Dr. Thomas Eldridge credits Vietnam vets for shedding light on PTSD.
And if only the country had listened, but alas they don't after the cheering long ago dyes down, it would cost them way too much for the long term results!!
May 13, 2011 - Post-traumatic stress disorder has gotten more attention in recent years, but the condition is nothing new. Soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan feel it; Vietnam-era vets have felt it for decades. Many came home from war angry and they acted out. But for thirty years, they say, their mental health was ignored and went untreated.
And just when these Vietnam vets got the tools to tackle their mental health, they say, the tools were taken away.
Bud Perry remembers what Vietnam did to his mind. He took a job at a prison, but says he should've been locked up.
"You didn't think about what you were doing. You just wanted to do something, or a crazy idea came up or somebody got you mad, you let go," said Perry.
Perry says PTSD took over him and many fellow vets.
Dr. Thomas Eldridge credits Vietnam vets for shedding light on PTSD.
"The Vietnam era veterans brought this to our attention," said Dr. Thomas Eldridge, Associate Chief of Staff for Primary Care in VA in Salem. {continued}
May 12th, 2011 - After fighting our wars, Veterans say they return home to a new battle over health care. This is especially true for the Vietnam generation.
They say the government is pushing them aside to care for younger veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.
Government employees stand by the healthcare they give veterans, but admit that filing a health benefit claim in the system can be a tedious, tiresome task. Some Vietnam vets say it's disrespectful. But, disrespect for the Vietnam generation, vets say, is nothing new.
Pat Plourde served during the Vietnam era. And, in return, lives with multiple sclerosis.
"I have pain from the top of my head all the way down to my right side and my left foot. My feet really, really bother me a lot," said Plourde.
Plourde's pain is physical. But, it also comes from a heapload of rejection. {continued}
Same happened on a number of issues related to veterans as we Vietnam Vets returned and Korean Vets were pushed aside or funding was shifted!
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