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