Why Some Soldiers Develop PTSD While Others Don't - Association for Psychological Science - 0 views
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The researchers re-examined data from a subsample of 260 male veterans from the National Vietnam Veterans Readjustment Study
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three primary factors: severity of combat exposure (e.g., life-threatening experiences or traumatic events during combat), pre-war vulnerabilities (e.g., childhood physical abuse, family history of substance abuse), and involvement in harming civilians or prisoners.
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e, as 98% of the veterans who developed the PTSD syndrome had experienced one or more traumatic events.
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Of the soldiers who experienced any potentially traumatic combat exposures, only 31.6% developed the PTSD syndrome.
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This suggests that there were other factors and vulnerabilities involved for the minority of exposed who did end up developing the PTSD syndrome.
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Among these factors, childhood experiences of physical abuse or a pre-Vietnam psychiatric disorder other than PTSD were strong contributors to PTSD onset.
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The combined data from all three primary factors — combat exposure, prewar vulnerability, and involvement in harming civilians or prisoners — revealed that PTSD syndrome onset reached an estimated 97% for veterans high on all three.
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these results emphasize the need to keep the more vulnerable soldiers out of the most severe combat situations.
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Dohrenwend and colleagues also point out that the recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, like the Vietnam War, are “wars amongst the people,” and they underline the need for research examining the circumstances in which harm to civilians and prisoners is likely to occur. Such research could provide important clues for preventing such devastating violations of the rules of war.