Military personnel

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    special programs including UCLA’s Center for Advanced Surgical and Interventional Technology; the UCLA Brain Injury Research Center, the Ronald Katz Center for Collaborative Military Medicine, UCLA Operation Mend, the Nathanson Family Resilience Center, and the UCLA / Duke University National Center for Child Traumatic Stress’ Military Families Program and provide a legal clinic and pro bono lawyer activities relating to the legal problems of veterans. While we look forward to continuing this…

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    It is easy to find out who won a war, and it is easy to find statistics on casualties and fatalities. What is less accessible however, is the intangible component that is mental survival. We know that many of those who survive wars develop some level or form of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), but we pay less attention to the mental state that exists for these soldiers during the war. During the most widespread war in history, WWII, countless individuals abandoned their lives of normality…

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    Tom Leyton, a Vietnam veteran, was once "so full of hope"- but the war changed him. Experiencing a terrible mental illness, he trapped himself in his own world for decades. Gun shots all around you. Soldiers falling one by one. An agonising image no one can get rid of. As Australian soldiers return home nothing would seem the same to them. Brave men and women who served the country have to continue with a personal battle, a battle with the world of chaos known as post-traumatic stress disorder…

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    The psychological risks of combat for returning soldiers Over the past 20 years, more Australian soldiers died from suicide than those who died at war. Losing a peer is often hard for militaries. Even though psychological help is offered to help them, many refuse it. For veterans, it is not manly to seek mental health care. In fact, men are supposed to be strong enough to recover from war by themselves. One of the main psychological problems, post-traumatic stress disorder, consist of…

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    William presents with a combination of physical, cognitive, and psychological symptoms. His poor coping skills have also made him susceptible to depression and drug abuse. Although it is evident that William’s situation is exacerbated by a type1 trauma brought on through his exposure to combat while in the Army, his readjustment issues are also perpetuated by a traumatic brain injury (TBI), as his symptoms include anxiety, memory loss and dizziness. Treatments options for William should start…

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    All Quiet on the Western Front and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder All Quiet on the Western Front causes its readers to imagine the horrors of war. "In the branches dead men are hanging. A naked soldier is squatting in the fork of a tree, he still has his helmet on, otherwise he is entirely unclad. There is only half of him sitting up there...and somewhere else is plastered a bloody mess that was once a human limb. Over there lies a body...” (Remarque 172-173). Reading quotes like this one…

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    We Do Not Foreshadow

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    Outcomes We Do Not Foreshadow On July 28, 1914 the World War I inaugurated causing many countries to join. As these countries joined, the future outcomes were never clear to them. World War I had effects that no one could foreshadow. While some countries and individuals do not know the truth behind war,they later do as their economy is in crisis and soldiers shows signs of PTSD. The war affected all sorts of people and that is the risk they took. While many individuals initially…

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    We in what way are out veterans not important. They have been there ever since the revolutionary war all the way up to now. Either they are fighting for our freedom or against people who have made wrong decisions to attack us. They have been the brave men and women who have and will lay down their lives in order to protect the country that they love and keep us safe and protected. We look up to them as brave individuals who will lay down everything to keep our rights and freedom. Ever since…

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    they need, and so rightly deserve, at a VA hospital and turn to civilian hospitals. (Counts. 4) In her article in MEDSURG Nursing, Lynn Counts explains why this is a problem. "This means that they are most likely receiving care from civilian and non-military trained health care providers" (Counts. 4). It is vital that veterans receive care from specially trained individuals. Veterans do not have typical issues dealt with by most of the American public. It is imperative that the professionals…

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    A soldier’s homecoming should be a relief from what they have gone through in war. However, for some veterans there is a sense of emotional triggers or anger when they come home. They struggle to fit in with society after prolonged service. Paul experiences these emotions and struggles on the streets and in his household during his seventeen day leave. Much like the emotion in Suicide in the Trenches and the modern soldiers in Odysseus in America, Paul Baumer finds himself dispositioned in…

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