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War, War, War See other War, War, War Articles Title: PTSD Costs Way Too Much For The Military To Ever Honor Its Promises To Veterans PTSD Costs Way Too Much For The Military To Ever Honor Its Promises To Veterans Bruce Krasting, My Take On Financial Events | 5 hours ago | 1,663 | 9 A A A inShare2 mv-22 oSprey, military, plane, army, marines US Army RSS Feed Heroes On Banknotes Bernanke Talks His Book See Also Night Military Psy Ops Iran's Oppressive National Internet May Have Just Arrived There Wasn't Just One Sniper At The Super Bowl, They Were Everywhere There Wasn't Just One Sniper At The Super Bowl, They Were Everywhere Robert Business Insider Launches A New Military And Defense Vertical I know a man. Call him Eddie. Hes African American, going on about 63. When he was a boy he had no real home or much education, so when he was eighteen he took the only option available to him. He joined the military. That was 1967. He must have been a hell of a soldier. He ended up in the Armys 1st Cavalry Division. (One of the toughest outfits around.) In February of 1968 he fought in the battle of Hue during the Tet offensive. He was in non-stop firefights for three weeks. He said half his platoon were killed or wounded. He told me about the time he held onto a fellow soldier, while he bled to death from a sniper round through the throat. After the Tet Offensive his tour was up, but for some stupid reason (probably a few thousand dollars) he did a second tour. In April of 1968 he went back up country with the 1st Cav. This time he fought in the A Shau Valley. (This was referred to at the Valley of Death". The fighting was as bad as any combat in history). He once talked of the time that he spent a night in a bomb crater with two dead comrades while the Viet Cong were shooting AK47s with green tracers over his head. He also talked about killing his enemy in hand-to-hand combat. His buddies did the same. For some reason, Eddie walked away from it. But he was a broken man. He has Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). He has never been able to function properly. He is afraid of everything. On the Fourth of July he has to be sedated. Hes terrified by the noise of the fireworks. The Army never questioned that he was damaged goods, and that it was his time in battle that was responsible. They gave him antidepressants; after a while he got a half disability pension. Life was just a struggle. Eight years ago I banged on a bunch of doors and helped him get a full disability pension. Hes okay these days, sort of. I bring up Eddies story in connection with a new report from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). The wars we fight today are no different than those of 1968, or any other war. Almost one in four (21%) of our soldiers are coming home with PTSD. The CBO attempts to come up with a price on this. By its calculation, it costs an average of $10,000 per year for each soldier with PTSD. Given that 2.3mm troops have cycled through our wars the past ten years we can expect a bill for at least $5 billion a year for just those with PTSD. For how long? The CBO reports that 80+% of those with PTSD were still in need of treatment after four years. For Eddie, its been forty plus years now. Of course the CBO numbers dont measure the real cost. What is the cost of a busted life? You cant put a number on it. We have some very big debts to pay to the soldiers that have come home recently. (Dont blame them for wars they just fight them.) Im concerned that we will renege on those promises. I think the CBO is too, thats probably why it wrote the report. Im writing about this because the CBO report reminded me of Eddie. And that got me to thinking how fucking stupid these wars have been. Note: PTSD is just a fraction of the total costs of taking care of our Vets Please follow Military & Defense on Twitter and Facebook. Tags: Military, Defense | Get Alerts for these topics » Sponsored Link: Download: Microsoft Enterprise Apps on VMware vSphere, NetApp Unified Storage, Cisco Unified Fabric Read more: www.businessinsider.com/b...ptsd-2012-2#ixzz1m1tQE6Sr Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 4.
#4. To: tom007 (#0)
I suspect that many of the vets who seemed to still require therapy decades after their return, needed it late because they hadn't gotten adequate treatment early. The Pentagon (and the VA) were long reluctant to diagnose PTSD, or suggest that it was severely disabling if untreated, because otherwise it would involve admitting that perhaps large numbers of wartime vets required expensive therapy and more expensive disability compensation -- and that this was a risk that could be expected of any service personnel in any future conflict. So the vets got a bottle of tranqs and the official conclusion that any further symptoms were unrelated to their military experience and were somehow the vets' own fault. Very very gradually the govt started to take responsibility for PTSD cases; first, it had to be vets who had been wounded in combat, then it had to be vets who actually engaged the enemy, then it could include vets who had served in burn wards and morgue duty, then vets who had not actually shot at the enemy but had been in locations that were bombarded, etc., gradually expanding the categories of vets who could be diagnosed with PTSD. I am not sure if an effective treatment for PTSD is yet available.
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