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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: Head of Walter Reed Hospital Fired Head of Walter Reed Hospital Fired Associated Press | March 01, 2007 WASHINGTON - The Army said Thursday that the two-star general in charge of Walter Reed Army Medical Center has been relieved of command following disclosures about inadequate treatment of wounded soldiers. Maj. Gen. George W. Weightman, who was commanding general of the North Atlantic Regional Medical Command as well as Walter Reed hospital, was relieved of command by Army Secretary Francis J. Harvey. In a brief announcement, the Army said service leaders had "lost trust and confidence" in Weightman's leadership abilities "to address needed solutions for soldier outpatient care" at Walter Reed. The Army and the Defense Department launched a series of investigations after The Washington Post published a series of stories last week that documented problems in soldiers' housing and in the medical bureaucracy at Walter Reed, which has been called the Army's premier caregiver for soldiers wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan. Alert: Let your public officials know how you feel about this issue! After a visit to the hospital compound last Friday, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said those found to have been responsible for the problems at Walter Reed would be "held accountable." "A bedrock principle of our military system is that we empower commanders with the responsibility, authority and resources necessary to carry out their mission," Gates said at the time. "With responsibility comes accountability." A Pentagon spokesman, Bryan Whitman, said before the action against Weightman was announced that an outside review panel created by Gates was holding its first meeting Friday at the Pentagon. Headed by two former Army secretaries, Togo West and Jack Marsh, the panel is to review treatment and administrative processes at Walter Reed and at the National Naval Medical Center at Bethesda, Md. Gates has instructed the group to report its findings publicly within 45 days. Being relieved of command means Weightman is almost certain to have lost his future in the Army. A native of Vermont, he graduated from West Point in 1973 and got his medical degree from the University of Vermont. He later served as the surgeon for the 82nd Airborne Division, including during Desert Storm. He has held a number of medical commands, including service as a leading surgeon during the initial stages of the Iraq war. Weightman's duties at Walter Reed will be assumed temporarily by Lt. Gen. Kevin Kiley, the commander of U.S. Medical Command, until a permanent replacement is found, Harvey said. "The Army is moving quickly to address issues regarding outpatient care at Walter Reed Army Medical Center," the announcement said. Last week the Army took disciplinary action against several lower-level soldiers at Walter Reed, but officials have declined to publicly confirm any details of those actions. The problems at Walter Reed pertain not to the quality of medical treatment for wounded soldiers but rather to the level of care for those who are well enough to be outpatients, living in Army housing at Walter Reed. One building was singled out in the Post reports as suffering from ill-repair, including mold on interior walls. The Army also has acknowledged problems with the system it uses to evaluate wounded soldiers in determining whether they are well enough to return to active duty. At a breakfast meeting with reporters Thursday, in which he refused to discuss any aspect of the Walter Reed investigations, Harvey said the Army also was reviewing conditions at its medical centers elsewhere in the country. He would not be more specific. Sound Off...What do you think? Join the discussion.
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#1. To: tom007 (#0)
You know, at this point I use one simple metric to determine what I will and won't do in America, and that metric is this: What do the CEO's do? Do the CEO's of America serve in the military? Do their children serve in the military? Do they rely on VA hospitals for their medical care? Of couse not. If it's not good enough for them, why should the rest of us do it? We have a two tier society, the very wealthy and the rest of us. So, if it's something the very wealthy won't do, why should the rest of us do it? When the CEO's start serving in the military, and sending their pampered brats to serve in the military, then we should consider it as well. Until then, forget it. And forget about that whole "paying for college" deal they dangle like a carrot in front of you. College won't do you any good when your face is half blown off by an Iraqi IED.
#2. To: tom007 (#0) In a bureacracy, everyone is promoted beyond their level of competence. Since the entire government is a bureaucracy, the entire government is incompetent. "We become what we behold. We shape our tools and thereafter our tools shape us." -- Marshall McLuhan, after Alexander Pope and William Blake. #3. To: tom007 (#0) This will tick Army folks off to no end. The General's problem was that the truth became public. Bad news doesn't fly in the Bushco regime.
#4. To: Fred Mertz (#3) As well it should.
#5. To: tom007 (#0) Loose lips cause pneumonia and food poisoning, apparently. If you look carefully at my lips, you'll realize that I'm actually saying something else. I'm not actually telling you about the several ways I'm gradually murdering ****. - Tom Frost Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
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