PTSD In The Military Essay

Words: 1496
Pages: 6

Post-traumatic stress disorder is very serious and many military personnel suffer from this disorder after they return from war. My group and I choose this topic because PTSD was something we were all passionate about and it was a disorder we wanted to learn more about. PTSD is a psychological disorder that occurs after a traumatic event in one’s life, it is not subject to just military personnel but anyone that experiences a traumatic event. There have been many studies conducted about PTSD including a meta-analysis, treatment options and the correlation between post-traumatic stress disorder and the expression of emotions.
PTSD has been the object of study for many people for the last two decades, and as time goes on people are discovering
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It has also been found that when a soldier or someone involved in combat is taking propranolol it can lessen the effects of PTSD, because this drug can be used to treat headaches, performance anxiety, and hypertension. Psychotherapy can be used to help treat PTSD by modifying their memory structures about the upsetting event and the feelings surrounding the traumatic occasion. Researchers are working every day to find and innovate new treatment options for PTSD military personnel as well as nonmilitary personnel. The direct cause of PTSD varies from person to person, making it a very difficult disorder to treat. This disorder is mostly affiliated with the military profession because of how common it is in this field. Over the years a lot of research has been conducted on PTSD, but on small population samples.
Sarah A. Mustillo and her colleagues believed that the small samples used by previous researchers were too inadequate to produce accurate results. They focused more on returning veterans from all four branches of the United States armed forces. The research was conducted on sample size of 53,534 servicemen and women who willingly volunteered. Volunteers from the Army made up 68.7% of the group total, the Air Force 27.2%, the Navy 1.0% and the Marine Corps at 3.1%; these percentages represented the sample size of 41,351 servicemen and women (Sarah A. Mustillo and colleagues 2015:3