2007年VOA标准英语-US Army's Top Hospital Faces Criticism over Mai(在线收听) |
By Jim Fry
A newspaper investigation in Washington, D.C. revealed what it called neglect of the soldiers, and frustration among those soldiers and their families. The Army is promising action and some in Congress want an investigation. VOA's Jim Fry reports: Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C. prides itself as the Army's premier health care facility for the nation's war wounded. The Army holds out as an example, the amputee center -- where soldiers receive the latest computerized artificial limbs. But just across Georgia Avenue is a residence for recuperating soldiers known only as Building 18. Here The Washington Post found soldiers who wait months -- even years -- for follow-up care or discharge from the Army. Some live in substandard conditions, with black mold, damaged walls and holes in ceilings. Army Veteran Rob Timmins of the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America reacts to the treatment. "This is not the way we should treat our American heroes who have given life, limb over in Iraq and Afghanistan." Washington's representative to Congress also visited Building 18, bringing with her TV cameras and reporters. She visited soldiers living in one of the rooms. In one crowded hallway, she encountered Major General George Weightman, the hospital's commander. He said 26 rooms are getting needed repairs in a 30-year-old building that needs a major overhaul: "We have our facilities engineers looking at this building now to determine exactly what the scope of that is. Not only what systems need to be involved but what the timeline would be as we did that." Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton was not shown mold on walls or holes in ceilings and she told reporters she did not expect to find a dump. "I think that by talking to the two soldiers I was able to get a flavor for what the real problem is. It seems that what was exposed in the Post piece was a completely dilapidated, broken, medical administrative system." Another wounded soldier -- Specialist John Gentry -- said delays are to be expected in the Army. "And I have seen the rooms they were talking about. They were not that bad. I have lived in a lot worse. I do not know --some people just need to suck it up (be able to handle it)." She wants Congress to investigate. And, in fact, one senator has already announced he will convene a hearing next month.
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原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/2/37272.html |