cherryblossom
VIP Member
I don't disagree with this statement.This is where our beliefs differ. I believe that issues that arise from trauma are not in fact a mental illness but a normal human reaction to trauma.
I have also questioned the use of "mental Illness" with regards to PTSD (I think it was on the other PTSD forum that I started a discussion about it). I like the term 'psychological injury' that you mentioned in one of your quotes. I personally think that is better description.
The DSM-IV (American Psychiatric Association, 2000, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders IV) provides clear descriptions of diagnostic categories in order to enable clinicians and investigators to diagnose, communicate about, study, and treat people with various mental disorders. They do not encompass all the conditions for which people may be treated. PTSD is just one of many 'diagnosis's. Not everyone who suffers trauma will go on to develop PTSD (although figures are hard to determine), which is the worst end of the scale when it comes to anxiety disorders. When the brain reaches the state of PTSD, it means the brain has physiologically broken through change, via a Chemical Imbalance, where symptoms cause a permanent chemical imbalance. Permanent being the reason there is no 'cure' to date.
Whether our symptoms are called a 'disorder', an 'injury', 'condition' or an 'illness' (or anything else for that matter), doesn't really change the fact that we suffer. Whether, our symptoms can be 'treated', 'managed', 'sent into remission', 'recovered' or 'cured' (or however one wants to describe it), means for me that I will probably need to get help/ treatment and also help myself to "get better".
I'm not disagreeing with you Ezabella. Whatever words we use to describe the after-effects of trauma, we can work out ways to reduce debilitating symptoms.
I agree Blutarg.There is no possibility of complete healing. That would be unreal thinking. The lasting effects are intwined in everything, therefore it becomes a condition, and being such can be managed even if it can't be cured.
I have been diagnosed with PTSD, while I can't correct the physical changes that have gone on in my brain, I can find ways to manage the many different symptoms.