Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: Troops-Mental Health Crisis
Common Ground Common Sense > Issues that Affect Our Lives > U.S. Military Issues > U.S. Military Issues Archive
gmanders777
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/na...-home-headlines

THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ
These Unseen Wounds Cut Deep

A mental health crisis is emerging, with one in six returning soldiers afflicted, experts say.

By Esther Schrader
Times Staff Writer

November 14, 2004

WASHINGTON — Matt LaBranche got the tattoos at a seedy place down the street from the Army hospital here where he was a patient in the psychiatric ward.

The pain of the needle felt good to the 40-year-old former Army sergeant, whose memories of his nine months as a machine-gunner in Iraq had left him, he said, "feeling dead inside." LaBranche's back is now covered in images, the largest the dark outline of a sword. Drawn from his neck to the small of his back, it is emblazoned with the words LaBranche says encapsulate the war's effect on him: "I've come to bring you hell."

In soldiers like LaBranche — their bodies whole but their psyches deeply wounded — a crisis is unfolding, mental health experts say. One out of six soldiers returning from Iraq is suffering the effects of post-traumatic stress — and as more come home, that number is widely expected to grow.

The Pentagon, which did not anticipate the extent of the problem, is scrambling to find resources to address it.

A study by the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research found that 15.6% of Marines and 17.1% of soldiers surveyed after they returned from Iraq suffered major depression, generalized anxiety or post-traumatic stress disorder — a debilitating, sometimes lifelong change in the brain's chemistry that can include flashbacks, sleep disorders, panic attacks, violent outbursts, acute anxiety and emotional numbness.

Army and Veterans Administration mental health experts say there is reason to believe the war's ultimate psychological fallout will worsen. The Army survey of 6,200 soldiers and Marines included only troops willing to report their problems. The study did not look at reservists, who tend to suffer a higher rate of psychological injury than career Marines and soldiers. And the soldiers in the study served in the early months of the war, when tours were shorter and before the Iraqi insurgency took shape.

"The bad news is that the study underestimated the prevalence of what we are going to see down the road," said Dr. Matthew J. Friedman, a professor of psychiatry and pharmacology at Dartmouth Medical School who is executive director of the VA's National Center for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

Since the study was completed, Friedman said: "The complexion of the war has changed into a grueling counterinsurgency. And that may be very important in terms of the potential toxicity of this combat experience."

Mental health professionals say they fear the system is not moving fast enough to treat the trauma. They say slowness to recognize what was happening to Vietnam veterans contributed to the psychological devastation from that war.

More than 30% of Vietnam veterans eventually suffered from the condition that more than a decade later was given the name post-traumatic stress disorder. But since their distress was not clinically understood until long after the war ended, most went for years without meaningful treatment.

"When we missed the boat with the Vietnam vets, we didn't get another chance," said Jerry Clark, director of the veterans clinic in Alexandria, Va. "When they left the service, they went away not for a month or two but for 10 years. And they came back addicted, incarcerated and all these things. We can't miss the boat again. It is imperative."

Experts on post-traumatic stress disorder say it should come as no surprise that some of the soldiers in Iraq are fighting mental illness.

Combat stress disorders — named and renamed but strikingly alike — have ruined lives following every war in history. Homer's Achilles may have suffered from some form of it. Combat stress was documented in the late 19th century after the Franco-Prussian War. After the Civil War, doctors called the condition "nostalgia," or "soldiers heart." In World War I, soldiers were said to suffer shell shock; in World War II and Korea, combat fatigue or battle fatigue.

But it wasn't until 1985 that the American Psychiatric Assn. finally gave a name to the condition that had sent tens of thousands of Vietnam veterans into lives of homelessness, crime or despair.

A war like the one in Iraq — in which a child is as likely to die as a soldier and unseen enemies detonate bombs — presents ideal conditions for its rise.

