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Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Summary
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) identifies a specific emotional
distress that can follow a major psychologically traumatic event. This
uncommon event would typically produce fear and anxiety in anyone who experienced
it. Examples are rape or assault, a natural disaster, being part of or
observing a serious accident, major surgery, and wartime combat duty. Symptoms
may begin immediately or not surface for six months, a year, or even longer.
Severe anxiety and panic may be only two of several symptoms. The person
will have recurring images of the traumatic event, often with the same
degree of anxiety as during the event itself. Or, he will suddenly feel
as though the event is occurring in the present. Recurring nightmares of
the trauma are dramatic and disturbing. Nightmares, anxiety, or depression
can disturb sleep. The person may remain tense and anxious throughout the
day, and may startle easily.
As they become more mentally involved with these experiences, the traumatized
individuals begin to withdraw from the world, show less emotion, and become
disinterested in people and activities that were once important. They avoid
any situations that might stimulate memories of the traumatic event. Guilt,
depression, and sudden outbursts of aggressive behavior may also surface.
Drug and alcohol abuse develop in some as they attempt to manage these
responses.
Treatment of PTSD
Fortunately PTSD can be effectively treated. Behavior therapy may play
a useful role by helping modify the way a patient acts and reducing avoidance
behavior. Behavior therapy is often combined with cognitive therapy, which
is intended to change underlying thought patterns. These approaches may
be used in a group or in an individual setting.
Family therapy can help close relatives understand and cope with the
illness. Through such counseling family members can learn that any apparent
rejection by a relative with PTSD is the result of the disorder. Family
counseling can repair communications and help restore normal interaction.
Support groups of individuals who experience PTSD can show victims that
their reactions to trauma are shared by many. By discussing common experiences
and emotions, groups of survivors can help each other rebuild confidence.
Medication can be a valuable complement to other treatment by relieving
many of the most debilitating symptoms, and enabling other therapy to go
forward. The use of medication may be required only for a few weeks, but
in severe cases it may be needed for several years.
Self-Help
We do not offer a self-help program for PTSD, primarily because of the
complexity of the disorder. If you or someone you love is suffering from
these symptoms, we encourage you to seek help from a mental health professional
who specializes in PTSD.
An example - Vietnam Veteran
The largest subgroup to experience this problem is the combat veteran.
In the United States, the Vietnam War has produced the largest percentage
of PTSD cases. In fact, it was after studies of Vietnam veterans were added
to studies of civilian post-trauma sufferers that the American Psychiatric
Association created, in 1980, the diagnostic category: post-traumatic stress
disorder (acute, chronic, and/or delayed).
The major task in overcoming this problem is to incorporate the traumatic
event into a person's sense of the world and into his understanding of
his personal life. It is possible that the nightmares and spontaneous reliving
of the trauma are unconscious attempts to heal the psychic wounds.
The singular experience of Vietnam combat veterans illustrates how traumatic
changes can be difficult for the mind to incorporate and how this "working
through" process is essential. The Vietnam War was like no other in
American history. The average age of the combat soldier was nineteen, not
twenty-six as in World War II. The military flew soldiers into duty as
individuals, not as teams. Once there, nothing seemed straightforward.
Those already fighting did not readily accept arriving soldiers. The enemy
was not easily identifiable or necessarily in uniform; women and children
could kill you in the streets. Women and children civilians were therefore
sometimes killed by U.S. soldiers. There was no "front line,"
and soldiers had to win the same territory over and over again. Leadership
was young and inexperienced. The object was to kill as many people as possible
and survive.
The coming home process of the Vietnam soldier failed to account for
the mind's need to assimilate this experience in a slow-paced manner. After
twelve to thirteen months of combat duty, the military flew soldiers back
to the States in a matter of hours and, again, as isolated individuals
rather than as teams. This is in stark contrast to the weeks or sometimes
months that World War II veterans spent on ships returning to the U.S.,
while sharing time with other soldiers close to them. In forty-eight hours
the Vietnam combat soldier could go from a unit assault in which he killed
four North Vietnamese soldiers with an M-16 to sitting on the front steps
of his parents' house in the U.S. While in Southeast Asia, soldiers would
dream of that day. But when it arrived they weren't prepared. The American
people, for the first time in its history, turned against its war and the
returning soldiers. Anti-war marches replaced ticker-tape parades. A soldier
in uniform on the streets of our country might be spat on. The heroes were
now the villains.
It is no wonder that some Vietnam veterans have continued to experience
chronic post-traumatic stress disorder, since the primary cause of the
disorder is an inability to assimilate the experience into current life.
A combat veteran needs time and the support and understanding of other
people to assimilate a trauma of this significance. The person with post-traumatic
stress disorder must have an opportunity to talk about the traumatic experience
and, eventually, to feel the emotions associated with it. As he works through
these feelings, he can begin to connect the trauma with the rest of his
life. Part of that connection will be an ability to let past events remain
in the past instead of continuing to surface in the present. For the Vietnam
veteran, the return to present life can still be eased by the responses
of those around him. Back in 1985, one of my colleagues who worked with
these men and women said that even twenty years after returning from Southeast
Asia, these soldiers need to hear three things from us that weren't said
so long ago: "Welcome home," "Thank you," and "Thank
God you're alive."
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