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S. 2921, The Caring for Wounded Warriors Act of 2008 (2 comments ↓)

  • This item is from the 110th Congress (2007-2008) and is no longer current. Comments, voting, and wiki editing have been disabled, and the cost/savings estimate has been frozen.

S. 2921 would require pilot programs on training and certification for family caregiver personal care attendants for veterans and members of the Armed Forces with traumatic brain injury, to require a pilot program on provision of respite care to such veterans and members.

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Dr. Lynne Van Trieste

As the wife and mother of two Marines who have been in combat zones six times between them and as a cognitive process professional, I believe this bill is a critical step in creating and sustaining a support network for injured troops and their families. Once someone with a traumatic brain injury leaves the medical system, their support network significantly decreases and the full responsibility of care rests on the family - if there is one. Family members are not trained to deal with the rigors of retraining those with brain injuries and it creates a massive strain on those who provide daily care. This bill is crtical to help in establishing a network of respite and other caregivers. I urge its passage in the near future.

Jay Morris

Although I did not care for a wounded veteran, I was a 24/7 caregiver for my mother who was the widow of a veteran. I know the caregiving toll that it took on me financially, emotionally, and socially. I hope this bill is passed very soon. I agree with Dr. Trieste's post above. Once a person leaves the medical system the support network decreases.

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