NFH, this is an extract out of the DSM IV, the psych manual. It is the first criteria.
A. The person has been exposed to a traumatic event in which both of the following have been present:
(1) The person experienced, witnessed, or was confronted with an event or events that involved actual or threatened death or serious injury, or a threat to the physical integrity of self or others
(2) The person's response involved intense fear, helplessness, or horror.
Every person who has PTSD has to fall under this criteria, otherwise it is not PTSD. There is also a time frame. If the person can be diagnosed within 30 days of the actual trauma, then they can class it as an anxiety disorder or a depressive episode. This is why they now constantly counsel paramedics, policemen/women, and even service personnel after a tragic event.
They had to draw the line somewhere. That is also why the VA here have an avenue of escape. If they can diagnose a person within the 30 day window after returning from overseas, they can get away with it.
When you think about it, it saves money.
So as you can see, a person who is raped, a person who is attacked, a person who is in an MVA, a person who goes through a natural disaster and people who see action in a warlike environments are all exposed to a traumatic event.
The difference between a veteran and anyone else is the duration. Some soldiers suffer from intense fear for months. For example, two weeks after my deployment to Iraq, mortars landed very close to where we were sleeping. For the next 5 months I slept very, very lightly and used to lay away some nights wondering whether a mortar or rocket was going to come through the roof, and I will tell you, the Taliban were not real good shots with home made mortar tubes or rockets. Three weeks after I left, a fellow co-worker was thrown from her rack and broke her hip after a rocket blew a hole through the blast wall and the wall of the room she was sleeping in. The very room I was in.
So, like the criteria says, veterans are confronted over a long period of time with events that threaten death or serious injury. They also inflict death or injury constantly on other human beings and as well as that witness horrifying devastation day after day after day.
Whereas with a rape victim, or a MVA victim, or an attack victim, its usually a one off event.
Yes they can suffer from PTSD if not treated, but it is different from a veteran.
So, Anthony not only made this forum for us veterans because of that, but because we all have also been 'brainwashed' for a better word with military training and have been taught to with hold a lot of our emotions.
So we don't talk a lot about our emotions and our trauma's, and we also speak our mind and do not really care what other people think.
After being on the other forum for a bit I noticed that a lot of physical abuse, rape, and accident victims, constantly talked about their trauma, and some never seemed to let it go. It was like it was cool or something.
This site allows us to speak our mind without having to choose our words carefully, which can result in some people being offended.
Anyway, thats just my opinion. Hope it clears it up for you NFH, why we are so different.
Jimmy :eek: