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Post-traumatic stress disorders

Post-traumatic stress disorders

A community portal about Post-traumatic stress disorders with blogs, videos, and photos. According to Wikipedia.org: Post-traumatic stress disorder is a term for certain psychological consequences of exposure to, or confrontation with... [more]

A community portal about Post-traumatic stress disorders with blogs, videos, and photos. According to Wikipedia.org: Post-traumatic stress disorder is a term for certain psychological consequences of exposure to, or confrontation with, stressful experiences that the person experiences as highly traumatic. The experience must involve actual or threatened death, serious physical injury, or a threat to physical and/or psychological integrity. It is occasionally called post-traumatic stress reaction to emphasize that it is a routine result of traumatic experience rather than a manifestation of a pre-existing psychological weakness on the part of the patient.

Articles

Anxiety Disorders

From:  healthruns.com
Over Anxious? What is anxiety? It is an emotion or a feeling of apprehension from the anticipation of danger . Anxiety can also be termed as a feeling or state of unease or unwanted concern . Types of Anxiety Disorders There are many kinds of Anxiety Disorders. They are not psychotic disorders. Anxiety disorders are always mistaken as psychotic. Anxiety is not a negative feeling. Emotions are there to help us to deal with a situation, solve a problem. But as it’s said... Read Full Story

Injured, stressed veterans suffer more headaches

From:  reuters.com
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Veterans who suffered physical injuries or developed post-traumatic stress disorder after combat in Iraq or Afghanistan may suffer recurrent headaches, a new study suggests. In surveys of 308 veterans, researchers found that those who had suffered combat injuries were at greater risk of developing migraine headaches. Meanwhile, those who screened positive for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) had elevated rates of both migraine and tension-type headaches. The... Read Full Story

VA to ease way for vets to get stress disability

From:  ap.org
Female soldiers and others who served behind front lines have long complained about how hard it is to prove their combat experience when applying for disability due to post-traumatic stress disorder. That could soon change. The Veterans Affairs Department has proposed reducing the paperwork required for veterans to show their experience caused combat-related stress. Even just the fear of hostile action would be sufficient, as long as a VA psychologist or psychiatrist agreed. The VA says the... Read Full Story

When a Veteran Turns to Crime: PTSD Sufferer, called "Broken."

When a veteran turns to crime He has posttraumatic stress disorder; a VA counselor called him "broken." GENE J. PUSKAR / Associated Press Windy Horner holds a portrait of her husband, Nick (left); Laurie Claar holds one of her son Matthew. Both had posttraumatic stress disorder: Claar killed himself; Horner is charged in deaths. HOLLIDAYSBURG, Pa. - When the envelope arrived, Windy Horner was talking with her husband, Nick - Windy on a cell phone, Nick in the Blair County jail. Windy... Read Full Story

Attitude may affect long-term recovery from whiplash

From:  reuters.com
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - For people who suffer whiplash in a car accident, feelings of being wronged may raise their risk of lingering post-traumatic stress, a new study suggests. The study, which followed 112 patients in rehab for whiplash injuries, found that 45 percent had symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) when they started treatment. And those with a greater sense of "perceived injustice" about their situation were more likely than others to still have PTSD symptoms at... Read Full Story

Study sheds light on post-combat mental problems

From:  reuters.com
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are typical after deployment to a war zone, and may even represent a healthy reaction to stress, but can lead to problems with mental functioning if they persist, new research in Iraq vets suggests. Past research has demonstrated that people exposed to life-threatening situations will show changes in their nervous and hormonal systems, Dr. Jennifer J. Vasterling of the VA Boston Healthcare System and her colleagues... Read Full Story

Ignore the Film Title and See the Movie THE MESSENGER

The new film THE MESSENGER would be much better served with the title NEXT OF KIN. While THE MESSENGER could refer to any number of movies -- and is an unmemorable title -- NEXT OF KIN is powerful, memorable and pinpoints the emotional rollercoaster of this compelling film. This film does NOT bash the military or the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan. Instead it provides a window into the lives of military personnel and their families who are forever changed by death. As those of you who are... Read Full Story

PTSD raises heart disease risk in Iraq war vets

From:  reuters.com
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Veterans who come home from Iraq and Afghanistan with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other mental health diagnoses are hit with a double whammy: They also have greater risk factors for heart disease, according to a report in the Journal of the American Medical Association. PTSD related to military service has been linked to heart disease in the past, but, to the authors' knowledge, the present study is the first to examine the association for veterans of... Read Full Story

Pot Might Ease PTSD: Study

Synthetic marijuana reduced post-traumatic stress disorder in rats By -- Robert Preidt Share What is this? Buzz Digg Facebook More... EMAIL PRINT RSS   FRIDAY, Nov. 13 (HealthDay News) -- Marijuana may help people with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), according to a new study. PTSD affects 10 to 30 percent of people who experience a traumatic event, such as a car accident or terror attack. These people... Read Full Story

Health impacts from 2001 U.S. attacks linger: study

From:  reuters.com
CHICAGO (Reuters) - The September 11, 2001 attacks that brought down New York's World Trade Center continue to trigger health problems for tens of thousands of people exposed to the horrors and dust of that day, researchers said on Tuesday. More than 400,000 office workers, residents, rescuers and passersby were in lower Manhattan on September 11 or shortly afterward, and an estimated 25,000 have since developed asthma and 61,000 suffer from post-traumatic stress, they reported in the... Read Full Story
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