Yet the Army initially sent far too few psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers to combat areas, an Army study released in the summer of 2003 found. Until this year, Congress had allocated no new funds to deal with the mental health effects of the war in Iraq. And when it did earmark money, the sum was minimal: $5 million in each of the next three years.

"We're gearing ourselves up now and preparing ourselves to meet whatever the need is, but clearly this is something that could not be planned for," said Dr. Alfonso Batres, a psychologist who heads the VA's national office of readjustment counseling services.

Last year, 1,100 troops who had fought in Iraq or Afghanistan came to VA clinics seeking help for symptoms of depression or post-traumatic stress; this year, the number grew tenfold. In all, 23% of Iraq veterans treated at VA facilities have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.

"And this is first-year data," Batres said. "Our experience is that over time that will increase."

In the red brick buildings of Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the "psych patients," as they are known, mingle, sometimes uncomfortably, with those who have lost limbs and organs.

One soldier being treated at Walter Reed, who spoke on condition of anonymity, walks the hospital campus in the bloodied combat boots of a friend he watched bleed to death.

Another Iraq veteran in treatment at Walter Reed, Army 1st Lt. Jullian Philip Goodrum, drives most mornings to nearby Silver Spring, Md., seeking the solitude of movies and the solace of friends.

He leaves early to avoid traffic — the crush of cars makes him jumpy. On more than one occasion, he has imagined snipers with their sights on him in the streets. Diesel fumes cause flashbacks. He keeps a vial of medication in his pocket and pops a pill when he gets nervous.

"You question — outside of dealing with your psych injury, which will affect you from one degree or another throughout your life — you also question yourself," Goodrum said. "I trained. I was an excellent soldier, a strong character. How could my mind dysfunction?"

When it began to become clear that what the Pentagon initially believed would be a rapid, clear-cut war had transmuted into a drawn-out counterinsurgency, the Army began pushing to reach and treat distressed soldiers sooner.

The number of mental health professionals deployed near frontline positions in Iraq has been increased. Suicide prevention programs are given to soldiers in the field. According to the Pentagon, 31 U.S. troops have killed themselves in Iraq.

At more than 200 storefront clinics known as Vet Centers — created in 1979 to reach out to Vietnam veterans — the VA has increased the number of group therapy sessions and staff. Three months ago, the VA hired 50 Iraq war veterans to help serve as advocates at the clinics.

Officials acknowledge that is only a start. The Government Accountability Office found in a study released in September that the VA lacked the information it needed to determine whether it could meet an increased demand for services.

"Predicting which veterans will seek VA care and at which facilities is inherently uncertain," the report concluded, "particularly given that the symptoms of PTSD may not appear for years."

The Army and the VA are also trying to catalog and research the mental health effects of this war better than they have in the past. In addition to the Walter Reed study, several more are tracking soldiers from before their deployment to Iraq through their combat experiences and into the future.

If Iraq veterans can be helped sooner, they may fare better than those who fought in Vietnam, mental health experts say. And they note that the nation, although divided on the Iraq war, is more united in caring for the needs of returning soldiers than it was in the Vietnam era. And in the last decade, new techniques have proved effective in treating stress disorders, among them cognitive-behavioral therapy and drugs like Zoloft and Paxil.

Whether people like Matt LaBranche seek and receive treatment will determine how deep an effect the stress of the war in Iraq ultimately has on U.S. society.

Before the war, LaBranche was living in Saco, Maine, with his wife and children and had no history of mental illness.

He deployed to Iraq with a National Guard transportation company based in Bangor. He came home a different person.

Just three days after he was discharged from Walter Reed, he was arrested for threatening his former wife. When he goes to court Dec. 9, he could be looking at jail time.

He lies on a couch at his brother's house most days now, struggling with the image of the Iraqi woman who died in his arms after he shot her, and the children he says caught some of his bullets. His speech is pocked with obscenities.

On a recent outing with friends, he became so enraged when he saw a Muslim family that he had to take medication to calm down.

