To Serve W.Va.'s Veterans, Clarksburg VA Hospital Prepares For Coronavirus

You can still find West Virginians sporting WW2 and Korean War vet hats, wars that were fought more than 70 years ago, as well as hats representing Vietnam, the Gulf War, Iraq and Afghanistan. More than 145,000, or nearly 10 percent, of the state’s population have served their country.

Over the course of their service, many were exposed to everything from heavy smoke, to oil fires, to the highly-toxic chemical Agent Orange. This means many vets are either elderly or they have preexisting conditions, making the veteran population particularly susceptible to the new coronavirus.  

“Agent Orange has been associated with certain cancers, like Hodgkin’s disease, lymphomas, lung and upper respiratory cancers and also Parkinson’s disease [and] diabetes,” said Dr. Prasad Devabhaktuni, a pulmonologist and the head of the emergency department at the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center in Clarksburg.  “If the individual has associated burn pit lung injury or problems like hyperreactive airways or asthma, then we would consider they are at increased risk for complications. Complications, pneumonia or respiratory failure, things like that.”

Credit Chip Hitchcock
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Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center in Clarksburg, W.Va. The main screening tent is in the center background of the photograph, while the mobile testing unit is on the right background.

At the Department of Veterans Affairs hospital in Clarksburg, all visitors and staff are being screened for the new coronavirus before they can enter the hospital.  

George Smith normally works as a clerk, but on this day he’s screening visitors at the temporary carport erected at the hospital’s entrance.  Smith asks if the visitor if they’ve been in high risk coronavirus areas, met someone who has the coronavirus or who are they feeling sick.  If they don’t, he gives them a green arm band to wear while they’re on the hospital grounds. 

Helping Smith work the carport are a VA dentist and her assistant.  It’s an unlikely team, but since President Donald Trump declared a state of national emergency, the VA has reorganized resources to address the crisis, including assigning people to where there is need.

Right now, the need is at the hospital entrance.  Staff has been trained in to safely screen patients and visitors for the coronavirus, according to Dr. Glenn Snider, the director of the facility. 

“Training on things such as how to apply and utilize a protective mask, how to utilize an N95 mask, how to use portable ventilator equipment that are used, that is used to protect staff from airborne droplets and viruses,” he said.

Credit Chip Hitchcock
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George Smith (left) screens patients before they’re allowed to enter the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center in Clarksburg, W.Va.

Behind Smith’s temporary carport is a tent where staff are also screened. If the staff or visitor replies “yes” to any of Smith’s questions, they are directed to an area where two registered nurses are garbed in full protective gear — with gowns and portable ventilators — that look like bicycle helmets with face masks and tubing. The nurses are armed with thermometers and coronavirus test kits, which allows them to check temperatures and swab for the virus. 

“If the individual is minimally symptomatic, they’re sent home with instructions on how to manage themselves at home,” Snider said. “They’re also given phone numbers to call in to speak to staff if they have an acceleration of symptoms or if they have other questions.” 

An acceleration of symptoms means shortness of breath, or persistent pain or pressure in the chest. Snider said if you do plan to come to the hospital, please call beforehand so they can be ready for your arrival. 

“Our goal being, ‘Let’s reduce exposure to as many veterans and as many staff as is possible,'” he added. “But of course, if the individual is in respiratory distress, then the best course of action is to present to the emergency department immediately and for many veterans that means calling 911 for medical transportation.”

In the front lobby of the hospital, there is a newly constructed negative air pressure hallway that is made up of walls made from plastic sheeting, wooden wall joists and duct tape sealing the plastic to the floor. When the hospital gets a coronavirus patient, they’ll go from outside straight into this special hallway, avoiding the lobby. Here, the air is sucked in, and can’t pass out, protecting other patients and staff from potential exposure to the coronavirus.

Credit Chip Hitchcock
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The waiting room is empty of veterans and their families as the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center prepares for coronavirus patients.

In the emergency room, which is normally packed, but there aren’t any patients. Although the hospital is open, staff said veterans are apparently staying home in accordance with the governor’s stay at home order.

While the VA focuses mostly on veterans, in 1982, Congress passed a law mandating that the agency provide backup healthcare services to the country in times of crises. Dr. Snider said if the VA was ordered to it would help the general public. 

“At this time, I don’t believe that has been invoked, but if it were to be invoked, the medical center is aware of that mission of the VA and we would do everything we could to work with community partners in serving not only veterans, but those in our community,” he said.

And while current cases in West Virginia remain relatively low, if hospitals were to see an increase in veteran patients, then Snider said the VA currently has everything they need to care for vets.

Credit Chip Hitchcock
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Closeup of a coronavirus test kit. The swab is in the back of the kit, and after swabbing it is placed in the tube labeled “Transport Medium.”

