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Air Force cracks down on combat deployment exemptions

images_02     "The Air Force has steadily tightened deployment exemptions – from yanking medical waivers to cutting training assignments." Military Times.

       Military Times, the parent publication of Air Force Times, reports that the Air Force has been consistently cracking down on Airmen seeking exemption and waivers to get out of deployments in Iraq or Afghanistan.

       As noted in the article, Air Force Expeditionary Force (AEF) units can deploy from a low of 90 days to high of six month tours, and most Airman face only one tour compared to the grueling Army and Marine ground troops six months to a year or more on multiple tours.     

       I believe that the Air Force is now doing a much better job at preparing Airmen to be boots on the ground. Check out the Air Force Expeditionary Force Center photo gallery of Airmen being given what looks like Basic Infantry Training. http://www.expeditionarycenter.af.mil/photos/mediagallery.asp?page=1

Robert L. Hanafin
Editorial Board Member
Veterans Today News Network &
Our Troops News Ladder

     Policy change means most Airmen will deploy to Iraq and Afghanistan.

If needed, nearly all Airmen could go to war      

�91105f9429s004_01During December 2008, Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz huddled with his war planners to figure out how to get more medical evacuation helicopters to Afghanistan. Schwartz offered up the aircraft used to teach pilots to fly the HH-60G Pave Hawk, the Air Force combat search-and-rescue helicopter.

      In the past, the Weapons School instructors at Nellis Air Force Base, NV were exempt from deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan because Air Force leadership considered their educational mission too vital.

A new policy emerged that wintry day, one that put Air Force war fighting before training.

      "We got very direct guidance from the chief," recalled USAF Maj. Gen. Marke Gibson, director of operations for the deputy chief of staff for operations. "The chief said, ‘We’re not going to have Americans over there dying while we’re worried about a weapons instructor course.’ "

      Although most air expeditionary force deployment changes aren’t as dramatic as the one Schwartz lay forth, the Air Force has steadily tightened deployment exemptions – from yanking medical waivers to cutting training assignments.

http://www.militarytimes.com/news/2009/12/airforce_medical_waivers_122909w/

      About a year ago the Air Force began to closely monitor Airmen who were seeking ways out of deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan. Military Times noted that if an Airman had not deployed because they wrenched your back or had a baby, the Air Force was watching them closely.

      The scrutiny is the response to findings by the Air Force Audit Agency that the USAF failed to track its medical waivers from late 2001, when deployments ramped up after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, through 2006. Only in 2009 has there been a strict accounting policy in place Air Force-wide.

      Today all Airmen who have medical waivers face a monthly review by their base commanders and doctors, and a possible change in their deployment status, according to Lt. Col. Brian Pinkston, a flight surgeon and chief of operational medicine for the Air Force Medical Support Agency.

      "If someone has a broken arm that should have healed in six weeks and it’s now six months, they pull the records and say, ‘Does this make sense?’ Col. Pinkston said. Because of the new scrutiny, the number of Airmen with permanent non-deployable conditions is a fraction of what it was nine years ago.

      In 2001, 1.57% of the service’s 307,635 Airmen, or 4,830, had permanent conditions that kept them from deploying, according to the Surgeon General’s Office. By 2006, that figure crept up to 2.16% or about 6,800 of the 314,800-member active-duty force. Today, about 0.26% of the 293,400 active-duty Airmen, or roughly 760, cannot be deployed for health reasons.

      Many of the airmen with permanent conditions have left the service or have been reclassified as deployable if they can be sent to an overseas base that has a hospital or clinic. This year, about 9,680 airmen, or 3.4%, are in the new category of having a condition that requires medical care but doesn’t prevent them from deploying.

      Another 3.89% of Airmen, almost 11,415, have waivers for temporary conditions, requiring them to be eligible for deployment within a year of the diagnosis. The number of temporary waivers had hovered around 2 percent until the crackdown.

      About a quarter of all waivers are issued for muscle and skeletal conditions, such as back problems, arthritis, broken bones and torn ligaments, according to the Surgeon General’s Office. Pregnancy was the second most common cause, at 14.4%.

Fakers in the Ranks?