He is seeing a therapist, but only once every two weeks.

"I'm taking enough drugs to sedate an elephant, and I still wake up dreaming about it," LaBranche said. "I wish I had just freaking died over there."

Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times
gmanders777
bif bump
flydangler
QUOTE(gmanders777 @ Nov 14 2004, 09:00 PM)
bif bump
*

Why?
Smartcor
This is a sad reality. We are still treating people with emotional wounds from Vietnam and this Iraq war is just as bad and many are getting hurt, the military personnel in Iraq and their families. sad.gif
MRFranks
QUOTE(gmanders777 @ Nov 14 2004, 05:15 AM)
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/na...-home-headlines

THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ
These Unseen Wounds Cut Deep

A mental health crisis is emerging, with one in six returning soldiers afflicted, experts say.

By Esther Schrader
Times Staff Writer

November 14, 2004

WASHINGTON — Matt LaBranche got the tattoos at a seedy place down the street from the Army hospital here where he was a patient in the psychiatric ward.

The pain of the needle felt good to the 40-year-old former Army sergeant, whose memories of his nine months as a machine-gunner in Iraq had left him, he said, "feeling dead inside." LaBranche's back is now covered in images, the largest the dark outline of a sword. Drawn from his neck to the small of his back, it is emblazoned with the words LaBranche says encapsulate the war's effect on him: "I've come to bring you hell."

In soldiers like LaBranche — their bodies whole but their psyches deeply wounded — a crisis is unfolding, mental health experts say. One out of six soldiers returning from Iraq is suffering the effects of post-traumatic stress — and as more come home, that number is widely expected to grow.

The Pentagon, which did not anticipate the extent of the problem, is scrambling to find resources to address it.

A study by the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research found that 15.6% of Marines and 17.1% of soldiers surveyed after they returned from Iraq suffered major depression, generalized anxiety or post-traumatic stress disorder — a debilitating, sometimes lifelong change in the brain's chemistry that can include flashbacks, sleep disorders, panic attacks, violent outbursts, acute anxiety and emotional numbness.

Army and Veterans Administration mental health experts say there is reason to believe the war's ultimate psychological fallout will worsen. The Army survey of 6,200 soldiers and Marines included only troops willing to report their problems. The study did not look at reservists, who tend to suffer a higher rate of psychological injury than career Marines and soldiers. And the soldiers in the study served in the early months of the war, when tours were shorter and before the Iraqi insurgency took shape.

"The bad news is that the study underestimated the prevalence of what we are going to see down the road," said Dr. Matthew J. Friedman, a professor of psychiatry and pharmacology at Dartmouth Medical School who is executive director of the VA's National Center for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

Since the study was completed, Friedman said: "The complexion of the war has changed into a grueling counterinsurgency. And that may be very important in terms of the potential toxicity of this combat experience."

Mental health professionals say they fear the system is not moving fast enough to treat the trauma. They say slowness to recognize what was happening to Vietnam veterans contributed to the psychological devastation from that war.

More than 30% of Vietnam veterans eventually suffered from the condition that more than a decade later was given the name post-traumatic stress disorder. But since their distress was not clinically understood until long after the war ended, most went for years without meaningful treatment.

"When we missed the boat with the Vietnam vets, we didn't get another chance," said Jerry Clark, director of the veterans clinic in Alexandria, Va. "When they left the service, they went away not for a month or two but for 10 years. And they came back addicted, incarcerated and all these things. We can't miss the boat again. It is imperative."

Experts on post-traumatic stress disorder say it should come as no surprise that some of the soldiers in Iraq are fighting mental illness.

Combat stress disorders — named and renamed but strikingly alike — have ruined lives following every war in history. Homer's Achilles may have suffered from some form of it. Combat stress was documented in the late 19th century after the Franco-Prussian War. After the Civil War, doctors called the condition "nostalgia," or "soldiers heart." In World War I, soldiers were said to suffer shell shock; in World War II and Korea, combat fatigue or battle fatigue.