“Based on the calculations we’ve been given from central office, we should be able to handle any projected surge that were to occur, but as a reminder, sometimes we can’t predict the behavior of some viruses in some populations,” he said. “So, I can’t guarantee 100 percent, but I can tell you that today we have everything that we need to care for our patients.”

In the meantime, the Clarksburg VA hospital is tracking everything from lab materials, to protective equipment, to hand sanitizer, to ventilators to ensure that if it’s needed, they’ll be ready.

If you’re a veteran located in north-central West Virginia, you can reach the Clarksburg VA at 304-623-3461, extension 3450.  For veterans in other parts of the state that are experiencing symptoms, call your local VA hospital or outpatient clinic.

 

"Still Taking Casualties" Puts a Face on Veteran Suicide

Iraq War veteran Mark Combs was fed up and wanted to do something. He had just answered the phone in the spring of 2014 and was told another buddy had killed himself.

Combs, a native of Beckley, was about to graduate with a degree in Theater from West Virginia University. He was studying in an acting-for-the-camera class and decided to make a television show about veteran suicide.

Twenty-two vets a day die from suicide. That number is an estimate based on only half the states reporting suicide statistics to the Veterans’ Administration from 1999 to 2010.

The Washington Post conducted an extensive, nationwide poll of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans in the spring of 2014. Half of the vets who served said they know a fellow service member who has attempted or committed suicide. The New York Times ran articles on veteran suicide in September and December of last year. They found that the suicide rate is actually increasing, and the Department of Defense and Veterans Affairs were at a loss to explain why.

But statistics are only a number, and Combs thought what was needed was a show where vets talk about suicide, not another study.  Combs wanted to put a face on these statistics.  He asked his West Virginia veteran friends who had tried to kill themselves if they would be willing to talk about it on camera. They said yes.  “Still Taking Casualities” became that show.

Christopher Morris was in the Marines when he was wounded by an IED – Improvised Explosive Device – in Helmand Province, Afghanistan with only four days left on his tour of duty. Damien Gabis was an Army combat infantryman assigned to work with the Special Forces in Afghanistan when a vehicle packed with explosives rammed his Humvee in Afghanistan. Sarah Leifeit served two tours in the Army as an ammunition specialist; one in Afghanistan and one in Irag. And Jeremy Harrison was a Reserve engineer whose company built bridges for the Marines during the initial invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Watch “Still Taking Casualties,” as these veterans describe their time in the service and their experiences with re-integration during a special taping on West Virginia Public Broadcasting. The show will be broadcast on West Virginia Public Broadcasting on Sunday, May 29 at 7 p.m. and re-broadcast Memorial Day at 8 p.m. on the West Virginia Channel. Web-only content and clips will be available at wvpublic.org/stories-service.  

Morgantown High School Band Will Represent W.Va. at Pearl Harbor Commemoration

Dec. 7, 2016 will mark the 75th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor, which thrust America into World War II. Morgantown High School’s marching band has been selected to represent West Virginia during a commemoration next year in Hawaii to honor that milestone.

One of the few remaining survivors of the attack came to the Mountain State from Texas to share his first-hand account of that fateful day with the band members and take part in Veterans Day ceremonies.

Seaman 1st Class Richard Cunningham, 94, was invited to speak at Morgantown High School’s auditorium because he’s one of the last witnesses to one of the most infamous days in American history.

He was serving aboard the USS West Virginia on Dec. 7, 1941, as the battleship was docked in Pearl Harbor. Early that morning, he and two other sailors were assigned to pick up some officers from shore in a small, wooden motorboat. They were halfway through their 10-minute journey when they heard an enormous explosion.

“The three of us looked back and we saw this Japanese plane coming down and peeling off and coming in,” Cunningham said. “We looked and saw the two rising suns and the big loud bomb and I thought, ‘Boy, this is it. This is war.’ ”

Cunningham told the rapt audience about how he and his shipmates dodged enemy fire in that flimsy boat to rescue sailors from the burning water of the harbor. He told them how the explosion from a damaged Japanese plane was so close that it singed the hair on his arms. And he told them how he and others fought the flames from the burning American naval fleet for days after the attack.

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Seaman 1st Class Richard Cunningham speaks with students following a talk he gave at the Morgantown High School auditorium on Monday, Nov. 9.

But his message in the end was simple.

“Be prepared,” Cunningham said. “The nation can get lackadaisical in their attitude toward living, you know. And you get so involved with the things that you have to do that you forget about that the freedom isn’t free.”

Learning About History

Cunningham participated in many of the Veterans Day ceremonies in and around Morgantown during the week of Nov. 8. But he also spent time at Morgantown High School talking to students about the battleship he served on, the USS West Virginia, and the attack on Pearl Harbor.

