[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 55 (Monday, April 19, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2418-S2419]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RESERVE COMPONENT HEALTH CARE PROGRAMS
Mr. BURRIS. Madam President, it is with pride that I bring to the
attention of my colleagues a recent series of programs conducted in
Downing Grove, IL, relating to medical care for our servicemembers. The
programs were sponsored by the Dupage Medical Group and the Defense
Education Forum of the Reserve Officers Association of the United
States, ROA. They were part of an ongoing series of six programs held
over the past 2 years by these entities and related to the Reserve
Components and military medicine.
In November of last year, the topic was Mental Health Care Programs
for the Reserve Components and their Families. As we all know, the
signature injuries of the current overseas wars have been head injuries
resulting in some degree of traumatic brain injury, TBI, and post
traumatic stress syndrome, PTSD. Treatment for our wounded warriors
with these injuries is paramount and has been correctly made a priority
by the Secretary of Defense and Secretary of Veterans Affairs. The most
recent of the programs was on the lessons in military medicine from
Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom, which was
conducted on April 9, 2010. It had a distinguished faculty and featured
Dr. Paul DeFina, chairman of the International Brain Research
Institute, who discussed brain trauma and its latest treatments.
I am especially proud of the efforts of several of my constituents,
notably, COL Janet Kamer and the doctors of the DuPage Medical Group,
in developing and hosting these programs together with the Defense
Education Forum. Colonel Kamer is the command consultant for psychology
to Air Force Reserve Headquarters and a psychologist with the DuPage
Medical Group. She is also the president of the Illinois Department of
the Reserve Officers Association.
MG Robert Kasulke also deserves recognition for his efforts in
cohosting these programs. He is commander of the Army Reserve Medical
Command and a vascular surgeon in his civilian career. RADM Paul Kayye
(Retired), the national president of ROA, has also played a part in
these medical care programs by introducing the April 9, 2010, program.
Other faculty for these programs that deserve recognition includes: BG
Margaret Wilmoth, Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for
Health Affairs; COL Nicole Keesee, deputy surgeon in the Office of the
Chief of the Army Reserve; Sergio Estrada, assistant director of the
Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs; Adermi Olodun, of the DOD
Employer Partnership Program; and Bob Feidler, the director of the
Defense Education Forum. Participants of the meetings included medical
providers, local representatives of the Department of Veterans Affairs,
other caregivers, medical and legal, and several of our wounded
warriors.
It is through people such as Dr. Kamer, the DuPage Medical Group and
the Defense Education Forum of ROA, and the distinguished faculty of
these programs that the most up-to-date information is being provided
to the medical community, Reservists and their families about the
various programs and treatments available to
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them. I congratulate them on their ongoing efforts.
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