Showing posts with label PTSD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PTSD. Show all posts

Thursday, December 22, 2011

For veterans battling the wounds of war, there's an APP for that

The battle against the psychological scars of war is being helped by technology. One application for smart phones and the iPAD, is called the T2 Mood Tracker. It helps patients monitor their behavior over time.

Binding the Wounds of War - Veterans deal with invisible scars of war


In the first installment of the Pentagon Channel's three-part series, "Binding the Wounds of War" we look at how the Defense Department is helping veterans deal with post-traumatic stress.

DoD's Senior NCO concerned over report of shockingly high suicide rate


SgtMaj Bryan Battaglia offers leadership support to servicemembers and veterans struggling with emotional stress.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Headlines for Monday, December 19, 2011


Headlines for Monday, December 19, 2011: USS Enterprise Returns from Two-Week Underway; SECNAV Updates Requirements for Purple Hearts

Monday, June 27, 2011

PTSD Awareness Day June 27th

June 27th is PTSD Awareness Day and for the entire month of June, the VA's National Center for PTSD is working to increase PTSD awareness.

Myths about PTSD: some people think that they can't do anything for a person with PTSD. Think again! You can do a lot, starting with making yourself better informed about what PTSD is and is not.

PTSD Awareness Day is this Monday, June 27. Visit www.ptsd.va.gov to learn what you can do, as a community member, partner, friend, or employer to help someone with PTSD.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

The continuing war at home

By ANDREW COUGHLAN

ON JULY 19, 2004, I didn’t die.

I can talk now about what happened that day, but it’s enough to know that I lost friends in a mortar attack in Baghdad. Pfc. Charles Persing, who had pushed me away and took the brunt of the blast, and Sgt. Dale Lloyd, my team leader who had run to help, both died that day. Two other friends, Sgt. Mike Ramirez and Spc. James O’Leary, and my team leader, Staff Sgt. Keith Adams, were injured.

Physically, I was unhurt, but I was living with the loss of my friends, recurring nightmares of the events of the day, and an overwhelming guilt for being alive. I’m not even really sure you could call it living. I felt worthless; although I was newly married with a daughter, I thought about suicide.

I didn’t know what to call it then, but I was suffering from survivor guilt and post-traumatic stress disorder. The only people I could listen to were those who had been there with me. Hearing from them that they cared for me and that I could be proud of myself and my service meant so much more somehow than hearing it from my family, who love you in spite of a turmoil they don’t understand.

I had to get better not only to care for my family but to honor the friends we had lost by living a full life.

I underwent treatment at the VA, which involved group therapy sessions and meeting with counselors. But the thing that broke through more than any session was talking one-on-one with veterans of the Vietnam War. Those guys put me on a personal mission. “Don’t let your generation become like ours,” they told me. “Make your buddies aware, make the public aware.”

I could tell them things — one guy in particular. With all the doctors and social workers and other vets there, this big, tough Vietnam vet chose me to share a story that, although half a world and four decades apart, was a lot like mine. As he helped me, I was helping him, too.

This offered me a starting point. I didn’t have to open up completely then, but I could start, little by little, to unload the weight of my emotions and experiences.

If this set me on an upward slope, I reached a peak at a combat-stress retreat run through the Wounded Warrior Project. I didn’t say as much as I could have, and I can’t really explain what that week meant to me. I learned to look at things a different way and to process my feelings differently.

I won’t say that I was cured that week. There is no cure for post-traumatic stress or survivor guilt, just as there is no way to bring Lloyd or Persing back.

But I have fewer, less-intense nightmares. When I have a flashback, I know how to ground myself back into my surrounding reality. I have learned to control my symptoms rather than letting them control me.

A lot of combat veterans believe that asking for help is a sign of weakness. I will admit that I once felt the same, but reaching out saved my life. The help doesn’t need to come from a doctor. It can be another vet, or just someone you can trust. It can be hard to talk. But just take one thing out at a time, something small. You don’t have to dump it all out; just lighten your load, bit by bit, and you’ll get there.

PTSD is a wound. Like any other wound, it will fester and spread if you don’t treat it. Just like you would with a wound to your arm or leg, you treat it, you stop the infection. It may not work quite as it did before, and you may have a scar, but you will start to heal and find strength and ability to do things you didn’t before.

I am pursuing my education now through the TRACK program, working out and loving my wife and daughter. I won’t waste the life that was spared on July 19, 2004, and I will honor the friends I lost by living a better life.

Andrew Coughlan, a Michigan resident, served in the war in Iraq. He is participating in the nonprofit Wounded Warrior Project’s TRACK program, which provides education and transition service to wounded vets in Jacksonville, Fla.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Ft Hood Review


The Defense Department has released its final review and implementations report on last November's shootings at Fort Hood, Texas.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Art Therapy


The Department of Veterans Affairs has been exploring new ways to help patients heal - especially those dealing with the invisible scars of war.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Today's Top News 12 July 2010

There's more federal help for veterans suffering from PTSD, and the U.S. hands over Camp Bucca to the Iraqis.

Aiding Veterans with PTSD


The VA is making it easier for veterans to receive compensation benefits for post traumatic stress disorder.

Help for PTSD


The Department of Veterans Affairs will be taking steps to make it easier for those suffering from PTSD to receive federal benefits.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Armed Forces Boxing


Boxing is great exercise but there are serious medical dangers that can come with the fun of it.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Intrepid Center Opens


A new medical center built specifically to diagnose and treat traumatic brain injury and psychological disorders in war veterans opened Thursday in Bethesda, Maryland.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Today's Top News 24 June 2010


Defense Secretary Gates voices his support for General David Petraeus as the next U.S. commander in Afghanistan. Also, the National Intrepid Center of Excellence opens its doors.

Intrepid Center Opens


The National Intrepid Center of Excellence in Bethesda, Maryland, opens its doors.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Military Suicide Hearing


New research shows a decrease in suicides among active duty Soldiers in 2010.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Military Suicides


Suicides among members of the military remain at historic highs - despite the increase in awareness and treatment programs.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Caring for the Caregiver


Many people are still reluctant to seek treatment for a mental health issue - or even to see a doctor if they think they have a problem. This is also true of caregivers.

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