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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8743574/

More troops developing latent mental disorders
Symptoms appear several months after returning from Iraq, military says

The Associated Press
July 28, 2005

WASHINGTON - Thirty percent of U.S. troops returning from the Iraq war
have developed stress-related mental health problems three to four months
after coming home, the Army’s surgeon general said Thursday.

The problems include anxiety, depression, nightmares, anger and an
inability to concentrate, said Lt. Gen. Kevin Kiley and other military
medical officials. A smaller number of troops, often with more severe
symptoms, were diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, a
serious mental illness.

The 30 percent figure is in contrast to the 3 percent to 5 percent
diagnosed with a significant mental health issue immediately after they
leave the war theater, according to Col. Elspeth Ritchie, a military
psychiatrist on Kiley’s staff. A study of troops who were still in the
combat zone in 2004 found 13 percent experienced significant mental health
problems.

Soldiers departing a war zone are typically given a health evaluation as
they leave combat, but the Army is only now instituting a program for
follow-up screenings three to six months later, said Kiley, speaking to
reporters at a breakfast meeting.


A pilot program for the follow-up screenings, conducted on 1,000 U.S.
soldiers returning from Iraq to Italy last year, found a much greater
incidence of mental health problems than expected, a fact Kiley attributed
to post-combat stress problems taking time to develop once the danger has
passed.

Only about 4 percent or 5 percent of troops coming home from combat
actually have PTSD, but many others face problems adjusting when they come
home, Kiley said.

Such problems are sometimes more acute in members of the National Guard,
who return to a civilian job when they leave active military duty, Ritchie
said.

Military medical officials, however, cautioned against people reading
their data as suggesting the war had driven so many soldiers over the
edge. Instead, they characterized the anxiety and stress as normal
reactions to combat, seeing dead and mutilated bodies, and feeling
helpless to stop a violent situation.

Still, such reactions can lead to problems with spouses and children,
substance abuse and just day-to-day life, they said.

Truck drivers and convoy guards in Iraq are developing mental health
problems in greater numbers than other troops, Ritchie said, suggesting
the long hours on the road, constantly under threat of attack, are taking
their toll.

The military has about 200 mental health experts in Iraq, grouped in what
the Army calls “combat stress control teams.” These teams are at many
posts around the country and talk with troops after battles, try to
prevent suicides and diagnose troops who should be evacuated from of the
country because of mental health problems.

“They are worth their weight in gold,” Kiley said of the teams.

An inquiry into the mental health of soldiers serving in Iraq found an
improvement in the mental health and morale in 2004 over 2003. The
military made its report on the inquiry public last week.

The report said the number of suicides in Iraq and Kuwait declined from 24
in 2003 to nine last year.

Historically, mental health problems have always been a part of warfare,
and were looked at systematically when shellshock cases accounted for
significant losses during World War I.

Ritchie said mental health cases ebb and flow during a war, and suggested
they are sometimes connected to a soldier’s sense of the success of the
larger war effort. During the Korean War, cases increased when U.S. forces
were losing ground but decreased as the situation improved, she said.

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