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(Media-Newswire.com) - MILWAUKEE – During a ground-breaking
ceremony today for a world-class facility for spinal cord injuries,
Secretary of Veterans Affairs Jim Nicholson committed the Department of
Veterans Affairs ( VA ) to expand programs and open new facilities for
seriously disabled veterans with spinal cord injuries.
"VA’s
health care facilities provide world-class health care for
America’s veterans,” said Nicholson. “Especially for
our most seriously disabled veterans, VA is committed to continuing its
role as a world leader in treatment and research.”
The new
spinal cord injury center at the Milwaukee VA Medical Center is a $32.5
million building and will open by 2010 to replace an existing converted
ward in the hospital. It comes on the heels of another
ground-breaking by Nicholson just a month ago for a new $20 million
spinal cord injury center attached to the VA medical center in
Minneapolis.
“VA is the only -- and best -- resource for a
veteran with a spinal cord injury,” said Randy L. Pleva Sr.,
national president of Paralyzed Veterans of America ( PVA ). “We
are proud of the accomplishments of the VA in health care.”
This
week, PVA is co-sponsoring with the Milwaukee VA Medical Center the
27th National Veterans Wheelchair Games, an athletic showcase open to
veterans with spinal cord injuries and other mobility impairments that
celebrates the value of sports in rehabilitation therapy and fosters
better health through sports competition.
VA is a leader in
spinal cord injury health care research and rehabilitation, providing a
coordinated lifelong continuum of services for eligible veterans with
spinal cord injuries of all ages. VA's expertise in this area
ranges from emergency care and surgical stabilization to
rehabilitation, preventive care, and long-term care.
The
department's investment in spinal cord injury research is yielding
practical medical applications such as reducing pressure ulcers and
increasing the use of annual influenza and pneumococcal vaccinations.
VA
research on spinal cord injuries is exploring new frontiers such as
nerve regeneration, activity-based therapies that target recovery of
standing and walking skills and developing prosthetics that have a
direct connection to the nervous system. Last year, VA spent
nearly $19 million on 186 research projects relating to central nervous
system injury and associated disorders.
Responding to the needs
of the latest generation of combat veterans, VA has developed a network
of polytrauma rehabilitation centers that bring together specialists in
spinal cord injury and other experts into multidisciplinary teams that
aid injured troops with other severe disabilities such as traumatic
brain injury, amputation, blindness, and complex orthopedic injuries,
auditory disorders and mental health concerns.
About 80 percent
of veterans with spinal cord injuries and disorders are at least 50
years of age. However, many of the approximately 450 newly
injured veterans and active-duty members who received rehabilitation at
VA’s spinal cord injury centers last year are young adults.
Treatment
and technology have improved so that veterans with spinal cord injuries
have increasingly longer life expectancies. Maintaining health,
preventive medicine and early treatment of new conditions are important
parts of VA’s lifelong care.
Last year, VA provided a full range of care to nearly 26,000 veterans with spinal cord injuries and diseases.
VA's
specialized services are delivered through 135 primary care teams or
support clinics for spinal cord injuries at VA medical centers and
through 23 regional spinal cord injury centers.
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