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Army Fixing Patients' Housing
Changes Underway At Walter Reed |
By Dana Priest and Anne Hull
Washington Post Staff Writers
Walter Reed Army Medical Center began repairs yesterday on Building 18, a former hotel that is used to house outpatients
recuperating from injuries suffered in Iraq and Afghanistan and that has been plagued with mold, leaky plumbing
and a broken elevator.
The facility's commander, Maj. Gen. George W. Weightman, said Army staff members inspected each of the 54 rooms
at the building and discovered that outstanding repair orders for half the rooms had not been completed. He said
that mold removal had begun on several rooms and that holes in ceilings, stained carpets and leaking faucets were
being fixed.
Walter Reed, the Army's premier medical facility, has turned into a holding ground for wounded soldiers during
5 1/2 years of sustained combat. Almost 700 outpatients suffering from physical injuries and psychological problems
live on the 113-acre military post or in nearby quarters. Many linger there for 18 months or longer as they move
through the Army's numbing bureaucracy.
A Washington Post series over the weekend described "The Other Walter Reed," where overdoses, suicide
attempts and depression among outpatients are the parallel narrative to the spit-polish hallways of the renowned
hospital.
Building 18, in particular, symbolizes the indifference and |
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neglect that many of the wounded say they experience at Walter Reed.
Yesterday, Weightman said a broken elevator in the building had been repaired and soldiers were working to improve
the outside of the building, including removing ice and snow. The slippery conditions have kept some soldiers in
their rooms. A garage door that has been broken for months will soon be repaired as well.
Spec. Jeremy Duncan, whose room has a moldy wall that was featured in one photograph in the Post series, has been
moved to another room while workers make repairs. Duncan will be able to return to his room when the work is completed,
Weightman said.
Walter Reed and Army officials have been "meeting continuously for three days" since the articles began
appearing, Weightman said. A large roundtable meeting with Army and Defense Department officials will take place
at the Pentagon early this morning to continue talks about improvements in the outpatient |
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system, he added.
Weightman said the medical center has received an outpouring of concern about conditions and procedures since the
articles appeared and has taken steps to improve what soldiers and their families describe as a messy battlefield
of bureaucratic problems and mistreatment.
"We're starting to attack how we'll fix and mitigate" some of the problems, he said.
Social workers will now be stationed around the clock at Mologne House, the 200-room hotel on the post where many
of the outpatients live. Plans are being developed to better train other staff members who deal with outpatient
needs.
The Army will also consider moving some outpatients to its other medical centers throughout the United States and
will determine over the next weeks whether more workers are needed at Walter Reed. |
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