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The Mournful Effects Of PTSD In Today's World

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The Mournful Effects of PTSD in Today’s World Lone Star College - Fairbanks Timothy Donovan & Andy Cortez Abstract Feeling afraid when you are in danger is a normal human reaction. Fear triggers changes in us and we tend set up defense mechanisms to avoid the danger. This feeling of being frightened or stressed is a normal healthy response that is meant to protect us from harm. This period of stress is temporary and should leave when the danger is no present. In some people this state of feeling stressed or frightened never leaves. This reaction has been termed post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Post-PTSD may develop in a person after experiencing a traumatic event. It is often associated with …show more content…

Because of this statement then we must assume that PTSD has always been around but never identified as PTSD until the 20th century. It has been called many names but the causes and symptoms are the same. Reports of stress associated with famous historical battles appear as early as the 6th century BC. Writing discovered from three thousand years ago by an ancient Egyptian scribe named Hori described his feeling before going into battle “You determine to go forward. . . . Shuddering seizes you, the hair on your head stands on end, your soul lies in your hand.” (Bentley, The VVA Veteran, 1991, March/April 2005). In 1678 Swiss military physicians defined Nostalgia as a condition characterized by symptoms of depression, home sickness, poor sleep patterns, weakness, loss of appetite, anxiousness, inattentive, fever, rapid, and erratic heart activity. German doctors identified these symptoms as “heimweh,” or “homesickness” while the French called it “maladie du pays,” and the Spanish “estar roto,” or “to be broken” (Bentley, The VVA Veteran, 1991, March/April 2005). No matter that the name was different, it is evident that fear and trauma from military actions were causing similar …show more content…

The Civil War was so horrific that many soldiers were left with psychological wounds that doctors did not know how to treat. Dorothea Dix, an American activist who advocated on behalf of the poor and insane was instrumental in the creation of the Government Hospital for the Insane in Washington, D.C. in 1855. Because little was still know about PTSD, soldiers sent to this hospital because of their symptoms were embarrassed because they were being seen as weak and just home

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