Anthony,
I fit into the 6% category. My PTSD covers a lifetime. Began as a child, which in turn affected my life choices and put me in situations that had terrible consequences.
Not what I mean about "lifetime PTSD."
Lifetime PTSD has nothing to do with your trauma, which you have aligned that term with. It has to do with whether or not symptoms will affect you your entire life, regardless of further trauma or not.
That is what is defined by mental health professionals as lifetime PTSD.
You can endure 20 years of trauma and completely recover symptoms and no longer fit the diagnostic criteria for PTSD and get back into life completely, quite normally... albeit you may experience some heightened symptoms compared to another, you can fully function again without fitting the criteria longer than a month.
Don't get confused with that terminology against trauma duration vs. whether you will endure symptoms your entire life.
I will use me as an example. I have healed my trauma, I have spent years working on self management and retraining my brain to react differently to what used to knock me out for a week and put me on the lounge. I can now function at home, I can do things, I can go shopping, I can perform tasks, I can socialise for small periods, I can go on holidays with my wife, however; even going on holidays, I will fallover on completion of the holiday because its takes me everything I have to keep myself together, using every technique and trick and I have learnt to manage myself for a short period, ie. week or two outside of home, outside of my normal routine, and go do things in a big city, as an example.
The lifetime part comes in because I couldn't sustain that activity for an extended period. For example, full time work, my symptoms that I don't get daily would suddenly reappear and be worse than ever after a couple of weeks. It then takes me another week or two to recover, get symptoms back under control and rebalance myself.
That is an example of lifetime PTSD. I have healed, I have spent years learning to manage myself, I can participate in life, but any type of extended period, ie. a week or two directly exposed to what everyone else does daily, is all I can take before I collapse in symptoms overwhelming me.
If you haven't healed your trauma and got your symptoms under control, exposed yourself progressively back into life, and pushed hard at reintegrating completely, then you can't say whether you have lifetime PTSD or not.
Both my Ts have warned me not to fear PTSD flaring up again. I don't think they would have told me that if it wasn't a common fear. My trauma T said that I will experience negative emotions just like everyone else, albeit maybe a more intensely, but that doesn't mean the PTSD is coming back. To use my coping skills and if I am struggling I can always call her and come in for a tune up. That's for future as I am currently still seeing both of them. The key here, is in the future to call and get help early on so it doesn't become PTSD again.
Exactly spot on the money. Very commonsense therapist.
General...
As Girl3 mentioned, the trauma types are very different in relation to symptoms. There is vast differences between civilian and military trauma, there are vast differences between incest and raped by a stranger as a child versus adulthood sexual assault and rape, domestic violence, etc, all towards recovery.
You can have endured the worst events as a child, which now affect you immensely in adulthood, however; a childhood brain is extremely resilient to trauma, what its not resilient to is the emotional impact of feeling betrayed and unprotected by family. This is usually the biggest issue in adulthood for PTSD with that type of trauma, just for examples sake. Heal that aspect, the trauma itself is normally irrelevant to many because they either don't remember the specifics or they aren't the worst part of the trauma for them, its the betrayal and lack of trust, protection, etc, from primary care givers.
A majority of these people can function in life, work, etc... but fall apart in relationships and socialising due to the childhood trauma and its real problems transferred into adulthood.
A very small percentage of these people would have lifetime PTSD, even though they may of been in therapy for 20 years... the core hasn't been solved. Solve the core, the majority can reintegrate into life and symptoms get less and less. Some, they will heal everything but still fall apart when integrating into life... hence, lifetime PTSD.