Haunted by Combat: Understanding PTSD in War Veterans Including Women, Reservists, and Those Coming Back from Iraq
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Average customer review:Product Description
Across history, the condition has been called "soldier's heart," "shell shock," or "combat fatigue." It is now increasingly common as our service men and women return from Iraq, Afghanistan, and other ongoing combat zones. Since 1990, Veterans' centers here have treated more than 1.6 million affected men and women, including an estimated 100,000 from the Gulf War and an untallied total from the Iraq front and fighting in Afghanistan. The number also includes some 35,000 World War II veterans, because PTSD does not fade easily. Regardless of the months, years, and even decades that have passed, the traumatic events can flash back as seemingly real as they were when they occurred.In Haunted by Combat Paulson and Krippner range across history and into current experiences and treatments for this haunting disorder. They take us into the minds of PTSD-affected veterans, as they struggle against the traumatic events lingering in their minds, sometimes exploding into violent behavior. The authors explain how and why PTSD develops--and how we can help service members take the steps to heal today.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #31241 in Books
- Published on: 2007-08-30
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 200 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Including empirical research and anecdotal prose and poetry about combat veterans, this book discusses post-traumatic stress disorder among war veterans and present debates about diagnoses. Paulson and Krippner also take up other important issues-for example, the difficulty in determining who combatants are (in the case of Iraq) and coping when returning home....Readers will appreciate the volume's general assurance that most veterans get beyond their combat experiences, despite the fact that most receive no formal intervention. Those involved with veterans may wish to explore this existential view of intervention. Recommended. Graduate students through professionals.”–Choice
“The testimonials by Paulson and other war veterans, the easily comprehensible discussion of neurobiologic mechanisms, and the author's recommdedations of essential therapeutic elements make Haunted by Combat a solid contribution.”–The New England Journal of Medicine
“The men and women who follow orders to be sent thousands of miles from home, to fight wars in the most dangerous corners of the globe, are the very best America has to offer. They've seen destruction and chaos few others can imagine. And too many return home to their families struggling to make sense of their combat experiences and their personal lives. This book tells their stories in their own words and explores treatment options that will enable our nation to fulfill its promise to support our veterans.”–Lynn Woolsey, Member of Congress 6th District, California
“This is an excellent and necessary analysis of the effects of war on combat troops and will stimulate much thought and care for people who are suffering from stress disorders. It also brings attention to the possibility that this widespread psychological condition may require a new diagnosis: post societal traumatic stress syndrome. Dr. Krippner has long been a leader in understanding societal processes and he and Dr. Paulson have given us insights into a process that needs immediate attention.”–Ethel Tobach, Ph.D. Museum of Natural History, New York City
“Allying the authors' personal experience with first-hand accounts of veterans from current war scenarios, especially from Iraq, this book provides a compelling account of the psychosocial sequelae of war on soldiers and their loved ones. The book presents a clinical and sociological analysis of post-traumatic stress disorder in combat veterans and war-afflicted civilians, as well as useful guidelines for treatment in this population. The bridging of soldier stress and war stress in civilians emphasizes the human struggle with healing the lasting wounds of war and conflict. The combination of personal and clinical approaches makes this book powerful and helpful reading to both professionals working with war-afflicted soldiers and civilians as well as victims and their families.”–Teresa Mendonca McIntyre, Former President, The European Health Psychology Society, Professor, University of Minho, Portugal
“The history of our species is a history of war and the history of war is a history of deep human trauma and suffering. In this clinically important and highly approachable text, Paulson and Krippner help us understand the psychological and spiritual basis for the post-traumatic stress disorder experienced by today's combat veterans. The authors poignantly describe how the PTSD of the men and women interviewed results from "the loss of individual perspective or personal myth that ensure the security and safety of the world". Paulson and Krippner provide clinicians, family members and concerned citizens with the cross-cultural tools we need to help Iraqi combat veterans move from post-traumatic stress to post-traumatic strength. The authors help us see that by approaching combat veterans with compassionate understanding rather than denial, we may collectively realize a world of peace that knows no end.”–Jeannette Diaz-Laplante, PhD Director, Harvest for Haiti Faculty, Bainbridge Graduate Institute