It especially meant a lot to the MHS marching band. They’ve been chosen to represent the Mountain State in Hawaii next year during the 75th anniversary commemoration of the attack.

Band director Keith Reed said that to prepare for the trip, the students are learning a lot about the USS West Virginia and the sailors who died during the battle. He said having Cunningham meet the students in person drove those lessons home.

“The kids really liked him,” Reed said. “They listened, they were quiet today — I mean the whole student body, not just the band kids — and I think it will really bring it more alive to them and make it significant when we get to go over there.”

It’s a Long Way To Hawaii

Reed said the school plans to send about 250 band members to Pearl Harbor next year. Freshman trumpet player Arden Minor will be one of them.

“I know we’re good, but I don’t think we’re the best in the state,” she said. “But I do think we are very well qualified to represent the whole entire state of West Virginia and I am really excited about that.”

Credit U.S. Library of Congress
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A small boat rescues a seaman from the 31,800 ton battleship USS West Virginia on Dec. 7, 1941.

Arden said she is looking forward to paying homage to all those who served aboard the USS West Virginia.

Reed said he hopes to lay some wreaths on the dock near where the battleship was moored when it was attacked. He also has a special song in mind.

“We really want to play ‘My Home Among the Hills.’ And I don’t say that to, you know, to invoke emotion, but it is to think that,” he said.

Reed said it’s going to take quite an effort to get the band and their instruments to Hawaii, but they’ve received a lot of community support for the trip.

W.Va. Roots

Cunningham said he was more than happy to come to Morgantown. He lives in Texas, but of both his parents were West Virginia natives. Cunningham said he’s thrilled that so many students from Morgantown High will get to experience Hawaii.

“I’d love to see ’em out there and bare-footed and walking up and down Waikiki beach in their bare feet,” he said. “It would just, that would just tickle me, really, it would make me happy.”    

Cunningham wrapped up his visit as a Veterans Day parade guest of honor, riding in a silver convertible and leading the MHS Marching Band down High Street in Morgantown.

Stories Of Service – A Website For Veterans and Their Communities

At West Virginia Public Broadcasting, we know about the power of storytelling – it’s what we do. 

We’ve been telling the stories of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq through news reports and documentaries since 2001, when the first soldier killed in Afghanistan worked in a bike shop in Morgantown.  

When PBS started their web site, “Stories of Service,” to tell the stories of US military veterans, we knew we wanted to be part of their national initiative.  On Veterans Day, we’re launching our own Stories of Service Website.

“We wanted a site that showcases all the material we produce about West Virginians who have served – whether it is our award-winning documentaries or our outstanding radio stories,” says Scott Finn, Executive Director or West Virginia Public Broadcasting. 

Viewers can access the extensive line-up of national documentaries, specials and original digital content directly from the site.  There are personal accounts of service told from the perspective of men and women who have served, such as “Iwo Jima:  from Combat to Comrades,” as survivors of the WWII battle return to honor the fallen.  There are also histories of courage, sacrifice and service from our past, and investigative reports through the lenses of journalists.

What we’re most proud of is that you can watch our documentaries about West Virginians who have served or read news reports.  Now available online, “West Virginians in War,” a two-hour film by Russ Barbour, examines why Mountaineers are among the first to volunteer for wartime service.

Viewers can also read or listen to our news articles, such as one by Jesse Wright, about a Dutch man who has cared for a West Virginian soldier’s grave since he was 13.

Credit Photo courtesy of Maarten Vossen
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The Stories of Service homepage introduces The War in My Words, and upcoming web site and mobile application.  It will allow veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to use their phones to video or audio record their stories.

“We want to create an online community of vets to share their stories with each other and to communicate their war experience with the public,” said Mark Combs, assistant producer for the project and a combat vet of the Iraq surge. “These aren’t the stories you would tell your Mom and Dad.”  Mark is a veteran of the 1st Infantry Division, having served as a vehicle machine gunner during the surge in Baghdad in 2007.

The application is being developed with a grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. “This funding will put a storytelling tool in the hands of our vets, allowing them to directly share their experiences,” said Chip Hitchcock, the project’s producer.  “It will also have a messaging system to build a cyber community.  Most of our state is rural, and vets frequently experience a sense of isolation.”

WVPB Launches “Stories of Service,” a Website for Veterans and their Communities

This Veterans Day, West Virginia Public Broadcasting is launching “Stories of Service,” a website that features inspiring stories of military veterans, their families and communities: wvpublic.org/stories-service

It is part of a national PBS initiative which includes resources for vets and material for educators. West Virginia stories are also featured.

“We wanted a site that showcases all the material we produce about West Virginians who have served – whether it is our award-winning documentaries or our outstanding radio stories,” said Scott Finn, executive director of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Documentaries include “West Virginians in War,” a two-hour film that examines why Mountaineers are among the first to volunteer for wartime service.  Radio stories feature news about veterans and the West Virginia National Guard and Reserves.

