Ariz. VA program helps out pregnant vets
By Cathryn Creno - The (Phoenix) Arizona Republic
Posted : Sunday Jun 6, 2010 13:05:37 EDT
PHOENIX — KJ Sloan entered the technological equivalent of a rat’s
nest when she started to manage the Phoenix Veterans Affairs women’s
program.
Pregnant veterans had been checked into the VA computer
system as long as three years prior — but no one had bothered to note
when or if they had given birth. Veterans’ maternity-care bills were
going unpaid. Even worse, in the eyes of Sloan, the VA was losing
contact with women she believes the organization should serve.
That
was two years ago. Now, the Phoenix VA’s maternity-support program is
being touted as a national model.
Sloan said she now knows exactly
how many pregnant vets — 66 — need maternity care in metro Phoenix.
Bills
are getting paid. Military moms-to-be are getting phone calls, visits
and gift baskets from volunteers who make sure they are getting the VA
services the need.
And programs in Tucson, Prescott, Albuquerque,
N.M., and Texas are using the Phoenix volunteer effort as a model for
their own work with pregnant veterans, Sloan said.
She gives much
of the credit to two volunteers, sisters Kathy Laurier and Barbara Shaw
of Phoenix. The pair’s efforts in helping to turn the maternity program
around earned them Phoenix VA’s Volunteer of the Year awards in May.
“The
only training we had was that we are both moms and grandmas,” said
Laurier, a veteran who worked in a Navy personnel office during the
Vietnam War.
Recently, Laurier and Shaw pulled up in an SUV packed
full of baby gifts to the Ahwatukee Foothills home of former Army
veterinary technician Stefanie Lewis. Her baby, Noah, is expected in
July.
Besides offering tips about not exerting herself too much
while getting her home ready for the baby, Laurier and Shaw gave Lewis
four large baskets filled with toys and practical items for the baby.
Lewis also received a separate basket of bath and pampering gifts for
herself.
“Oh my gosh, I was not expecting this,” Lewis said as she
looked through the trove of gifts and fought happy tears. “This is like
a baby shower.”
Active-duty women face challenges. Six months
ago, an Army general in Iraq generated controversy by
adding pregnancy to a list of grounds for court-martial. Around the
same time, an Army cook was threatened
with dishonorable discharge for refusing deployment because she had
a 10-month-old son.
Laurier said female veterans typically are
unaware of their VA maternity benefits. She and Shaw, who did not serve
in the military, intend to change that.
Lewis had expected to deal
with the VA only when it came to bills.
“I feel so lucky that
they [Laurier and Shaw] found me,” said Lewis, who served in the Army in
Germany and has lived in metro Phoenix since 2006.
“My husband
and I have lived and traveled all over the world — Germany, Japan,
Thailand. But neither of us know very much about having babies.”
Shaw
said coaching expectant and breast-feeding moms is the fun part of the
volunteer work.
She and her sister also have handled more tedious
duties, like calling women to find out if they still needed services and
if they had bills to be paid. Some vets were fighting with collection
agencies, she said.
Sloan said that when she started her job, she
had a list of about 140 women who had enrolled in the Phoenix VA’s
maternity program. But it was unclear what had happened to them.
Some
of the calls to the homes of female veterans have been difficult, Shaw
said.
One husband who answered the phone told her his wife had
died in childbirth. The VA had no record of it.
Other women needed
help coping with the stress of having been in Iraq or Afghanistan on
top of the stress of being pregnant.
“They come back with all this
stress,” Shaw said. “Their boyfriends leave, and then they find out
they are pregnant. They are left to deal with it all alone.”
Laurier
said she and Shaw started picking up small baby gifts at dollar stores
when they first started visiting the moms-to-be. Over time, donations
started rolling in and now every future mom in the program receives at
least a couple of large baskets of gifts, she said.
“I could not
believe it when they came to my house and brought gift baskets, a
portable high chair and a portable baby swing,” said Kori Kirkpatrick of
Scottsdale, whose daughter Kodi was born a year ago.
Kirkpatrick,
who served as a firefighter in the Navy, nominated Laurier and Shaw for
their award: “They are fun ladies and make a wonderful team.”