SBAND Seminar Materials 2013 Free Ethics: Echoes of War The Combat Veteran | Page 7
experts
debate
the
numbers,
among
the
3.5
million
Americans
who
served
in
Vietnam,
estimates
of
psychiatric
casualties
range
from
1,000,000
to
1,500,000
cases.18
Twentieth
century
democracies
have
been
better
than
most
at
admitting
and
dealing
with
their
combat
psychiatric
casualties.
Information
from
non-?Western
sources
is
extremely
limited,
but
we
now
know
that
America’s
experience
is
representative
of
a
universal
cost
of
modern,
protracted
warfare.19
Nations
around
the
world
have
experienced
similar
mass
psychiatric
casualties,
but
many
have
simply
driven
these
casualties
into
battle
at
bayonet
point,
shooting
those
who
refused
or
were
unable
to
continue.20
D. PTSD
Today
PTSD
was
not
formally
recognized
by
the
psychiatric
community
and,
more
importantly,
the
Veterans
Administration,
until
1980,
too
late
for
many
psychologically
injured
Vietnam
veterans.
Their
lives
and
their
trust
in
the
system
were
often
shattered
by
that
time
and
many
refused
treatment
when
and
if
it
was
eventually
offered.
Ultimately,
31
percent
of
male
Vietnam
veterans
and
27
percent
of
female
Vietnam
veterans
have
had
PTSD
in
their
lifetime.21
1. PTSD’s
Stigma
Though
PTSD
has
been
informally
recognized
for
millennia,
approaches
to
dealing
with
it
have
varied
widely.
After
battle,
many
Native
American
and
other
tribal
societies
segregated
their
warriors
from
the
rest
of
the
tribe,
sometimes
for
weeks,
where
they
were
physically
cleansed
of
the
blood
from
battle,
and
spiritually
cleansed
of
their
traumatic
experiences.
Some
of
the
rituals
were
intended
to
transfer
to
the
stain
of
“bloodguilt”
from
the
warrior
to
his
people
as
a
whole.
This
shared
responsibility
was
believed
to
lift
the
spiritual
weight
of
combat
from
the
shoulders
of
the
warrior
and
to
ease
his
transition
back
Id.
Id.
20
Id.
21
Saint
Louis
Area
Iraq
War
Veterans,
Learning
from
Vietnam
–
Facts
About
Trauma,
Iraq,
and
Afghanistan
(2007),
http://s tliraqwarvets.wordpress.com/2007/03/26/learning-?from-?vietnam-?facts-?about-?trauma-?iraq-?and-? afghanistan/
(citing
National
Center
for
Post-?Traumatic
Stress
Disorder
and
The
U.S.
Department
of
Veterans
Affairs).
19 18
7