Friday, 3 July 2015
Making Sense of Medicine: ‘Talk therapy’ has proven successful for PTSD
In 1915 during the terrors of the very first World War, British doctor Charles Myers printed the very first description of what was called shell shock. Before that point, it d occurred to nearly 15 percent of troops and British military officers who d seen or done conflict and were left with tremors, head aches, flashbacks, nightmares, dizziness, amnesia and perhaps even guilty compunction. Were they worthless as soldiers, however a complete misunderstanding of what had occurred to them led to the court martialing of hundreds of thousands for desertion and cowardice. Although only a couple of hundred sentences were really carried out thousands were sentenced to be carried out. By the period of the Battle of Passchendaele in 1917, the British army started to develop somewhat successful strategies for treating it and had started to understand shell shock as a medical and psychological illness. Constructive comprehension of that which we now call post-traumatic stress disorder grown slow
https://www.ptsdnews.com/making-sense-of-medicine-talk-therapy-has-proven-successful-for-ptsd/213/
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