I just came across this it was published in 2010 at the bottom is the link to the web site it came from
In a momentous development yet to be mentioned in the American or the English language-speaking press, we’ve learned that Denmark has expanded the criteria for their version of our Purple Heart medal — given to those who have been wounded physically in combat operations — to include those who suffer the less-visible wound of post-traumatic stress disorder.
From an official Danish government publication, issued date October 10, 2010, and translated here: “In 2010 Her Majesty The Queen approved that…veterans who are wounded physically in international operations can receive the Armed Forces Medal for Wounded in Service.”
Importantly, the publication adds, “The Government recognizes the psychological harm on an equal footing with physical damage, and has therefore taken the initiative to add recognition of physical and mental injuries treated. The Defense medal “Wounded in Service” will from now on be attributed also to those mentally wounded.”
This past summer, the Jutland Post (Jyllands-Posten), one of Denmark’s largest-selling newspapers, published a video expose of Danish war veterans “so frustrated by society’s lack of empathy for suffering war-related post-traumatic behavioral issues (PTSD) that they have gone beneath the radar and are living in forests, eating berries and catching wildlife to survive,” according to Danish journalist Bent Lorentzen, who wrote about it, here.
Then Gitte Lillelund Bech, the first female Defense Minister, offended many Danes when she suggested that it was up to the veterans to find their own mental help. The head of one Danish veterans’ organization, Lars Christensen, responded angrily (translated) that her remarks were “a great insult to the people who today are suffering after having served Denmark. We urge all veterans to send their medals for us and we will return them to the Minister. When Gitte Lillelund Bech send people to war, it is also her responsibility to treat them properly when they get home.
http://homecomingvets.com/2010/10/2...lude-ptsd-in-awarding-their-medal-to-wounded/
In a momentous development yet to be mentioned in the American or the English language-speaking press, we’ve learned that Denmark has expanded the criteria for their version of our Purple Heart medal — given to those who have been wounded physically in combat operations — to include those who suffer the less-visible wound of post-traumatic stress disorder.
From an official Danish government publication, issued date October 10, 2010, and translated here: “In 2010 Her Majesty The Queen approved that…veterans who are wounded physically in international operations can receive the Armed Forces Medal for Wounded in Service.”
Importantly, the publication adds, “The Government recognizes the psychological harm on an equal footing with physical damage, and has therefore taken the initiative to add recognition of physical and mental injuries treated. The Defense medal “Wounded in Service” will from now on be attributed also to those mentally wounded.”
This past summer, the Jutland Post (Jyllands-Posten), one of Denmark’s largest-selling newspapers, published a video expose of Danish war veterans “so frustrated by society’s lack of empathy for suffering war-related post-traumatic behavioral issues (PTSD) that they have gone beneath the radar and are living in forests, eating berries and catching wildlife to survive,” according to Danish journalist Bent Lorentzen, who wrote about it, here.
Then Gitte Lillelund Bech, the first female Defense Minister, offended many Danes when she suggested that it was up to the veterans to find their own mental help. The head of one Danish veterans’ organization, Lars Christensen, responded angrily (translated) that her remarks were “a great insult to the people who today are suffering after having served Denmark. We urge all veterans to send their medals for us and we will return them to the Minister. When Gitte Lillelund Bech send people to war, it is also her responsibility to treat them properly when they get home.
http://homecomingvets.com/2010/10/2...lude-ptsd-in-awarding-their-medal-to-wounded/