But it wasn't until 1985 that the American Psychiatric Assn. finally gave a name to the condition that had sent tens of thousands of Vietnam veterans into lives of homelessness, crime or despair.

A war like the one in Iraq — in which a child is as likely to die as a soldier and unseen enemies detonate bombs — presents ideal conditions for its rise.

Yet the Army initially sent far too few psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers to combat areas, an Army study released in the summer of 2003 found. Until this year, Congress had allocated no new funds to deal with the mental health effects of the war in Iraq. And when it did earmark money, the sum was minimal: $5 million in each of the next three years.

"We're gearing ourselves up now and preparing ourselves to meet whatever the need is, but clearly this is something that could not be planned for," said Dr. Alfonso Batres, a psychologist who heads the VA's national office of readjustment counseling services.

Last year, 1,100 troops who had fought in Iraq or Afghanistan came to VA clinics seeking help for symptoms of depression or post-traumatic stress; this year, the number grew tenfold. In all, 23% of Iraq veterans treated at VA facilities have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.

"And this is first-year data," Batres said. "Our experience is that over time that will increase."

In the red brick buildings of Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the "psych patients," as they are known, mingle, sometimes uncomfortably, with those who have lost limbs and organs.

One soldier being treated at Walter Reed, who spoke on condition of anonymity, walks the hospital campus in the bloodied combat boots of a friend he watched bleed to death.

Another Iraq veteran in treatment at Walter Reed, Army 1st Lt. Jullian Philip Goodrum, drives most mornings to nearby Silver Spring, Md., seeking the solitude of movies and the solace of friends.

He leaves early to avoid traffic — the crush of cars makes him jumpy. On more than one occasion, he has imagined snipers with their sights on him in the streets. Diesel fumes cause flashbacks. He keeps a vial of medication in his pocket and pops a pill when he gets nervous.

"You question — outside of dealing with your psych injury, which will affect you from one degree or another throughout your life — you also question yourself," Goodrum said. "I trained. I was an excellent soldier, a strong character. How could my mind dysfunction?"

When it began to become clear that what the Pentagon initially believed would be a rapid, clear-cut war had transmuted into a drawn-out counterinsurgency, the Army began pushing to reach and treat distressed soldiers sooner.

The number of mental health professionals deployed near frontline positions in Iraq has been increased. Suicide prevention programs are given to soldiers in the field. According to the Pentagon, 31 U.S. troops have killed themselves in Iraq.

At more than 200 storefront clinics known as Vet Centers — created in 1979 to reach out to Vietnam veterans — the VA has increased the number of group therapy sessions and staff. Three months ago, the VA hired 50 Iraq war veterans to help serve as advocates at the clinics.

Officials acknowledge that is only a start. The Government Accountability Office found in a study released in September that the VA lacked the information it needed to determine whether it could meet an increased demand for services.

"Predicting which veterans will seek VA care and at which facilities is inherently uncertain," the report concluded, "particularly given that the symptoms of PTSD may not appear for years."

The Army and the VA are also trying to catalog and research the mental health effects of this war better than they have in the past. In addition to the Walter Reed study, several more are tracking soldiers from before their deployment to Iraq through their combat experiences and into the future.

If Iraq veterans can be helped sooner, they may fare better than those who fought in Vietnam, mental health experts say. And they note that the nation, although divided on the Iraq war, is more united in caring for the needs of returning soldiers than it was in the Vietnam era. And in the last decade, new techniques have proved effective in treating stress disorders, among them cognitive-behavioral therapy and drugs like Zoloft and Paxil.

Whether people like Matt LaBranche seek and receive treatment will determine how deep an effect the stress of the war in Iraq ultimately has on U.S. society.

Before the war, LaBranche was living in Saco, Maine, with his wife and children and had no history of mental illness.

