SBAND Seminar Materials 2013 Free Ethics: Echoes of War The Combat Veteran | Page 9
arm.
This
too
was
attacked
by
electricity,
but
before
it
disappeared
it
had
to
be
chased
from
the
right
arm,
left
leg,
and
finally
the
right
leg
with
each
part
similarly
treated.”27
In
the
aftermath
of
WWII,
the
United
States’
VA
was
guilty
of
similar
treatment
of
our
veterans.
The
VA
had
102,000
hospital
beds
full
and
20,700
patients
in
waiting,
60
percent
of
which
were
in
need
of
psychiatric
care.28
Maintaining
these
patients
could
cost
as
much
as
$35,000
per
year,
but
George
Washington
University
professor
Walter
Freeman
created
the
ice
pick
lobotomy
to
be
able
to
treat
certain
psychoses.29
Doctors
would
use
“a
hammer
to
tap
a
modified
ice
pick
through
the
patient’s
eye
socket
and
into
the
prefrontal
lobe,
which
was
then
severed
from
the
rest
of
the
brain.”30
World
War
II’s
most
decorated
soldier,
Audie
Murphy,
is
credited
with
forcing
the
United
States
government
to
study
PTSD
and
extend
benefits
to
psychologically
injured
veterans.
Audie
returned
home
an
American
Hero
and
went
on
to
become
a
major
Hollywood
movie
star.
He
also
secretly
suffered
severe
PTSD.
He
became
a
chronic
alcoholic
and
prescription
drug
addict
who
later
admitted
he
slept
with
a
loaded
gun
under
his
pillow
every
night
after
the
war.
His
wife
reported
many
incidents
of
domestic
violence
including
an
instance
in
which
he
held
a
gun
to
her
head.
Audie
eventually
sought
help
for
his
condition
and
then
broke
the
taboo
against
publicly
discussing
war-?related
psychological
injuries.
Today,
the
military
is
making
strides
in
removing
the
stigma
of
PTSD
among
its
ranks.
Troops
heading
into
combat
are
educated
about
PTSD
and
encouraged
to
seek
help
if
they
need
it.
The
military
also
now
deploys
“combat
stress
officers,”
basically
battlefield
psychologists,
to
the
front
lines
to
screen
and
treat
troops
as
they
come
out
of
battle.
Though
the
military
is
making
progress
in
removing
the
stigma,
it
still
has
a
long
way
to
go.
The
military
is
under
unprecedented
strain
as
it
struggles
to
meet
the
demands
of
two
extended
conflicts.
Military
leaders
are
often
caught
between
a
rock
and
a
hard
place.
Though
they
are
now
trained
to
recognize
and
encourage
treatment
of
mental
health
disorders,
they
are
also
under
pressure
to
field
combat-?effective
units.
Sometimes
they
relegate
mental
health
treatment
to
a
secondary
priority.
A
series
of
2007
media
reports
27 28
Id.
at
78
(emphasis
added).
PENNY
COLEMAN,
FLASHBACK:
POSTTRAUMATIC
STRESS
DISORDER,
SUICIDE,
AND
THE
LESSONS
OF
WAR
54
(2006).
29
Id.
at
54?55.
30
Id.
at
54.
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