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A new name for PTSD could reduce stigma among veterans

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Air Force veteran Ian Lord holds his miniature two-year old Australian Shepherd Jonas in Norfolk, Va., last fall. As the number of veterans grappling with the psychological scars of war mounts, Jonas represents a newer breed of treatment. (Photo by Matthe

Thousands of American soldiers suffer from the effects of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or PTSD, yet many of them don't seek help. Mental health professionals are hoping changing the name of PTSD will stamp out a stigma and encourage more veterans to request treatment.


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Post-traumatic stress disorder has become a major topic of conversation in the wake of two wars, in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Many returning soldiers are facing the medical condition, but are leery of getting help. Now, mental health professionals are proposing a change.

“No 19-year-old kid wants to be told he’s got a disorder,” said Gen. Peter Chiarelli, who spearheaded the campaign to reduce suicide rates in the Army.

Chiarelli has endorsed dropping the 'D' in PTSD thereby eliminating the loaded term "disorder." 

While an estimated 30 percent of American veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars demonstrated signs of PTSD, the Department of Veterans Affairs reported that less than half of those soldiers will solicit medical help. 

The bundle of symptoms including depression, anxiety and memory loss associated with PTSD are triggered by traumatic experiences such as assault, rape or war. According to Chiarelli, the word 'disorder' makes the condition sound incurable, and he is in favor of dropping it altogether. High level Pentagon officials have begun using the name PTS, including Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, but the broader medical community is yet to follow suit.

Chiarelli has pushed hard to change the name of PTSD in order to change how the condition is perceived.

Some psychologists have suggested substituting 'disorder' for 'injury,' but others question whether the condition can be categorized as such. 

According to Naveed Ali Shah, a veteran who recently sought treatment for PTSD, changing the name won't affect how veterans think about receiving a diagnosis.

"I don't think the 'D' is that stigmatizing that if we dropped it it would make such a huge difference," Ali Shah said. "For a majority of soldiers it would still be a psychiatric diagnosis that would still label them, no matter what the label is."

Air Force veteran and the director of veteran services at Valley Cities Counseling Scott Swain, disagreed. 

"Words matter. Who wants to be labeled with a disorder when this trauma happened to you during something that was part of your regular duties as a soldier?" Swain asked. "It's acceptable to have an injury, but the label that sits on you with a disorder is so much more powerful."

Frank Ochberg, a psychiatry professor at Michigan State University who supports Chiarelli's name change, thinks that PTSD is more like an injury because it is caused by an external event.

“One could have a clean bill of health prior to the trauma, and then afterward, there was a profound difference,” Ochberg wrote in a letter supporting Chiarelli’s idea.  

Ali Shah recalled having been in denial about the symptoms he was experiencing two years after leaving the army. He said he felt bothered by having to seek treatment, and didn't want to confront having a disorder.

"The toughest part of the diagnosis was the realization that this is something real, something that is really happening, and learning how to cope with it internally," he said.

After coming to terms with his disorder, Ali Shah came up against the next obstacle, receiving timely treatment through understaffed veteran affairs health services programs. 

Swain thinks giving treatment should be prioritized over the bureaucratic process of changing the name of PTSD, but with such a pervasive problem, changing the name could be a powerful first step. 

"We need to normalize the fact that these kinds of things happen in life. Mental illness is part of life at large. There's lots of ways that the community can help. We can work together with the veterans association and coordinate services better," Swain said. 

On Monday, psychiatrists met in Philadelphia to begin discussing changing the name of PTSD. Their decision will play a role in how the American Psychiatric Association chooses to categorize the condition in their updated Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders due for publication in May 2013.

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Archie Haase 09 May, 2012 12:48:45
They can change the name of PTSD but it is still PTSD. It is like the rape of a woman to be tagged with a different name to something less offensive.

Nothing will be okay with returning combat veterans until the VA and congress get's it's priorities right. Get rid of it's big budget giant hospital buildings with in 100's of thousands of employees. Open smaller clinics for medical issues, and contract with private providers when needed. Most of all stop trying to be all things to all types of veterans. The VA was started to help returning war veterans , not be the only national health care hospital system outside of Indian Health. The Department of Veteran Affairs was not started to create jobs for foreign doctors. It was not started to train doctors, for medical schools, it was not started to treat America's growing uninsured poor. I was started to help returning combat veterans adjust after returning home from World War 1. My God ten's of thousands of Vietnam war veterans died on the streets without care lost in the VA maze, and if something is not changed the same ill happen with our latest veterans.
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Ray 10 December, 2012 11:29:28
I am the daughter of a Vietnam drftaee and I concider myself a survivor of PTSD. I will never forget the day my father threatened to shoot me with a sawed-off shot gun just because I tried to voice my opinion against his verbal assaults. My father reminded me so many times that if I'd been born a boy he would have most likely killed me early on. The most difficult part of my childhood was being bullied by both the children at school and my own father as well. I imagined later in life that while most little girls were protected, loved, and adored by there father's I on the otherhand was treated like a disease by my father, and invisable to the rest of the World. I never did anything harmful to anyone, and I was not a disruptive spoiled child either. I was not allowed to touch anything in my parents house outside of my own room, and most of my early childhood was spent in isolation in my bedroom. My mother never divorced my father, knowing how abusive he was to me and my younger sister. I am bitter because my mother didn't protect me against my father but has the nerve to remind me that I should forget the past and learn to trust in God for Guidance. As an adult my father now claimes he called me names and beat me because he didn't want me to grow up weak. His taunts and name calling were daily and repetative. The only time the name calling would stop was when I raised my voice to him, which always ended with a beating to my head. As a result of my childhood I have bouts of anxiety where I am terrified of people and social situations. I don't trust anyone, and I feel like my father won, and I have become a complete failure in everything I dreamt to be in my life. I feel the Government owes me the same rights as what my father is given, as well as disability support!! Where do people like me go when we need Group Therapy, and not just drug handouts from pompous shrinks, but a geniune retreat where cries can be not just heart but felt. I am angry even as I type this because it is sad that this is the only website I can share my story with, my own monitor screen and a tone of rambling keystrokes for a random stranger to hear. I am enraged that the shrink I went to a year ago told me he didn't know of any Group Therapy for the kind of therapy I was searching for and looked at me with narrow eyes as if I was making up all accounts of the abuse I survived. I am exhausted because roughly a week out of every month I become suicidal. I have been diagnosed bipolar, but I think it's a mis diognosis because I feel I have all the symptoms of PTSD. I cannot find any information local in my area or service provided for Children of Vets. Can someone please send me a link so that I can gain the courage to share my story with others like myself.
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