He deployed to Iraq with a National Guard transportation company based in Bangor. He came home a different person.

Just three days after he was discharged from Walter Reed, he was arrested for threatening his former wife. When he goes to court Dec. 9, he could be looking at jail time.

He lies on a couch at his brother's house most days now, struggling with the image of the Iraqi woman who died in his arms after he shot her, and the children he says caught some of his bullets. His speech is pocked with obscenities.

On a recent outing with friends, he became so enraged when he saw a Muslim family that he had to take medication to calm down.

He is seeing a therapist, but only once every two weeks.

"I'm taking enough drugs to sedate an elephant, and I still wake up dreaming about it," LaBranche said. "I wish I had just freaking died over there."

Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times
*




Having suffered the effects of PTSD, I know first hand how debilitating it is. Although I didn't turn to crime, I did turn to alcohol. My drinking was moderate, but dropped off significantly after I went through counselling in the mid-80's after a series of flashbacks and nightmares. My crazy behaviour almost derailed my law enforcement career. I'm still just a little mentally deranged. I still have flashbacks, and smells or sounds bring on periods of retrograde memories. IT NEVER GOES AWAY--IT JUST LAYS BENEATH THE SURFACE OF MY CONCIOUSNESS UNTIL ANOTHER VAGRANT SMELL, SOUND OR SIGHT BRINGS ON ANOTHER FLASHBACK! The difference though, is I no longer have to find a safe place, or a tactically advantageous place to hide. People, I've rediscovered are NOT the enemy--are present Administration is!
ARMYDAD
THIS WAS SENT TO ME BY THE BUCKEYE STATE COUNCIL OF VIETNAM VETERANS OF AMERICA

From: gabby1369
To: OPVET-PAC, "Doc" <j.p.wilson, KKelly
CC: ThomasCruickshank
Subject: FW: A Flood of Troubled Soldiers Is in the Offing, Experts Predict - NY Times
Date: Thu, 16 Dec 2004 18:06:48 -0500

-----Original Message-----
From: songbemet
Sent: Thursday, December 16, 2004 5:05 PM
To: OSACVSO- Bradley David; S. Daniel Cannode; John Erby; J R Fell; Herbert D. Greff; Donald Kuether; Michael E. Mahoney; Robert McCarty; Larry Moore; MarineCorpLeague; Mary Oliver; G Ondick; M P; Bob Park; Jane Roland; William Seagraves; Tom Simon
Cc: Joe 15_Benedict; Jeanne 15_Black; John 15_Bradfield; Sean 15_Ennis; Robert L. 15_Foward; TJ 15_J; Ron 15_Kimmel; Bill 15_Malumphy; James R 15_Sledz; PAT 15_SWEENEY; Phil 15_Toomey; VVA 55; Ron Ball; OSACVSO- Bradley David; F D; T Ellis; G England; John Erby; S F; William C. Fulmer; Clifford Hayes; Larry N Homan; Loren Sidle; James L Spencer; 010 VVA; 015 VVA; 015 VVA; 034 VVA; 035 VVA; 042 VVA; 055 VVA; 089 VVA; 097 VVA; 157 VVA; 249 VVA; 255 VVA; 281 VVA; 385 VVA; 532 VVA; 616 VVA; 649 VVA; 670 VVA; 709 VVA; 783 VVA; 810 VVA; 822 VVA; 857 VVA; 900 VVA; 930 VVA; Ralph Evans VVA 676; Nicholas Wade; Dr. Tom Wiseman
Subject: Fwd: A Flood of Troubled Soldiers Is in the Offing, Experts Predict - NY Times

If you read nothing else today please take a moment to read what is below, then ask yourself do we want this generation of Veterans to be treated better or worse than we the Vietnam Era Veterans have been treated?

