PTSD: Yet it's always been there, including in the civilian populations and not only related to war/conflict theaters!
Just one of oh so many Veterans issues ignored, especially related to our wars, by those served, so they need Not Sacrifice!
As to combat theater PTS just one of our very vocal long time, Vietnam, all combat theaters, Veterans, Conservative Nemesis: "Sally Satel Still Selling Care for PTSD Veterans is Waste of Money", who reaped an extremely comfortable living speaking and writing that PTS didn't exist, setting the Conservative talking points. Congress, the people served representatives in control of the countries purse strings, following up, on numerous occasions, with hearings and spending millions every now and then for studies, as they have and still do on other issues especially related to veterans, using her and other experts{?}, knowing the results they, and the country unwilling to Sacrifice, wanted. Like hearings held for other grossly under funded Veterans issues, little done after and if, poser patriotic, legislation was passed it wasn't funded or often not related to any actual problems but, poser, patriotic sounding and worded, but was used to attack VA personal in future hearings. Creates them media hyped 'scandals' that are once again ignored when the smoke of clears, and ignored as budgets are once again, conservative ideologies, obstructed! Finally being addressed, with what country allows to, under Sec Shinseki and continuing with Sec McDonald, with full help from this Executive branch and it's Cabinet and the crossover issues found also in society, legal, housing, more, they are charged to oversee with congress supposed to help for the good of the country.
July 22, 2015 - Philip Paolini served four years in the Vietnam War as a marine. In the years since then, he's faced a number of hardships, including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), substance abuse and homelessness.And Paolini's story is far from uncommon. New research shows that four decades after the Vietnam War ended, more than 270,000 veterans who served in the war zone suffer from symptoms of PTSD, a mental health condition characterized by painful flashbacks, severe anxiety, and uncontrollable thoughts about the disturbing events they experienced.
The study, published online Wednesday in JAMA Psychiatry, also found that at least one-third of those veterans exhibiting symptoms of PTSD suffer from major depression, as well.
Researchers from NYU Langone Medical Center followed up with Vietnam War veterans who had participated in a study from 1984 to 1988. Of the 1,839 men and women still alive from the original study, over 1,400 participated in at least one phase of the new study, which involved a health questionnaire, health interview and clinical interview.
The study authors used three different scales to measure PTSD. Depending on the method, the results suggest that between 4.5 percent and 11.2 percent of the male Vietnam veterans and 6.1 and 8.7 percent of the female vets are experiencing serious PTSD symptoms today.
About 16 percent of veterans in the study reported an increase of more than 20 points on a PTSD symptom scale, while only 7.6 percent reported a decrease of greater than 20 points. read more>>>
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