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It has four letters that
represent millions of Americans who are challenged by it everyday:
PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder). Over 13 million American
lives are affected by PTSD (PTSD Alliance, 2004).
PTSD can occur when an individual
has lived through an overwhelming event where closely held values
and assumptions about life became challenged. The following listing
of traumatic events may be the precursors to PTSD: a serious car
accident, rape, domestic violence, the loss of a job, involvement
in a natural disaster, a death, a house fire, etc.
For many individuals, their
human system of self-defense becomes disorganized and impacts adaptations
to life that give a sense of control. Not all individuals develop
PTSD from traumatic events. When specific symptoms are experienced
past three months or more after a traumatic experience has passed,
the individual may be suffering from Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.
The problematic symptoms are: anxiety, flashbacks, poor concentration,
depression, inability to relax or feel safe, helplessness, irritability,
excessive worry, isolation, avoidance, and startled responses.
The symptoms of PTSD can
cause severe problems of distress in the person's personal life
and/or work. A PTSD diagnosis is one of the most prevalent mental
disorders, surpassed by substance use disorders and depression.
PTSD is often misdiagnosed and many individuals are given mental
classifications of chronic anxiety or depression.
PTSD is often associated
with Vietnam veterans. However, it is the American woman that is
most affected by this mental challenge (PTSD Research Quarterly,
1996). Women have a higher prevalence of PTSD because of the types
of traumatic events that they experience than the events that men
usually report: rape, domestic violence, and sexual molestation
in childhood. Women are more likely to report medical illnesses,
be admitted to outpatient mental health facilities, and receive
two thirds of the prescriptions for psychotropic medications such
as Valium and Librium (American Psychiatric Association, 1999).
In our society, the correlation of specific types of precipitating
traumatic events in a woman's life and PTSD are scarcely addressed.
When a person has PTSD, their
daily reality can be one of trying to regain a sense of control
and normalcy. It is common for people to feel that no matter what
they've faced or lived with, no matter how extreme, they should
be able to carry on. But sometimes people face situations that are
so traumatic that they may become unable to cope and function in
their daily lives. Some people become so distressed by memories
of the trauma - memories that won't go away - that they begin to
live their lives trying to avoid any reminders of what happened
to them.
Individuals with PTSD are
often diagnosed for alcoholism, depression, anxiety, and drug addiction.
They often feel shame, helplessness and inadequacy. To avoid these
feelings, the individual can often isolate.
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