Paul Sutton wrote:

From: "Paul Sutton"
To: ssgtusmc6169
Subject: A Flood of Troubled Soldiers Is in the Offing, Experts Predict - NY Times
Date: Thu, 16 Dec 2004 13:06:53 -0500

Shades of Vietnam. Only difference - these vets won't have to fight for 10
years to get their PTSD recognized by the American Psychaitric Association.

Paul Sutton
"The Land of the Free, Because of the Brave!"

A Flood of Troubled Soldiers Is in the Offing, Experts Predict
By SCOTT SHANE

WASHINGTON, Dec. 15 - The nation's hard-pressed health care system for
Veterans is facing a potential deluge of tens of thousands of Soldiers
returning from Iraq with serious mental health problems brought on by the
stress and carnage of war, Veterans' Advocates and Military Doctors say.

An Army study shows that about one in six Soldiers in Iraq report symptoms
of major depression, serious anxiety or post-traumatic stress disorder, a
proportion that some experts believe could eventually climb to one in three,
the rate ultimately found in Vietnam veterans.
Because about one million
American troops have served so far in the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan,
according to Pentagon figures, some experts predict that the number
eventually requiring mental health treatment could exceed 100,000.


"There's a train coming that's packed with people who are going to need help
for the next 35 years,"
said Stephen L. Robinson, a 20-year Army Veteran who
is now the executive director of the National Gulf War Resource Center, an
advocacy group. Mr. Robinson wrote a report in September on the psychological toll of the war for the Center for American Progress, a Washington research group.

"I have a very strong sense that the mental health consequences are going to
be the medical story of this war,"
said Dr. Stephen C. Joseph, who served as
the assistant secretary of defense for health affairs from 1994 to 1997.

What was planned as a short and decisive intervention in Iraq has become a
grueling counterinsurgency that has put American troops into sustained
close-quarters combat on a scale not seen since the Vietnam War.

Psychiatrists say the kind of fighting seen in the recent retaking of
Falluja - spooky urban settings with unlimited hiding places; the
impossibility of telling Iraqi friend from Iraqi foe; the knowledge that
every stretch of road may conceal an explosive device -
is tailored to
produce the adrenaline-gone-haywire reactions that leave lasting emotional
scars.


And in no recent conflict have so many Soldiers faced such uncertainty about
how long they will be deployed. Veterans say the repeated extensions of duty
in Iraq are emotionally battering, even for the most stoical of warriors.


Military and Department of Veterans Affairs officials say most military
personnel will survive the war without serious mental issues and note that
the one million troops include many who have not participated in ground
combat, including Sailors on ships. By comparison with Troops in Vietnam,
the officials said, Soldiers in Iraq get far more mental health support and
are likely to return to a more understanding public.

But the duration and intensity of the war have doctors at veterans hospitals
across the country worried about the coming caseload.


"We're seeing an increasing number of guys with classic post-traumatic
stress symptoms," said Dr. Evan Kanter, a psychiatrist at the Puget Sound
Veterans hospital in Seattle. "We're all anxiously waiting for a flood that
we expect is coming. And I feel stretched right now."


A September report by the Government Accountability Office found that
officials at six of seven Veterans Affairs medical facilities surveyed said
they "may not be able to meet" increased demand for treatment of
post-traumatic stress disorder. Officers who served in Iraq say the
unrelenting tension of the counterinsurgency will produce that demand
.

"In the urban terrain, the enemy is everywhere, across the street, in that
window, up that alley," said Paul Rieckhoff, who served as a platoon leader
with the Florida Army National Guard for 10 months, going on hundreds of
combat patrols around Baghdad. "It's a fishbowl. You never feel safe. You
never relax."


In his platoon of 38 people, 8 were divorced while in Iraq or since they
returned in February, Mr. Rieckhoff said. One man in his 120-person company
killed himself after coming home.


"Too many guys are drinking," said Mr. Rieckhoff, who started the group
Operation Truth to support the troops. "A lot have a hard time finding a
job. I think the system is vastly under-prepared for the flood of mental
health problems."


