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News from Around the Americas | January 2006
Pentagon Fired 244 Gay Doctors, Nurses, Medical Specialists Nathaniel Frank - Newswire
| An aerial view of the Pentagon is seen June 15, 2005. In a little-noticed move, the U.S. Army has issued new regulations governing the death penalty, raising speculation that the military might be preparing for its first execution since 1961. (Jason Reed/Reuters) | Santa Barbara, Calif. - A University of California research center released data today showing that the military has fired 244 medical specialists under the "don't ask, don't tell" policy. The figures, which cover 1994 through 2003, the first ten years of the policy, were obtained from the Pentagon by the Center for the Study of Sexual Minorities in the Military (CSSMM) with the help of Rep. Marty Meehan. The information is being reported today by the Associated Press.
Dr. Aaron Belkin, director of CSSMM, said the discharges provide evidence that the gay ban is hampering military readiness. "The consequences of shortfalls in medical specialists during wartime are serious," he said. "When the military lacks the medical personnel it needs on the frontlines, it compromises the well-being not only of its injured troops, but of the overextended specialists who have to work longer tours to replace those who have been discharged."
According to the new data, the 244 medical personnel discharged under the gay exclusion policy included physicians, nurses, biomedical laboratory technicians and other highly trained medical specialists. The revelation comes at a time when the military has acknowledged it is struggling with significant shortfalls in recruitment and retention of medical personnel.
According to a Senate report issued in 2003 by Sens. Christopher Bond and Patrick Leahy, hundreds of injured Guard and Army Reserve soldiers "have been receiving inadequate medical attention" while housed at Ft. Stewart because of a lack of preparedness that includes "an insufficient number of medical clinicians and specialists, which has caused excessive delays in the delivery of care."
The Center for the Study of Sexual Minorities in the Military is an official research unit of the University of California, Santa Barbara. |
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