“Paulson and Krippner present the gripping complexity that distinguishes the veterans of the Iraq war from their counterparts who returned from Vietnam. They address PTSD on a personal, community, family, and societal level in an experiential way that has never been done before. It is a landmark book for all concerned with the men and women who have been deployed to Iraq and return to American with the horrors of this war embedded in their souls as well as their bodies and mind.”–Benina Gould, Ph.D Director Social Transformation Concentration Saybrook Graduate School and Research Center
“In this vitally important volume, Krippner and Paulson offer a unique perspective on the psychological trauma warfare causes in combatants, and civilians alike. Those who argue that war is "in our genes" need to somehow account for the fact that we continue to be so deeply scarred by the horrors of this supposedly "natural" occurrence. Over 30% of the physically-intact soldiers returning from Iraq report severe psychological distress, while unknown thousands more suffer in silence. The need for this book could hardly be more urgent. This book should be provided to every soldier returning from war.”–Christopher Ryan, Ph.D. Visiting Professor (Medical Anthropology) University of Barcelona Barcelona, Spain and Cacilda Jetha, M.D. Psychiatrist (Specializing in Immigrants and Refugees) San Joan de Deu Hospital Barcelona, Spain
“This book is an outstanding guide for the understanding of war trauma. Every person interested in the topic, or affected by it, should take the time to read it. They will learn how these traumatic experiences originate and what techniques for treatment are available. They will also be impelled to fight the global calamity of war and hostility among humans.”–Gustavo Schiavo Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Uruguay
About the Author
DARYL S. PAULSON is a Psychologist, a Fellow of the American Academy of Traumatic Stress, and a veteran of the U.S. Marines who served in Vietnam. He has worked extensively with veterans affected by PTSD.
STANLEY KRIPPNER is Professor of Psychology at Saybrook Graduate Institute and Research Center. He is also the editor of The Psychological Impact of War Trauma on Civilians (Praeger, 2003). And, he is a member of the Advisory or Editorial Boards for journals including The Behavioral and Brain Sciences and the Journal of Humanistic Psychology. His many awards include the American Psychological Association Award for Distinguished Contributions to the International Advancement of Psychology.
Customer Reviews
Both scholarly and accessible . . .
In the growing literature of combat-related PTSD, this slim volume by authors Paulson and Krippner is directed chiefly to practitioners but is also accessible for lay readers. The book is loosely organized to cover a review of the scholarly and scientific literature on the subject, while interjecting examples of PTSD from veterans of wars and conflicts from WWII to Iraq. Krippner is a psychology professor at Saybrook Graduate Institute and Research Center. Paulson, a psychologist, is a combat veteran whose harrowing story is told with gripping detail - both his experience as a Marine on the killing fields of Vietnam and his debilitating descent into a different kind of hell after his return. So is his discovery of a therapeutic path out of that hell and his recovery.
The two men define PTSD broadly, identifying it as a spectrum disorder with commonalities across individual cases but no specific model of symptoms or etiology. They note also significant differences between the experience of Vietnam veterans and the reservists who have served in the Gulf and Iraq Wars. In looking at types of therapy, they provide a survey of different approaches, and question the long-term effectiveness of purely pharmaceutical interventions. Meanwhile, they advocate forms of existential-humanistic therapy, based in part on the theories of Roberto Assagioli, the pioneer of psychosynthesis. The authors provide a helpful overview of the subject and offer positive encouragement for those trapped in the after-effects of life-altering trauma. Their book includes a 15-page bibliography and an extensive index.
Most Enlightening
I have a much clearer understanding of this issue. PTSD is something unless you experience it - you don't understand it. This book helped me profoundly, in my own life as well as understanding the lives of others and those who serve our country....reguardless of gonernmental falshoods, unquestioning of mission, thinking they are doing the right thing (soldiers). They are not at fault, but suffer the consequences of war forever, things we are immune to and "could never happen here". Being at war changes lives forever - just because we don't see it in our safe cocoon doesn't mean it is not real for those who 'do' . Trauma is trauma. Until we experience it. Lets recognize that even our soldiers have a conscience to stuggle with...Haunting forever.