Capt. Tim Wilson, an Army chaplain serving outside Mosul, said he counseled
8 to 10 soldiers a week for combat stress. Captain Wilson said he was
impressed with the resilience of his 700-strong battalion but added that
fierce battles have produced turbulent emotions.


"There are usually two things they are dealing with," said Captain Wilson, a
Southern Baptist from South Carolina. "Either being shot at and not wanting
to get shot at again, or after shooting someone, asking, 'Did I commit
murder?' or 'Is God going to forgive me?' or 'How am I going to be when I
get home?' "


When all goes as it should, the life-saving medical services available to
combat units like Captain Wilson's may actually swell the ranks of
psychological casualties. Of wounded soldiers who are alive when medics
arrive, 98 percent now survive, said Dr. Michael E. Kilpatrick, the
Pentagon's deputy director of deployment health support. But they must come
to terms not only with emotional scars but the literal scars of amputated
limbs and disfiguring injuries.


Through the end of September, the Army had evacuated 885 troops from Iraq
for psychiatric reasons, including some who had threatened or tried suicide.
But those are only the most extreme cases. Often, the symptoms of
post-traumatic stress disorder do not emerge until months after discharge.


"During the war, they don't have the leisure to focus on how they're
feeling," said Sonja Batten, a psychologist at the Baltimore Veterans
hospital. "It's when they get back and find that their relationships are
suffering and they can't hold down a job that they realize they have a
problem."

Robert E. Brown was proud to be in the first wave of Marines invading Iraq
last year. But Mr. Brown has also found himself in the first ranks of
returning Soldiers to be unhinged by what they experienced.

He served for six months as a Marine chaplain's assistant, counseling
wounded soldiers, organizing makeshift memorial services and filling in on
raids. He knew he was in trouble by the time he was on a ship home, when the
sound of a hatch slamming would send him diving to the floor.

After he came home, he began drinking heavily and saw his marriage fall
apart, Mr. Brown said. He was discharged and returned to his hometown, Peru,
Ind., where he slept for two weeks in his Ford Explorer, surrounded by
mementos of the war.

"I just couldn't stand to be with anybody," said Mr. Brown, 35, sitting at his father's kitchen table.

Dr. Batten started him on the road to recovery by giving his torment a name,
an explanation and a treatment plan. But 18 months after leaving Iraq, he
takes medication for depression and anxiety and returns in dreams to the
horrors of his war nearly every night.


The scenes repeat in ghastly alternation, he says: the Iraqi girl, 3 or 4
years old, her skull torn open by a stray round; the Kuwaiti man imprisoned
for 13 years by Saddam Hussein, cowering in madness and covered in waste;
the young American soldier, desperate to escape the fighting, who sat in the
latrine and fired his M-16 through his arm; the Iraqi missile speeding in as
troops scramble in the dark for cover.


"That's the one that just stops my heart," said Mr. Brown. "I'm in my rack
sleeping and there's a school bus full of explosives coming down at me and
there's nowhere to go."


Such costs of war, personal and financial, are not revealed by official
casualty counts.
"People see the figure of 1,200 dead," said Dr. Kanter, of
Seattle, referring to the number of Americans killed in Iraq. "Much more
rarely do they see the number of seriously wounded. And almost never do they
hear anything at all about the psychiatric casualties."


As of Wednesday 5,229 Americans have been seriously wounded in Iraq. Through
July, nearly 31,000 Veterans of Operation Iraqi Freedom had applied for
disability benefits for injuries or psychological ailments, according to the
Department Veterans Affairs.


Every war produces its medical signature, said Dr. Kenneth Craig Hyams, a
former Navy physician now at the Department of Veterans Affairs. Soldiers
came back from the Civil War with "irritable heart." In World War I there
was "shell shock." World War II Vets had "battle fatigue." The troubles of
Vietnam veterans led to the codification of post-traumatic stress disorder.

