/family members within community • The conversations and struggles to discuss intense and intimate experiences • Psych Armor Institute on 15 Things Veterans Want You to Know 1960S AND 1970S AMERICAN CULTURAL SHIFT IN SOCIETY

• Civil unrest . • Increasingly vocal younger generation • Black Americans and women seeking equal rights • Changing attitudes about sexuality and drug use • Technology

Phillips, J., & Daratsos, L. (2017, August 15). Caring for Vietnam Veterans with Serious Illness. Lecture presented at Albany, New York. VIETNAM WAR TIMELINE

• 1945 Vietnam declaration of independence from France. • 1959 invaded Laos and Cambodia. Created the Ho Chi Minh Trail, a network of roads to support the National Liberation Front (NLF) AKA Viet Cong. • 1960-1976 NLF led a guerrilla warfare against , U.S. and it’s allies. • USA was concerned communism would spread to South Vietnam and the rest of Asia. • 1964 incident. Confrontation between U.S. USS Maddox and North Vietnamese Navy torpedo boats. • August 10, 1964 US Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which granted president Lyndon B. Johnson authority to deploy military forces. • In 1965, the first US troops arrive in Vietnam • In 1968 the Tet Offensive occurred which drew much US public criticism and questioning of their involvement in the war • In 1973 the US negotiated a cease-fire that ended in the infamous 1975 withdrawal of US troops and embassy from Saigon (Fall of Saigon).

VIETNAM

• Tropical country • High temperatures, high humidity • Monsoon season; unable to get dry for days effecting one’s mental/physical health • Infrequent opportunities for bathing • Skin hygiene poor • Bacterial and foot infections common • Malaria • Agent Orange exposure • Increased survival rate b/c availability of rapid evacuation, whole blood and well-established semi permanent hospitals • Lack of social support services (VA and VSOs) to assist with service- connected conditions

Phillips, J., & Daratsos, L. (2017, August 15). Caring for Vietnam Veterans with Serious Illness. Lecture presented at Albany, New York. VIETNAM WAR

• First televised war • Volunteer vs. Draft • 4GW (4th Generation Warfare) – First time encountered for military forces • Did not deploy and return as a unit nor have a supportive military exiting process • American society was experiencing political, economic, and social turmoil • The war did not have a national and unified understanding of its purpose and intent • Veterans returned suddenly to a confused and divided society at times conveying their aggravations at the individual veteran • Unwelcomed return home for veterans • VA and VSOs did not accept Vietnam veterans • Vietnam veterans have highest rates of divorce, unemployment, imprisonment, and substance abuse versus other veteran generation VIETNAM COMBAT EXPERIENCE

• Drafted for 1-year tour • Did not train and get deployed in companies • fragmented, eroded sense of camaraderie • Air travel meant active combatant one day and Veteran returning to hostile civilian environment the next • Sense of gratitude was often lacking from the Vietnamese due to lack of winning the peoples’ Hearts and Minds (harder to have a sense of accomplishment)

• 70% of WWII Veteran sample felt appreciated upon their return to this country and to civilian life vs. < 25% of Vietnam Veterans • The average infantryman: • In the WWII S. Pacific saw ~ 40 days of combat in 4 yrs • In Vietnam ~ 240 days of combat in 1 year

Phillips, J., & Daratsos, L. (2017, August 15). Caring for Vietnam Veterans with Serious Illness. Lecture presented at Albany, New York.

PRESUMPTIVE CONDITIONS, SERVICE RELATED ILLNESSES AND INJURIES

• Infectious Diseases • Environmental Hazards • Psychiatric/Behavioral Health • Chronic Pain • Addiction • ALS INFECTIOUS DISEASES

• Poor Hygiene • Fungal • Bacterial • Skin Diseases • Hepatitis C • Malaria ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS

• High Temperatures • High Humidity • Monsoon Climate • Agent Orange AGENT ORANGE

• Herbicide • Dioxin - TCDD • Veteran’s Health Care Eligibility Reform Act of 1996 • No Specific test to prove AO exposure • VA presumes AO exposure for Vietnam Veterans Presumptive Illnesses Associated with Exposure to Agent Orange

Malignant Diseases: • Lung Cancer Chronic B-cell Leukemia • Sarcomas Hodgkin’s Lymphoma • Prostate Cancer Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma • Multiple Myeloma

