PTSD cases will ‘totally overwhelm’ country, experts say
http://tricare.osd.mil/eenews/downloads/122005%20PTSD%20Cases.doc
December 26, 2005
Army Times
By Rick Maze
Times staff writer
Mental health and military family policy experts warn of what one called a
“tsunami” of woe ahead because the federal government is ill-prepared to cope
with post-traumatic stress problems among returning Iraq and Afghanistan war
veterans.
“We are, as a country, going to be overwhelmed, totally overwhelmed,” said
Charles Figley, director of the Florida State University Traumatology Institute
and an expert on war-related mental stress.
Post-traumatic stress disorder has been a concern of the Pentagon and Department
of Veterans Affairs since studies last year found about 18 percent of U.S.
troops returning from Iraq and 11 percent of those returning from Afghanistan
are reporting mental health problems.
This is higher than PTSD levels reported among Vietnam War veterans.
At a Capitol Hill briefing sponsored by Democrats on the House Veterans’ Affairs
Committee, the government received praise for the counseling and treatment being
provided to service members and veterans but was faulted for not being prepared
to help families.
Treating PTSD as a family problem, not just a disability for the veteran or
service member, was the main purpose of the Dec. 8 briefing, as Democrats try to
get bipartisan support for a bill that would increase access to family
therapists for veterans and their families.
The bill, HR 1588, has 102 co-sponsors, but only three are Republicans.
“We commit a serious disservice to veterans and their families if we only focus
on the veteran with PTSD,” said Rep. Lane Evans, D-Ill., who sponsored the
briefing and is a sponsor of the bill. “We would be remiss to ignore that often
it is a spouse or family member who encourages a service member or veteran with
PTSD or other readjustment problems to seek counseling and treatment.”
Surveys of U.S. troops in Iraq highlight some of the problems ahead. Evans’
staff says that one year after returning from deployment, 15 percent of service
members plan to get divorced and 20 percent say they recognize a need to reduce
their alcohol use, both signs of potentially serious family problems.
Among Vietnam veterans, 38 percent who were married got divorced within six
months of returning home, and veterans with PTSD were three to six times more
likely to divorce than those without the illness, Evans’ staff said. VA also has
found that 22 percent of veterans with PTSD had drug or alcohol addictions.
The need to help families is real, according to family policy experts.
“Families want to know what are normal behaviors associated with a deployment to
a war zone and what are warning signs for something more serious,” said Joyce
Raezer of the National Military Family Association.
“They want to know how long it should take before the service member gets back
to normal. Families understand that the service member may be angry, but what
happens when the anger continues and you’re tired of walking on eggshells?”
Counseling programs, when available, are helpful, especially for families of
members who have made multiple deployments, she said. But obtaining counseling
remains a problem for those in rural areas and for the parents and siblings who
see post-combat problems in single troops.
Counseling also can be difficult to find in communities in which mental health
counselors themselves have deployed.
The bottom line, Raezer said, is that “wounded service members have wounded
families.”
Much of the current PTSD treatment program is based on the Vietnam-era
experience. But Figley said the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are producing “a
more challenging group of people to deal with.”
“We are changing the textbooks,” he said.