In combat, the fight-or-flight reflex floods the body with adrenaline,
permitting impressive feats of speed and endurance. But after spending weeks
or months in this altered state, some soldiers cannot adjust to a peaceful
setting.
Like Mr. Brown, for whom a visit to a crowded bank at lunch became
an ordeal, they display what doctors call "hypervigilance." They sit in
restaurants with their backs to a wall; a car's backfire can transport them
back to Baghdad.

To prevent such damage, the Army has deployed "combat stress control units"
in Iraq to provide treatment quickly to soldiers suffering from emotional
overload, keeping them close to the healing camaraderie of their unit.

"We've found through long experience that this is best treated with sleep,
rest, food, showers and a clean uniform, if that is possible,"
said Dr.
Thomas J. Burke, an Army psychiatrist who oversees mental health policy at
the Department of Defense. "If they get counseling to tell them they are not
crazy, they will often get better rapidly."


To detect signs of trouble, the Department of Defense gives soldiers
pre-deployment and post-deployment health questionnaires. Seven of 17
questions to Soldiers leaving Iraq seek signs of depression, anxiety and
post-traumatic stress disorder.


But some reports suggest that such well-intentioned policies falter in the
field. During his time as a platoon leader in Iraq, Mr. Rieckhoff said, he
never saw a combat stress control unit.
"I never heard of them until I came
back," he said.


And the health screens have run up against an old enemy of military
medicine: soldiers who cover up their symptoms.
In July 2003, as Jeffrey
Lucey, a Marine reservist from Belchertown, Mass., prepared to leave Iraq
after six months as a truck driver, he at first intended to report traumatic
memories of seeing corpses, his parents, Kevin and Joyce Lucey, said. But
when a supervisor suggested that such candor might delay his return home,
Mr. Lucey played down his problems.


At home, he spiraled downhill, haunted by what he had seen and began to have
delusions about having killed unarmed Iraqis. In June, at 23, he hanged
himself with a hose in the basement of the family home.


"Other marines have verified to us that it is a subtle understanding which
exists that if you want to go home you do not report any problems,"
Mr.
Lucey's parents wrote in an e-mail message. "Jeff's perception, which is
shared by others, is that to seek help is to admit that you are weak."


REMEMBER THAT WITH THE PENTAGON HAVING RECRUITMENT PROBLEMS, ESPECIALLY IN THE NATIONAL GUARD AND RESERVES, AND THE MARINES DO HAVE A RESERVE FORCE, JUST LIKE VIETNAM = THE MEDICAL OBJECTIVE IS TO RETURN THE MARINE OR SOLDIER TO "COMBAT" = PERIOD! THAT PLUS "COST" OF PAYING BENEFITS WAS THE DRIVING FORCE OF THE NIXON ADMINISTRATION AND REPUBLICANS IN CONGRESS DURING VIETNAM OPPOSING RECOGNITION OF PTSD. IT COULD GIVE TROOPS THE EXCUSE THEY NEEDED TO GET OUT OF COMBAT DUTY ONCE THEY HAD MORE THAN THEY COULD PSYCHOLOGICALLY TAKE. ARMYDAD. YEP = IT IS SURELY TIME FOR "THE DRAFT" TO INCLUDE DRAFTING YOUNG REPUBLICANS FROM OUR COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES.

Dr. Kilpatrick, of the Pentagon, acknowledges the problem, saying that
National Guardsmen and Reservists in particular have shown an "abysmal"
level of candor in the screenings. "We still have a long ways to go," he
said. "The warrior ethos is that there are no imperfections."

Richard A. Oppel Jr. contributed reporting from Baghdad for this article.
Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company

Respectfully,

Joseph A. Jennings III
Exec. Dir.
VVA "BUCKEYE" State Council

"For those that have fought for it, ' FREEDOM ' has a flavor the protected will never know"
Pie
I think we need an emoticon that sheds tears.

This is so very, very sad.

This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2008 Invision Power Services, Inc.