The “Stories of Service” homepage introduces “The War in My Words,” an

upcoming web site and mobile application.  It will allow veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to use their phones to video or audio tape their stories.

“We want to create an online community of vets to share their stories with each other and to communicate their war experience with the public,” said Mark Combs, assistant producer for the project and a combat vet of the Iraq surge. “These aren’t the stories you would tell your Mom and Dad.”

The application is being developed with a grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. “This funding will put a storytelling tool in the hands of our vets, allowing them to directly share their experiences,” said Chip Hitchcock, the project’s producer.

About West Virginia Public Broadcasting: West Virginia Public Broadcasting tells West Virginia’s story through high-quality programming and services including radio, television, Mountain Stage®, wvpublic.org, WV LearningMedia and Ready To Learn®. West Virginia Public Broadcasting is a trusted resource for education, news, emergency services and community development.

Contact
Chip Hitchcock
Producer/Director
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
304-284-1466
chitchcock@wvpublic.org

Memorial Day Specials On TV And Radio

 West Virginia Public Broadcasting honors the sacrifice of those who died while serving the country’s armed forces with special programs on television and radio. From the musical tributes on the National Memorial Day Concert airing live from the nation’s Capitol, to television and radio documentaries that recall important moments in history and first-person perspectives of conflict, these programs offer an opportunity for reflection and remembrance on this Memorial Day.

National Memorial Day Concert 2015    Sunday, May 24 at 8 p.m.

Honoring our American heroes for over 25 years, the National Memorial Day Concert pays tribute to the service and sacrifice of our men and women in uniform, their families at home and all those who have given their lives for our country. Joe Mantegna and Gary Sinise co-host the 26th annual broadcast of this night of remembrance that airs live from the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol before an audience of hundreds of thousands, millions at home and to our troops around the world via American Forces Network. The National Memorial Day Concert will showcase courageous American heroes who have been disabled for life; shine a spotlight on Gold Star Children who 

Credit Courtesy of Dostie Family.
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This year’s National Memorial Day Concert shines a spotlight on Gold Star Children, those who have lost a parent to war. With lives that are forever changed, these children’s experiences will be told through the eyes of Bayleigh (left) and Cameron (right) Dostie, whose father, Shawn, made the ultimate sacrifice while serving in Iraq.

  have lost a parent to war; and commemorate the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II.

The all-star line-up includes distinguished American leader General Colin L. Powell USA (Ret.); seven-time Grammy Award-winner and international superstar Gloria Estefan; acclaimed film and television actress Stefanie Scott; “The Voice” season five winner Tessanne Chin; the world’s most prolific classical cross-over artist Katherine Jenkins; and renowned tenor Russell Watson in performance with the National Symphony Orchestra under the direction of top pops conductor Jack Everly.

Tradition of Service: The West Virginia Veteran’s Legacy Project    Sunday, May 24 at 8 p.m. on WVPB.2 (check local listings) West Virginia military veterans, from World War II to the conflict in Afghanistan, recall their time spent serving their country.

We Served Too: The Story of the Women’s Airforce Service Pilots    Sunday, May 24 at 9 p.m. on WVPB.2 (check local listings) A look at how the Women’s Airforce Service Pilots broke through barriers during World War II, then were erased from the history books. Watch a trailer of the film.

Four-Four-Two, F Company At War    Sunday, May 24 at 10 p.m. on WVPB.2 (check local listings) A profile of one World War II infantry regiment in the U.S. Army made up of Americans of Japanese ancestry.

Memory Of A Forgotten War    Sunday, May 24 at 10:30 p.m. on WVPB.2 (check local listings) Deeply personal accounts of the Korean War are provided by four Korean American survivors.

Credit Rakkasan Delta Website/transom.org
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A water-damaged photo of Delta Company on the ground.

  On the Radio:

We’ve Never Been The Same: A War Story    Monday, May 25 at 2 p.m. 

Over the course of five years, Adam Piore gathered the stories of the surviving members of Delta Company, a Vietnam-era paratrooper unit; Jay Allison joined him for the last two years when it turned from a book into a radio story.  At Fort Campbell before deployment, Delta was a ragtag bunch, the “leftovers” as one of their fellow soldiers put it, but on the night of March 18th, 1968, they became heroes. Their leader won the Congressional Medal of Honor and two others won the nation’s second highest honor, the Distinguished Service Cross, for their valor that night when the company endured a long and devastating battle—not as long or as devastating, however, as the years that followed, after the men of Delta Company came home separately to live alone with the memories. Read the producer’s notes and view an extensive slideshow of Delta Company.

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