Kokanee said:
Obviously I was mistaken when I thought that perhaps by posting here I could get some assistance from my fellow CF brethren, instead I have people like you tess who think it's funny to taunt and ridicule me, simply because I want to get fixed and back to soldiering.
You want assistance in help you get funding for treatment not recognized by Health Canada, from a site dedicated to soldiers. A great start, if you are looking for people to help you find the treatment, but not the place to help you condemn the wrong people. The IPSC and Veteran affairs are not there to give every hair brained idea, a dollar amount.
Kokanee said:
I'm so glad that you think this forum is a place to shit on people who only want to be done right by the CF, instead of a place to come together and help each other out. It's nice to know that the last year of abject suffering on my part, still soldiering on and working as much as I possibly can while putting up with nothing but flack from the medical system hasn't been wasted; that at the very least it could be something for you to rub my nose in. I hope you feel nice and satisfied with your snide remarks at a wounded member's expense.
I shit on those, which complain about the wrong resources, and help perpetuate myths. This will hinder injured soldiers from seeking the approved, treatment.
I am not rubbing your nose in it, and Bruce is correct, you rubbed me the wrong way when you criticized the system. Your attitude came out as you deserve what you want, not what is available. If you did not like the way our service rifle worked for you, would you come on here and ask how you would be able to circumvent the system, get your own preferred rifle and insist the system pays for it?
Kokanee said:
Thanks everyone else who was constructive, but obviously I"m asking for assistance in the wrong place.
No you are asking in the right place, however you are not asking the right questions.
Occam said:
There was a time when medical marijuana and laser eye surgery weren't approved by Health Canada. Fortunately, through trials and testing, there was a proven health benefit and those treatments are now recognized. Medical marijuana is even funded by the country....
Exactly, until those treatments were approved, you would have received the same answer that Kokaneee is getting now.
Occam said:
Sorry, I find this statement offensive. The VAC pension is not meant to pay for medical treatment; according to the VAC site, the disability award is "meant to recognize and compensate for the non-economic impacts of a service-related disability".
And VAC is an administrator for insurance, Blue Cross, not Daddy Warbucks, that is there to pay for every treatment googled on the internet.
Occam said:
The financial responsibility for treating the busted-up member is VAC's. If there is an alternative medical treatment which offers promise of relief for a given condition, but is not approved by Health Canada, then VAC should play a role in investigating/lobbying for the possibility of approval of the treatment by Health Canada.
VAC is supposed to be an advocate for the veteran.
No, VAC’s role is to administrate the funds to pay for treatment. You want someone to advocate changing something that is Government legislated; your Member of Parliament is where you go. If he wants to get treatment, which falls out of the lanes of Approved treatment, then he uses his own funds. That includes the Pay out that VAC gives.
http://www.vac-acc.gc.ca/clients/sub.cfm?source=forces/nvc/programs/da
When a CF Veteran has a disability, it can cause pain and suffering, change the way your body or mind functions, and make it hard for you to enjoy life. The disability award is meant to recognize and compensate for the non-economic impacts of a service-related disability.
Yes, it is compensation, however that also means investing in it to alleviate the pain, suffering and the way the body or mind functions. As an individual, you have the choice to decide what will do this, a Big screen TV or Operation outside of the Country. Your choice.
What grates under my skin is the attitude of entitlement. Everyone that expects that because they serve, and get injured, that they are entitled to what ever they feel is owed to them. They look at blaming everyone, and pouting, until they get what they want. You are injured, then take the advice your Doctor, IPSC, and VAC have given to you, to alleviate the pain, Kokanee. Have you been given alternatives?
dileas
tess