the visible and invisible wounds of today's veterans
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The Visible and Invisible Wounds of Today’s Veterans
Philip LarsonU-M Veteran and Military Services
Disclaimers
• This presentation may be a trigger for those who have experienced combat
• This is heavy material• Some of what I will say and discuss may
disturbing• I am not a doctor, clinician, social worker or
therapist• I have never served in combat
Brief History of Injuries in Combat
• WWI – trench foot, gas, lice, shell shock– 4% survival rate
• WWII – artillery/bombs, malaria– 69.7% survival rate
• Korea – cold weather, agent orange– 75.4% survival rate
• Vietnam – agent orange, environmental– 86.5% survival rate
• Gulf War – Chemical/Biologic, Immunizations• Today
– 90% survival rate
Iraq (OIF) Afghanistan
• Iraq War (OIF) 2003-2011– Modern Country, Cities,
Roads/Highways– Urban warfare, Countryside,
IEDs
• Afghanistan War (OEF) 2001 - Present– Mountainous, some cities– Rural Insurgency
Combat Trauma
• Physical Visible• Physical Hidden
• Psychological Visible• Psychological Hidden
IED
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XLR127_I9sw
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNx3-R13FtA
IED Wounds
• Roadside and footpath blasts• Limb loss – 11% lost more than one limb• Genital injuries – (often combined with double amputation of legs)
• Shrapnel wounds • Burns• TBI• Psychological Trauma
Sniper Fire
• High velocity rounds• Head and Neck wounds• Psychological Trauma
Combat
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b9Pq5JZ2Fd8 (6:07 – 12:00)
• Explosive devices/rounds• Non-explosive rounds• Rocket propelled grenades• Shoot downs• Friendly Fire• Psychological Trauma
Accidents
• Aviation• Ground• Transportation to battlefield• Accidents• Faulty equipment
TBI
• Caused by sudden trauma to the head or a penetrating head injury, that disrupts the normal functioning of the brain.
• Blasts are leading cause in combat zones• Person may remain conscious or be dazed or
confused after injury takes place• Symptoms are subtle and may not occur for
days or weeks following the injury.
TBI• Mild TBI
– Headaches or neck pain that does not go away.– Light-headedness, dizziness or loss of balance.– Urge to vomit (nausea).– Loss of sense of smell or taste.– Ringing in the ears.– Difficulty remembering, concentrating or making decisions.– Slowness in thinking, speaking, acting or reading.– Getting lost or easily confused.– Feeling tired all of the time and having no energy or motivation.– Mood changes (feeling sad or angry for no reason).– Changes in sleep patterns (sleeping a lot more or having a hard time sleeping).– Increased sensitivity to lights, sounds or distractions.– Blurred vision or eyes that tire easily.
TBI
• Severe TBI• Headache that gets worse or does not go away.• Repeated vomiting or nausea.• Convulsions or seizures.• Inability to awaken from sleep.• Dilation of one or both pupils of the eyes.• Slurred speech.• Weakness or numbness in the extremities.• Loss of coordination.• Increased confusion, restlessness or agitation.3
TBI
• Compounding issues– Delay in treatment– Repeated concussive events
• Increases risk of– Alzheimer’s Disease– Parkinson’s Disease– Dementia
TBI
• Diagnosis– Military Acute Concussion Evaluation– CT Scan– MRI– Single Emission Computed Tomography– Positron Emission Tomography– Cognitive Evaluations– Physical, Occupational and Speech Evaluations
Psychological
• 2012 SVA Survey:
Severe Anxiety
Severe Depressive Symptoms
Significant PTSD symptoms
Thoughts about suicide
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 45% 50%
Stories
• Fallujah family home• Convoy Duty• M1 Tank
PTSD
• Experience or witness of an event that involved actual or threatened death or injury
• Response involves intense fear, helplessness or horror
• Moral injury• Can be acute or chronic
PTSD
Re-experience the event• Recurrent and intrusive recollection of the
event– Images, thoughts, perceptions
• Dreams• Act as though the event was recurring• Reaction to “triggers”
PTSD
• Responses– Avoidance• Thoughts, feelings, conversations• Activities, places, people
– Inability to recall event or pieces of event– Feeling of detachment– Restricted emotions– Inability to look ahead– Shame, Guilt, Loss
PTSD
• Physical arousal– Difficulty falling or staying asleep– Irritability or outbursts of anger– Difficulty concentrating– Hypervigilance– Exaggerated startle response
PTSD
• Treatment– Safety and Security– Telling the story
• talking, art, writing, acting
– Remembering– Dealing with the moral injury– Managing Triggers– Sleep management– Concentration– Emotional management
From a veteran’s perspective(ten things you should know about todays student veteran)
• Student Veterans are a highly diverse group• Veterans do not see themselves as victims, ever!• They can feel alone on campus• They are often unaware of their PTSD or TBI• There are three things you should never say to a
veteran but they still hear them every day– These wars were atrocities and a waste of human life.– I don’t understand what you’re having trouble – you
volunteered for service.– Did you kill anyone?
Veteran’s perspective cont.
• Female soldiers suffer in silence– 15% of military – 22% of whom will be sexually assaulted during their
military service
• They often want to go back to the war zone• Combat trauma is an injury not a mental illness• Veterans need your understanding, compassion and
respect• Student Veterans are one of America’s greatest
untapped human resources
Documentaries
• The Battle for Marjah• Restrepo • Korengalhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jw_anreJjow&list=PLHQ5K79eN3JSQEpnEpDavx5ziqkrWY2cD
References• http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/0/ww1/25403864 - WWI Injuries• http://www.netplaces.com/world-war-ii/the-horrors-of-war/battlefield-inj
uries-and-medicine.htm - WWII injuries
• http://www.va.gov/oaa/pocketcard/korea.asp - Korea injuries• http://www.federallabs.org/news/top-stories/articles/?pt=top-stories/arti
cles/0609-03.jsp - survival rates
• http://www.nea.org/home/53407.htm - Ten Things You Should Know About Today’s Student Veteran
• http://www.realwarriors.net/active/treatment/tbisigns.php - TBI signs and symptoms
• University of Michigan P.A.V.E program – SVA statistics• Williams, Mary Beth, Ph.D., LCSW, CTS & Poijula, Soili, Ph.D. (2002) . The
PTSD Workbook, Oakland, CA, New Harbinger Publications
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