The Army Vindicated Me, But is there closure? | S.O.S. #271
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A C-section goes wrong, the truth stays buried, and a young soldier spends seven years fighting for the words that should have come on day one: we made a mistake, and we’re going to take care of you. We sit down again with Lauren Paladini, whose delivery at Womack Army Medical Center at Fort Bragg ended with a severed vessel connected to her right uterine artery, repeated hemorrhaging, emergency civilian surgeries, and a hysterectomy at just 22 years old. The worst part isn’t only the injury. It’s the silence, the missing documentation, and the long institutional grind that follows when you need answers.
We talk candidly about the military medical malpractice claims process, why it can feel like the military is judge and jury, and how the Feres doctrine shapes everything when active duty service members can’t sue like civilians can. You’ll hear what it took to reopen a stalled case, why specialized legal and medical expertise matters, and what it’s like to face denials, delays, and experts brought in to dispute your reality. We also dig into the bigger picture: more than 760 claims filed since Congress created a pathway, a strikingly low approval rate, and what reforms are still needed for real due process and accountability.
Then we go to the moment most people never reach: the day Lauren is told the appeals board reverses the Army’s determination and finds a breach of the standard of care. We unpack the emotional whiplash of being vindicated, why validation still doesn’t equal healing, and what life looks like after years in fight-or-flight. If you care about military health care, patient safety, veterans’ rights, and institutional betrayal, this conversation stays with you. Subscribe, share this with someone who served, and leave a review so more people hear these stories.
Stories of Service presents guests’ stories and opinions in their own words, reflecting their personal experiences and perspectives. While shared respectfully and authentically, the podcast does not independently verify all statements. Views expressed are those of the guests and do not necessarily reflect the host, producers, government agencies, or podcast affiliates.
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