M38A1 JEEP | NYC Veterans Day Parade 2017 | United War Veterans Council

M38A1Jeep.us – A non-profit initiative to provide education, support and post traumatic stress help to military soldiers and their families. Through K-9 Disaster Relief, a non-profit humanitarian organization, it brings to bear the services needed for mental health programs and the canine human-animal-bond of uniting PTSD service dogs with veterans. www.M38A1Jeep.us – @M38A1Jeep – www.K-9DisasterRelief.org

The annual Veterans Day Parade, produced by United War Veterans Council, is the largest celebration of service in the nation. The tradition of honoring veterans on November 11 began in 1919, following WWI. Today, veterans, military personal, high school and college bands, military vehicle preservation associations and humanitarian organizations like K-9 Disaster Relief – M38A1Jeep.us participate.

According to Frank Shane, Executive Director of K-9 Disaster Relief, who restored the vintage 1962 Vietnam War Jeep – “It was an honor to be part of the Parade. The M38A1 Jeep brings to light the psychological traumatic stress services, both human and canine, that are available to soldiers who have bravely served.”

For more information: www.M38A1Jeep.us info@M38A1Jeep.us #M38A1Jeep

Special Recognition: United War Veterans Council (UWVC) – Dan McSweeney & Jeff Swansen, FDNY Battalion Chief, Michael Kirwin, FDNY House 10, NYPD, MIL-SPEC, Robert Rubino
Photos & Video: K-9 Disaster Relief © 2017 All Rights Reserved. Additional Photos: Parade Reviewing Stand & on 5th Avenue: M38A1 Jeep/Shane/LTC’s Vargus/Hayden/K9 Chance: Photo Credit: NYC Henry O © 2017 All Rights Reserved

75/ALIVE | VIETNAM VETERANS

The approximate percentage of Vietnam-era veterans who are still alive is 75.

Some online estimates suggest that the number is much more stark: Only one-third of Vietnam veterans are still alive, these Web sites say, and the survivors are going fast.

But as Patrick S. Brady made clear in an article for The VVA Veteran, the magazine of the Vietnam Veterans of America, the reality is more reassuring. The rumor illustrates the danger of using incompatible numbers from different sources.

It was apparently based on an estimate that 800,000 Vietnam-era veterans had died by 2000. That number was reasonable: About 9.2 million Americans served in the military during the Vietnam era (1964-75), so that would mean about 8 percent of them had died and 92 percent were still alive.

The problem arose when someone applied the 800,000 figure to a different denominator: 2.7 million, the estimated number of veterans who actually served in Vietnam, rather than at home or in some other theater. This made it appear that nearly one-third of those veterans were dead in 2000 and that they were dying at a rate of almost 400 a day. That would have meant more than 100,000 deaths a year, or nearly two million between 2000 and 2015 — a path to near-total disappearance.

In reality, the death rate for Vietnam-era veterans in recent years has been comparable to or lower than that of other men in their age group, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Of the men with the age distribution of Vietnam-era veterans who were alive in 2000, about 12 percent had died by 2010, with about 1.5 percent of the survivors projected to die each year since then.

M38A1 Jeep | K-9 Vet Salute

This Blog is about my 1962 Vietnam War M38A1 Jeep. My AIT medical corps training was at Fort Sam Houston, Texas – Class 46 – Company C – 2nd Bn.  Basic at Fort Ord and AIT/Medic, Fort Sam Houston. My M38A1 is a way to connect with soldiers, veteran families and military organizations.

M38A1 WITH HUEY  UH-1 MediVac ‘slick” chopper

The best day for me is when a veteran family member or child rides in my Jeep wearing my Nam field jacket or helmet (much too large for their head) asking questions about the war or relating stories as told to them by their dad or grandfather. A wife or loved one will start talking . . . a short Jeep ride is restorative and forms a common bond