Erickson Tribune - Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder--the ripple effect can be far reaching
05/06/2007 05:46 PM
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Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder--the ripple effect can be far reaching Posted on Wednesday, December 27, 2006
By Wendy J. Meyeroff THE ERICKSON TRIBUNE “No soldier goes to war and comes back unchanged.” Thus began the September 2006 testimony before Congress of Thomas J. Berger, Ph.D., chairman of the Vietnam Veterans of America’s National PTSD & Substance Abuse Committee. Berger continued, “There is no longer any doubt that the trauma of war inflicts mental health injuries every bit as real as the physical wounds inflicted by bullets and bombs.” Those mental health injuries are now known fairly commonly as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), but it’s a label that is still fairly recent. “The symptoms of many vets initially were attributed to other things: depression at the very least and, for the more incapacitated, schizophrenia. The syndrome of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder wasn’t recognized until 1980,” says Diedre Johnston, MB, BCh, an assistant professor in the neuropsychiatry and memory division at
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