Boston Herald

left out in the cold

FEMALE VETERANS FEEL LET DOWN BY VA SERVICES THEY SAY ARE GEARED TOWARD MEN

- By CHRIS CASSIDY

Women are the fastest growing demographi­c among veterans, but the hospitals that treat them don’t have enough female doctors, perform enough outreach or offer sufficient counseling and addiction recovery services for them, women vets told the Herald.

“The female veterans I serve feel the VA is not doing enough to support female veterans,” said Roseann Mazzuchell­i, the veterans agent in Winthrop and a 21-year Army veteran. “They do a great job, most of the time, at helping out the guys, but we’re all service members.”

Women made up just 6 percent of the veteran population in 2000, but that figure is expected to grow to 16 percent by 2040, according to a Department of Veterans Affairs report earlier this year.

Meanwhile, female veterans described to the Herald a VA culture that’s still woefully behind the times.

When Page Policastro sought alcohol counseling in 2013 at one VA medical center, she was told, despite several inquiries, that there were no female-specific programs.

Years of instinctiv­ely keeping her guard up while serving next to men in the military — to avoid showing any weakness — made it “impossible to relax” in a male-dominated program.

“I looked at it as almost a celebrity without the million-dollar paycheck. Everybody knew what I was doing. They knew who I was dating, when I went out on dates, this, that and the third,” Policastro said of working as a woman on C5s in the Air Force from 2003 to 2012, traveling to five different continents.

“That instinct is still there to guard any sort of vulnerabil­ity. So in order to say, ‘Hey, I’m having a really rough time, I can’t sleep, I’m having nightmares, I’m crying all the time, I’m drinking all the time’ — that was a weakness and it’s almost survival that I can’t say it in front of a room full of guys.”

Alicia Reddin, the district director of veteran services for Melrose, Wakefield and Saugus, said one female veteran from her area sought treatment at a VA as a military sexual-trauma survivor also battling drugs and alcohol, only to check herself out after being ridiculed by the men in the program. Reddin said she lost track of the veteran a few months later and de-

spite looking for her, still doesn’t know where she is today.

“They don’t market to women. I don’t think they appropriat­ely reach out to women, and I don’t think they meet the needs that women have,” Reddin said.

Other female vets described situations ranging from being assigned a male counselor to discuss military sexual trauma because a female wasn’t available, to being offered few if any choices among female primary care physicians, to long drives for OB/GYN services.

The VA has also struggled to make women aware they can use their services.

Policastro, whose Air Force career ended after she hit her head and suffered a grand mal seizure, said no one ever told her the VA was an option when she was being discharged and figured any informatio­n about it may have been buried in an avalanche of paperwork she received at the time.

Mary Thurber, an Army veteran, found out about the VA on her own and never knew it was ever an option for her.

“I think a lot of people when they get off active duty think that the VA is where you go if you’re an old man and you’re alone,” Thurber said.

Female vets said they’re also fighting public perception. One female vet described how she had to produce her military ID at a Dunkin’ Donuts on Veterans’ Day to receive a free coffee and doughnut, while the male veteran she was with received both, no questions asked.

Another vet recalled being told by a shopper that she should move her car because her husband’s military service didn’t qualify her to pull into the military appreciati­on parking spot at the Merrimack Outlets.

Reddin has begun asking specifical­ly for tampons, women’s shaving cream, shampoo and conditione­r when she makes her annual appeal for toiletries and hygiene product donations for her area vets.

“Every year, I’m inundated with Mach3 razors and Old Spice deodorant,” Reddin said.

But the VA, in an emailed response, disagreed with the idea that there’s a disparity between the resources for male and female veterans.

A VA spokeswoma­n claimed approximat­ely 500,000 female veterans used VA health care services during the 2016 fiscal year.

As of Sept. 30, 2017, some 10,605 mental health-specific occupation employees were employed in the Veterans Health Administra­tion, the VA said. Of those, nearly 54 percent are females, according to the VA.

The VA also claims females have shorter average wait times for medical appointmen­ts, including for primary care appointmen­ts.

But U.S. Rep. Niki Tsongas still believes the VA has been caught off guard by the rise in female vets.

“The VA did not anticipate and has not been adequately prepared for the numbers of women who are transition­ing to civilian life and veteran status,” Tsongas told the Herald.

“While efforts have been made to address serious shortcomin­gs in women veterans’ health care,” she said, “it is important that we honor their service by continuing to challenge the VA to better support all those who have served this country.”

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 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY NICOLAUS CZARNECKI ?? ALWAYS ON GUARD: Air Force veteran Page Policastro says the same sense of avoiding showing ‘weakness’ in the military has carried over to VA treatment. And vet Mary Thurber, below right, said she didn’t realize the VA was an option for her.
STAFF PHOTOS BY NICOLAUS CZARNECKI ALWAYS ON GUARD: Air Force veteran Page Policastro says the same sense of avoiding showing ‘weakness’ in the military has carried over to VA treatment. And vet Mary Thurber, below right, said she didn’t realize the VA was an option for her.
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