Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

VA hospital in LR makes effort to tell women of services

- ALEX GLADDEN

Photos of women in uniform lined the walls. Women walked around tables advertisin­g support for LGBT people and people who had experience­d sexual trauma. Pink and silver balloons floated just above their heads.

The John L. McClellan Memorial Veterans Hospital hosted an event last week geared toward women and informing them of available services.

Eleven women-centered services set up the tables at the event, offering brochures and informatio­n about their groups, said Dawn West-Rosado, the women’s veteran program manager.

More than 100 veterans attended the event, said Chris Durney, the public affairs officer.

Ladonna Hobson, who served in the Army, said she appreciate­s the hospital making an effort to share the informatio­n with women veterans.

“It helps you like to take better care of yourself,” Hobson said.

She said often women who are veterans don’t receive as much informatio­n about services as men do.

It’s something the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is trying to make more

of a priority, West-Rosado said. This can be as simple as making sure there are tampons in the bathrooms or women’s pajamas on every floor of the hospital.

West-Rosado recalled a woman who cried when she gave the veteran pajamas designed for women. West-Rosado said she thought the woman was crying because the pajamas were ugly, but the woman cried out of relief that she didn’t have to wear men’s pajamas.

“She says ‘no, that’s not it. I don’t have a fly,’” West-Rosado said.

Margaret Robinson is a veteran and has volunteere­d at the hospital for six years, accumulati­ng more than 6,000 hours of volunteer service. She was a sergeant in the Air Force from 197483.

Robinson said it’s helpful to have all the services in one place.

From 2-4:30 p.m. Wednesday, women trickled in and out of the space.

“What we’re trying to do is advertise that we do see women,” said Tricia Moses, the women’s health medical director.

The hospital offers its Women Health Clinic and the Breast Imaging Center specifical­ly to women. The center recently tripled in size, allowing it to expand its waiting room and add a space for the women who work there.

Sherry Harper, a radiology technologi­st at the center, said employees reach out to their patients if they miss appointmen­ts and provide them with extra support.

“We try to run our clinic like a family,” Harper said.

A big part of making sure that women feel comfortabl­e seeking their veteran benefits is that the department has to acknowledg­e the military’s

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