      Before the crackdown, which was implemented base by base throughout 2007 and 2008, the Air Force did not regularly review the medical waivers it issued; an Airman could go for more than a year without his deployment status being updated.

      After the 9/11 attacks, the frequency and number of deployments skyrocketed, and so did the tales of imaginary illnesses and conditions. Concerned there were fakers in his ranks, then-former Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. T. Michael Moseley ordered the Air Force Audit Agency to review how the service approved medical deployment waivers and what it did to get Airmen back in the deployment pool.

      The audit agency didn’t find widespread abuse of the waiver system but did find examples of poor oversight and record keeping.

      For example, a nurse administrator considered non-deployable for medical reasons had gone at least 18 months without an appraisal, and the condition of a junior officer in a career field being downsized had not been reviewed for more than two years.

       The audit agency also found that personnel databases didn’t have correct information on Airmen’s medical status. An example cited: 763 pregnant Airmen were listed as non-deployable in medical readiness records but considered to be "worldwide deployable" in the Military Personnel Data System.

After laying out its findings, the audit agency recommended an overhaul of waiver policy.

      "There was a call for greater scrutiny, and we finally had the technical ability to do that," Col. Pinkston said. Within a year, the Air Force retooled its rules and began implementing them.

      A new Air Force instruction laid out detailed procedures for determining who qualified for a waiver for "duty limiting conditions" and mandated reviews as frequent as once a month. Also introduced was an electronic record-keeping system that allows squadron commanders as well as medical personnel to review Airmen’s medical waivers.

A lengthy process

      Getting a waiver is like filing a VA Claim it isn’t as easy as the concern of fakers makes it out to be. Airmen still start with a visit to a base clinic or hospital and a doctor’s diagnosis.

      Sleep apnea, difficulty breathing while asleep, is an example of a condition that restricts where an airman can deploy but does not require him to stay home, he said. The sandy conditions of desert bases make it difficult to maintain the breathing oxygen equipment used by sleep apnea patients, Col. Pinkston said, but the sufferers could deploy elsewhere if a base could provide adequate treatment.

      "The recommendation is put into the databases and reviewed by a flight surgeon who understands the Airman’s duties," Col. Pinkston said. "They review it and say, ‘Does this make sense from a medical standpoint? Does this make sense from a duty standpoint as well?"

      After the medical review, the recommendation is sent to the Airman’s squadron commander for a decision. If the commander objects, the waiver request gets a second medical review before being turned over to the wing commander for a decision.

      Because of federal privacy law, an Airman’s medical records that are not related to his ability to deploy are not shared with squadron and wing bosses.

      "Commanders can’t know everything, but they can know things that change duty status," Pinkston said.

      Once an Airman’s waiver is approved, the Airman’s doctors and squadron commander are expected to make sure the Airman is getting the medical care needed to recover. As a check, the Airman’s status is reviewed monthly by the base’s Deployment Availability Working Group.

      The electronic system also automatically flags the records of Airmen with recurring problems prompting deployment waivers. An Airman who does not become deployable after one year will have his case considered by a medical evaluation board, a review that could lead to the Airman leaving the service.

      While the percentage of Airmen with duty-limiting conditions has increased since 2001, the rise can be attributed to improved reporting and the Air Force’s willingness to keep in uniform Airmen with skills that are in high demand, even if their deployment options are limited.


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Posted by on Jan 11 2010, With 0 Reads, Filed under Military. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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2 Comments for “Air Force cracks down on combat deployment exemptions”

  1. Good column.

    If you’re gong to be in a combat zone, you ought to at least be able to use a weapon (rifle or machine gun at a minimum) efficiently in self defense or to augment other shooters.

    If you’re in service, except for temporary illnesses and conditions, you should be deployable.

    If you’re gong to be used outside of your AFSC or MOS, you should be trained for the new assignment.

    The burden of war shouldn’t be primarily on one or two branches of the military–especially if you’re going to have an all volunteer military and not have a draft.

  2. Sent into Veterans Today via email from Bobbie Christian

    So the Air Force personnel who have a conscience and are silently against the Iraq and Afgan wars are going to be forced to go. Karma, I guess. They made the choice to join, and their choice has consequences. Oh well, this will balance out the number of deaths and maiming.

    Bobbie Christian

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