Therapists offer free services to vets. From the L.A. Times:
Before he was deployed to Iraq, Scott Shore refused to take aspirin for headaches.
Six years later, suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, he takes six medications daily for ailments ranging from depression to insomnia.
“Just to leave my house and take my kids to the park is a struggle,” said the 34-year-old Mission Viejo resident, who also receives counseling from the Department of Veterans Affairs.
But another part of Shore’s therapy began in January with the Soldiers Project. The Los Angeles-based nonprofit includes a network of mental health professionals who provide free, unlimited, confidential counseling to service members returning from Iraq and Afghanistan and their families.
“It’s helped me open up a little bit more,” Shore said.
Judith Broder, a psychiatrist and founder of the Soldiers Project, said the idea came to her after she saw a Hollywood play featuring monologues of soldiers’ lives overseas. She was so shaken by their experiences that she awoke the next morning with the idea for the project.
The network, founded in 2005, has expanded from Los Angeles across Southern California and to Sacramento, Seattle, Chicago, New York and Boston. The licensed mental health professionals practice from their private offices, eliminating the long lines and crowds of people often seen at the VA.
The nonprofit can be reached at (877) 576-5343 or at www.thesoldiersproject.org.
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