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PTSD: The War Within Women
Reported September 27, 2011
(Ivanhoe newswire) -- Mothers, wives, daughters, and soldiers. Women who
served in combat zones continue to struggle with their war-time experiences
when they’re home. Research shows women are twice as likely to suffer from
posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) than men.
She’s home from Iraq, but for Army Sergeant Megan Krause, the battlefield is
still fresh on her mind.
"You're driving down the road, something looks like trash, and it turns out
to be a bomb, and it blows up one of your Humvees," Megan told Ivanhoe.
Megan served as a combat medic and struggles with the violence and trauma
she experienced.
"Should I have been able to save them? Or should they have died, and I saved
them?”Megan said.
Those were questions that haunted her once she came home.
"If I went into a restaurant with a group of people, I always had to make
sure I was sitting in the corner with my back against a wall so that no one
could get behind me, and typically, so I could see the door," Megan said.
She had posttraumatic stress disorder. She turned to alcohol to cope.
"I ended up thinking somehow that there were terrorists chasing me,” Megan
said.
In recent years, nearly 20,000 female veterans were diagnosed with PTSD and
other war-related mental disorders. Research shows women are four-times more
likely than men to have long-lasting PTSD.
In one study, it took women five years to recover compared to two years for
men. Another study found female vets with PTSD were more likely to suffer
from arthritis, lower back pain, obesity and hypertension than women without
the disorder. Therapists say the key is to acknowledge the symptoms.
"Never forgetting what's happened to them but accepting what's happened,
feeling they've learned how to cope with the issue and be able to move on,”
Sheila Jowsey, M.D., assistant professor of psychiatry at the Mayo Clinic,
told Ivanhoe.
Megan is now a college grad and helps other vets. She says a lot of
counseling saved her.
"I would be a very different statistic than someone who's winning the battle
with PTSD,”
Megan said.
All veterans who may be struggling with PTSD are encouraged to contact their
local VA hospitals for help. In July, the government established new PTSD
regulations to help simplify and streamline the claims process.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:
National Center for PTSD
http://www.ptsd.va.gov
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