Non-Malignant Diseases: • Amyloidosis Porphyria Cutanea Tarda • Ischemic Heart Disease Peripheral Neuropathy • Diabetes Mellitus Type 2 Parkinson’s Disease • Birth defects (Spina bifida) Chloracne MENTAL HEALTH DISORDERS

• PTSD • LATR – Later Adulthood Trauma Reengagement • Moral Injury • Depression • Sleep Disturbance • Addiction Patient’s experience

• “After Vietnam, I could not adjust to civilian life. I had trouble with drugs and alcohol. My spouse filed for divorce. I tried school, but I could not meet college requirements and dropped out. I couldn’t sleep or concentrate. I found myself daydreaming a lot. I got into many fights, often for meaningless reasons. I got fired from many jobs. Years later, I developed heart disease, breathing problems and chronic pain. I have lost hope and sometimes, I think life is not worth living”. Clinical Assessment

• Vietnam veterans are among the largest veteran groups receiving Social Security and Medicare benefits.

• Great likelihood of civilian clinicians rendering care for Vietnam veterans.

• Veterans are trained to listen to authority and observe discipline and structure

• Veterans may have difficulty establishing trust. Promote empathy, hope, optimism, truth, education.

• Involve the veteran in the assessment and care planning. Provide security and allows control.

• Avoid making assumptions about their experiences or asking sensitive questions.

• Every veteran’s experience is unique. Physical Assessment

• Introduce yourself and explain your role • Provide a welcoming environment conducive to comfort and privacy • Display empathy, validation and true concern to establish trust and credibility • Be honest • Be conscious of body posture and tone of voice • Provide active listening and be patient/lenient. • Explain every procedure and encourage active participation. • Assess for deployment-related exposure to prophylactic medications, chemical/biological/radiation agents, pesticides, bodily fluids, air pollution, insects. • Assess for combat physical trauma and its sequela. • Assess for Chronic pain. Vietnam veterans may be stoic about pain and other symptoms. • Assess for functional limitations including use of assistive devises and hearing aids. • Assessment 6Ws; Who, where, when, how, what, why • Ensure a safe home environment.

Psychosocial assessment

• Vietnam veterans experienced a lack of post-combat treatment.

• Direct combat trauma and POW experiences may require additional support.

• Honor, respect and celebrate the service of Vietnam veterans.

• “No event in American history is more misunderstood than the Vietnam war. It was misreported then, and it is misremembered now’ President Richard Nixon.

• Psychological; PTSD, depression, sleep disturbances, substance abuse, moral injury, survivor’s guilt, military sexual trauma, physical abuse, sexuality and intimacy, suicide, later-adulthood trauma reengagement.

• Veteran’s experiences have a significant impact on their families and society.

• Assess for existential and spiritual concerns We Honor Veterans Care Planning Guide Care Planning

• Provide an interdisciplinary approach to address physical and psychosocial needs.

• Identify service connection; Direct, Secondary, Aggravated, Presumptive

• Ensure Veterans have current information, and assistance to access benefits and resources

• Veterans Health Administration (VHA). Largest integrated health care system in U.S. (844-698-2311)

• Veterans benefit Administration (VBA). Compensation, pension, loans, education, life insurance (800-827-1000)

• Educate about specific registries and programs that provide additional resources for possible long-term health programs.

• Assist with advance Care Planning; Health care proxy, MOLST, DNR/DNI orders, power of attorney, living will CARE PLANNING GUIDE FOR VETERANS

• Adaptable to each hospice organization as a guidance/reference in order to ensure quality healthcare delivery • Assists with interventions specific to PTSD, assessment for pain and other symptoms, Moral Injury, and Military Rituals • Provides cultural sensitivity and awareness regarding veteran patient population

We Honor Veterans Care Planning Guide SUMMARY

GOAL: Evaluate the impact of their military experience(s)

• Useful tool in bridging the silence that often surrounds the war experience • Need to establish an environment of trust and respect • Not all veterans will want to speak with you about the details of their war experience nor will all have PTSD (Thousand yard stare) • A discussion of combat experiences can reactivate deeply buried issues • Listen non-judgmentally • Offer caring presence, conveying warmth and acceptance of the person, their journey and struggles • Do not offer platitudes or prematurely assuage feelings of guilt https://www.mypcnow.org/blank-v6bdf

Phillips, J., & Daratsos, L. (2017, August 15). Caring for Vietnam Veterans with Serious Illness. Lecture presented at Albany, New York. Thank You!!! Q&A