Neurologist: "Your husband's illness is too advanced and we cannot care for him here." Rejected from care home too, can't manage his pain.
4
5
This makes ZERO sense. Too much pain. Illness too advanced. That's what their JOBS are. Is this Glioblastoma Mutiforme? AO?
1
3
It's a mess between Medicare and V.A. Two Federal social workers who aren't allowed to talk to one another? Rather anti-social eh?
1
2
AO @stefsull spot-on nailed it meaning you likely have known someone with same? :( :( Not Glioblastoma tho multiple Gliomas, 7 spine 1 brain
2
1
And let me guess, VA still says, "Not on the list of AO problems"? Which from what I was just reading online seems like BS.
2
1
That classification means he is to receive healthcare even with the active AO deniability stuff going on. It is outright criminal.
2
2
This whole thread makes me wanna cry — veteransresources.org/forums…
2
1
This sentence trumps Donald Basturd Trump's idiocy level "If the veteran has passed on he no longer has a claim for compensation." @stefsull
1
1
it's also incorrect. Surviving family members are entitled to some benefits.
2
3
Replying to @stovak
Alas, this all depends upon the specific veteran's classification as to disability and whether it's combat related or not @stefsull

Oct 24, 2016 · 2:49 AM UTC