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Spearheaded by Vietnam veterans, Veteran
organizations and military family members, The
Veterans Multi-Purpose Center has developed a
NEW Veterans Retreat/Family Services Center
that will offer a wide range of programming for
day-use and weekend Retreats for those suffering
the invisible wounds of war. The vision is to
provide innovative, high-quality non-clinical
therapeutic programs, services, outreach, peer
education and support for military family
members impacted by wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, and veterans of the "war on
terror." The Veterans Retreat/Family Services
Center is located at 4311 SW 63rd Ave Davie, FL
(The old Osborne property) our hope is this NEW
Center will become a community program sponsored
by local veteran organizations, churches,
individuals and businesses. Please call our
office for Sponsorship incentives available.
Programs & Services Overview:
This grassroots effort, led in part by the
populations it is intended to serve, will create
an innovative, holistic model for post-combat
care that engages the participants in obtaining
the programs and services they want and need,
which are currently not available in the
Veterans Administration (VA) or Vet Centers e.g.
family counseling/marriage counseling/individual
family member support; outreach and programs
geared for citizen soldiers and families;
developmentally - appropriate play therapy for
children; gender-specific services for women
combat veterans, who often have a dual diagnosis
of military sexual trauma; peer-to-peer support;
support groups for soldiers, children, teens,
and partners prior to and during deployment;
respite and assistance for the primary
caregivers of seriously wounded soldiers, etc.
The program incorporates non-traditional
experiential and alternative therapies and
culturally specific methodologies, selected by a
panel of qualified, professionally credentialed
veterans, military families and mental health
experts specializing in the fields of trauma,
and military psychology. The Program will also:
conduct research and disseminate findings about
prevention, post-combat care, and secondary
trauma; advance the quality of veteran’s mental
health services; increase access to counseling
and support for military families prior to,
during, and after deployment; and promote policy
changes and improvements in post-combat care
while highlighting the human costs of war.
We Are Currently Conducting:
Peer Counseling: To help Iraq and Afghanistan
era veterans regain a positive sense of self and
heal from any negative aspects of service and
war. In weekend workshops, one-on-ones and local
groups, Our Program allow veterans to take equal
and uninterrupted turns sharing their
experiences and expressing their feelings in a
truly confidential setting.
Family Group Conferencing: Restorative
/Circle Methodology: Family group conferencing
is a restorative approach to problem-solving
that engages all members of the family in the
healing process and charting their future.
Originally developed in New Zealand, family
group conferencing began in the field of child
welfare and youth justice, but is now used in
mental health, education, domestic violence and
other applications.
Equine Therapy: Our Retreat offers an Equine
Assisted Therapy Program. Some of the best
evidence of the effectiveness of hippotherapy
was recently reported by Dr. Daniel Bluestone,
then a pediatric neurologist at UC San
Francisco, who tracked the progress of children
receiving the treatment. Comparing MRI scans
over time, Bluestone found that the repetitive
movement of riding generates physical changes in
the brain. The implications for treatment of
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) are intriguing, to
say the least, and we plan to conduct research
on the efficacy of equine therapy for veterans
with TBI and PTSD.
Grief Counseling for Gold Star families:
Taking Care of the Caregivers:
Individual Counseling/Vet Mentors:
Couple’s Weekend Retreat:
Women’s Warrior’s Weekend Retreat:
Warrior’s Weekend Retreat:
Substance Abuse Programs
A Fright Train of Suffering
At least 1.6 million American military
personnel have served in Iraq and Afghanistan,
and Iraq war veterans are exhibiting higher
rates of post-combat mental health problems than
veterans of any other war in this nation’s
history. In the words of one military analyst,
“There is a freight- train of suffering soldiers
headed our way, and we’re not prepared for
them.”
Due to repeat, extended tours, an
unprecedented wound-to-kill ratio of 16 to 1,
and the high incidence of civilian casualties in
a war without front lines, the most conservative
estimates now are that at least 30 percent of
troops will suffer some post-combat mental
health problems. While post-combat mental health
issues affect an individual veteran, the
aftermath of war impacts the whole family and
reverberates across communities.
Citizen Soldiers Have Higher Rates of
Combat Trauma
More than 400,000 National Guard and Reservists
have fought in the war on terror, but their
battles didn’t end when they got home.
“Reservists are more vulnerable than regular
service soldiers…for psychiatric breakdown,”
according to a 1996 study commissioned by the
Department of Defense on the impact of long-term
overseas deployments of Guard and Reserve
troops. Almost half of the citizen soldiers who
served in Iraq have post-combat mental health
problems, but they don’t have the same care as
active duty. That’s wrong, and The Veterans
Multi-Purpose Center wants to make it right
Military Families Serve, Too
When a soldier goes to war, so does the family.
Over 10 million Americans have sent an immediate
family member off to war, and saying good-bye to
your soldier for the second, third, or fourth
deployment doesn’t get easier. Every combat
deployment means more stress for the troops and
the families left behind. When a soldier is
killed or wounded in combat, or comes home with
combat trauma, the whole family suffers. But
help can be hard to find. The Veterans
Multi-Purpose Center will provide military and
Gold Star families and loved ones a safe haven
that offers outreach, referrals, respite,
counseling, workshops and support before,
during, and after their soldier’s combat
deployments.
We welcome your feedback, and if you are a
veteran, military family member, or provider,
and have suggestions for programs or services
not listed, we would love to hear from you! We
are seeking volunteers to work and oversee our
weekend programs.
VETERANS MULTI-PURPOSE CENTER
4311 SW 63RD AVENUE DAVIE, FLORIDA 33314
954-791-8603 - 954-448-3843
www.VETSENEWS.com |