Ansiety Disorder: The Development of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder

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Introduction

To many military service members, stress during combat is an every day occurrence, which is linked to their survival in those austere environments. Additionally there are so many elements in combat, which can affect the mind of combat veterans temporarily or permanently based on their personal experiences. And because their survival in combat depends on their experiences, managing some of that stress can be detrimental since it might affect their wits. However in many cases, when in garrison, combat veteran do not learn how to manage those combat stressful experiences, which served them well in war. Consequently they develop posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which is an anxiety disorder in response to dangerous ordeal or to witnessing a significant life event (NIMH, n. d). PTSDs, just like any stress, are linked to stimuli that Watson and Shalev (2005) referred to as “Primary Stressor.” Most PTSD treatments aim to building resiliency and developing coping mechanism. One of the ways to treat PTSD is the cognitive behavior therapy (CBT). One of the three approaches of CBT is the use of “Exposure Therapy” where the client is placed in a safe and relatively similar traumatic environment to help the client cope (NIMH, n. d.). However Watson and Shalev (2005) cautioned to apply stressors only for a limited duration, and prevent “bio-psychological system” to fracture, stressor application cannot exceed client resilience threshold. For this reason, I hypothesize that the gradual application of simulated stressors over a period of time in a safe and control environment could be beneficial in helping combat veterans cope or manage their PTSD.

Purpose

The purpose of this experiment study is to test the stress th...

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...e of ethics including informed consent, human treatment of all participants, and at anytime when the participants feel that there are in danger or that the treatment is not what they envisioned, they have the right to request to be dropped from the experiment. Because of the intricacy of PTSD, that is one of the reason I wanted to do gradual exposure to reduce to overwhelming response of that experience.

Works Cited

Lyons, J. A., & Keane, T. M. (1992). Keane PTSD Scale: MMPI and MMPI-2 Update. Journal Of Traumatic Stress, 5(1), 111-117.

National Institute of Mental Health (n. d.). Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Bethesda, MD: National Institute of Mental Health. Retrieved

Watson, P. J. and Shalev, A. Y. (2005). Assessment and treatment of adult acute responses to traumatic stress following mass traumatic events. CNS Spectrums 2005 Feb;10(2):123-31.

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