 Army sergeant Chase Gean was wounded in
Afghanistan. He is pictured during Rehabilitation at the Spinal Cord
Injury Center, at the VA Hospital in West Roxbury. (Photo by Fred Thys)
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By Fred Thys
BOSTON, Mass. - March 09, 2007 - A soldier who was discharged from the
West Roxbury VA hospital before Thanksgiving is still waiting for the
Army to discharge him. Sergeant Chase Gean needs those papers to start
collecting his disabled veterans' benefits and continue his
rehabilitation.
The
holdup is at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, where
doctors make decisions about whether soldiers should be discharged.
WBUR's Fred Thys interviewed Gean just before he was released from West
Roxbury VA last November, and now has the story of what's happened to
him in the months since.
TEXT OF STORY
FRED THYS: Just
before Thanksgiving, Sergeant Chase Gean was learning how to get back
into his wheelchair from the floor. He sat on a step like the ones you
see in aerobics classes, and just using his arms, pushed himself up
into the chair.
CHASE GEAN: Ready?
NURSE: Yeah. I'm ready. I'm just going to get out and move this way.
CHASE GEAN: One...
NURSE: Two, three!
FRED
THYS: Chase Gean was paralyzed from the waist down when he was on
patrol in the mountains of Aghanistan, near the border with Pakistan.
Just as the sun went down, his patrol was shot at from three different
sides.
CHASE GEAN: I was the first one to get shot. I got shot
in the back, and it hit my spine, and immediately my legs went numb. So
I felt around. I felt the bullet hole in my back.
FRED THYS:
Four months after being released from the hospital, Gean and his
fianc?are living in Colorado. Once Gean's rehab at West Roxbury was
over, he was only able to leave Boston because a benefits advocate paid
six thousand dollars in expenses out of his own pocket. The rehab
sessions at the West Roxbury VA Hospital were the last Chase Gean has
had. His mother, Liz Hinsley, says Gean wants to start rehabilitation
at a civilian hospital, Denver's Craig Rehabilitation Center, famous
for its work spinal cord injury patients.
LIZ HINSLEY: He
feels--we do, too--that they will do some very aggressive therapy, and
where I think we're going to see the results, but right now, I believe,
talking to Chase, that he's kind of in limbo with that.
FRED
THYS: Gean is hopeful that the VA will pay for the rehab, but the VA
can't pay for anything until he gets his discharge papers from the
Army. He is constantly on his cell phone, trying to track down his
status. The holdup is at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, in
Washington.
CHASE GEAN: They're the ones that aren't getting
my paperwork done. They're the ones that keep screwin' everything up
and can't do anything right the first time.
FRED THYS: An Army
spokesman says in order to protect the privacy of patients, it cannot
comment on specific cases, but the spokesman says paralyzed soldiers
are not treated differently from other wounded soldiers. The Army says
it takes time to make sure that a soldier is permanently disabled. But
Gean doesn't understand why Walter Reed has taken so long to figure out
that he is permanently disabled.
Sergeant Gean's Army
paychecks are about 900 dollars every two weeks. Gean may be eligible
to receive up to an additional 4200 dollars a month in VA
Disability
benefits.
Senator Edward Kennedy brought up Gean's plight at hearings on Capitol Hill this week.
EDWARD
KENNEDY: The Army, specifically Walter Reed, lost track of him,
resulting of lack of pay for the soldier and his families. We talked to
Walter Reed. Paperwork was incomplete, leaving him in a troubling gray
area, where he's not on active duty, not officially discharged, and
this is the situation that is being repeated, where people are being
left out, and effectively dropped.
FRED THYS: Gean is clearly frustrated, and he just wants to get on with his life.
CHASE GEAN: I just want some kind of
Physical Therapy, something. I don't need to be not doin' nothin'. I'm 26 years old.
FRED
THYS: And the bullet didn't sever his spinal cord, so he says, there
could be something that comes back. Gean has nothing but praise for the
medical care he has received, both at Walter Reed and at West Roxbury.
His frustration is with the Army's unexplained delay in letting him go,
so that he can try to rebuild his body, and his life.