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MORE NORTH CAROLINA VETERANS SEEK HELP FOR
PTSD -- And, some doctors say that not enough
veterans are seeking help.

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http://www.citizen-times.com/
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More WNC veterans seek help for PTSD
by Nanci Bompey,
NBOMPEY@CITIZEN-TIMES.COM
ASHEVILLE — More local veterans are seeking help for post-traumatic
stress disorder, and the numbers are expected to rise as more troops
return home from Iraq and Afghanistan.
But, while the military is getting better at addressing mental illness,
some doctors say that not enough veterans are seeking help.
Psychologists say the stigma attached to mental health is one reason
more veterans are not coming in for help, but the sooner they are
treated for post-traumatic stress disorder, the better chance they have
of overcoming it.
“Of course, there’s no cure for memories, there’s no cure for difficult
experiences, but there are many things that can help,” said Bruce
Purvis, a psychologist at the VA Medical Center in Asheville.
Post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, is an anxiety disorder that can
occur following the experience of a traumatic event. While anyone who
witnesses a traumatic event can suffer from PTSD, people who have been
in combat are extremely susceptible to developing the disorder.
Andrew Clark, 24, began experiencing symptoms of the disorder about one
month after he left the Air Force in 2005, following two deployments to
Iraq.
Clark started to have nightmares. He would wake up soaked in sweat and
his heart would be racing. He found himself searching the side of the
road for trash as if he was looking for roadside bombs. He couldn’t wait
in line and would explode if the person behind the counter couldn’t ring
him up fast enough. After his unit was deployed back to Iraq and Clark
was unable to go, he plunged into depression.
“Adapting back to civilian life is the hardest part of it,” he said.
Clark said when he was in Iraq, it was necessary to put his emotions
aside so that he could do his job.
“It took me awhile to understand that I’m not in that environment
anymore,” he said.
PTSD numbers increase
The National Center for PTSD estimates that about 30 percent of men and
women who served in Vietnam experience PTSD and an additional 20 percent
to 25 percent have had partial PTSD at some point in their lives. The
center also estimates that between 6 percent and 11 percent of veterans
from the war in Afghanistan and about 12 percent to 20 percent of
military personnel who served in Iraq have been diagnosed with PTSD.
At the Asheville VA Medical Center, the number of patients being treated
for PTSD has increased over the past 10 years.
Like most VA Medical Centers across the country, most of the PTSD claims
at the Asheville VA are from Vietnam War veterans, but the number of
veterans from recent wars who are being treated for the disorder in
Asheville has more than doubled to 170 patients from October through
April of this year from 58 patients during the 2006 fiscal year. This
number does not reflect veterans who are also getting help at the
Veterans Center and other mental health facilities.
“Until we send our robots out to fight their robots, we’ll always have
PTSD,” Purvis said.
Returning home
Soldiers returning from World War I experienced shell shock, and
veterans from World War II were said to suffer from combat fatigue. But
a formal diagnosis for PTSD did not exist until the early 1980s.
According to the National Center for PTSD, people with the disorder have
four major types of symptoms: They re-experience the event either while
awake or asleep; they stay away from people, places and things that
remind them of the trauma; they experience a loss of emotions; and they
feel on guard, have trouble sleeping and are irritable.
To receive a formal diagnosis of PTSD, these symptoms must last for more
than one month, cause significant distress and affect the person’s
ability to function normally.
The combat behaviors veterans learn in the military and the return to
civilian life after being in a life and death situation can exacerbate
some of these symptoms.
But, Purvis said these are normal responses to an abnormal situation.
“It’s the way we’re put together,” Purvis said. “It’s the way we’re
wired.”
Dr. Alan Krueger, a former psychiatrist at the Asheville VA Medical
Center, said even if military personnel don’t develop PTSD or other
mental health issues, war has some effect on everyone who is involved in
it.
“I don’t think anybody who goes into combat comes out unscathed,”
Krueger said.
The lessons of Vietnam
But doctors say newer veterans like Clark may have a better chance at
recovery than some of the older veterans who fought in Vietnam.
“The symptoms are very much the same but the package is different,”
Purvis said.
Lonnie Darr, 60, was in Vietnam for three years. After he left the
military in 1980, he couldn’t hold down a job, his wife and kids left
him, and he withdrew from the world.
One morning, he woke up in his car under a freeway in Los Angeles,
homeless and alone, and decided to seek help.
“I never heard of PTSD until I went to the Vet Center,” he said. “I knew
something was horribly wrong, but I couldn’t put my finger on it.”
Although Darr is now getting help, he still struggles with many of the
symptoms of PTSD on a daily basis. He is married for the third time, but
he hasn’t been able to work for the past three years because of severe
anxiety and intrusive thoughts about Vietnam.
Most days, Darr stays in his home office, which his wife has nicknamed
“the bunker.” Even a trip to Sam’s Club causes him severe anxiety.
While the number of times he thinks about Vietnam has decreased, a few
times a week, Darr will be back in a bunker staring into the face of a
teenage North Vietnamese soldier or running through a firefight in Khe
Sanh.
“In my day-to-day life, I see Vietnam all the time,” Darr said. “This
doesn’t leave you.”
Because PTSD was not formally diagnosed until the 1980s, many Vietnam
veterans like Darr went without help for a long time, which made their
symptoms worse and harder to overcome.
“When the Vietnam veterans came out we seemed to be pretty unaware of
the psychological consequences of combat,” Purvis said.
Krueger said because they are getting treatment at a younger age,
veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan might have a better chance of
overcoming PTSD than the veterans of previous wars.
Younger veterans have fewer additional health problems, and because they
are being treated earlier for PTSD, fewer structural changes take place
in the brain that compound the problems, Krueger said.
“The sooner we can intervene, the better,” he said.
The military now also acknowledges the need for mental health services.
Families and soldiers are educated about PTSD, and there are more
support services both before and after soldiers go to war. The military
screens soldiers for mental health problems during combat, and they have
critical stress units on the ground in Iraq.
Krueger said doctors and the military today also realize that the
methods of individual deployment and lack of time for adjustment back to
civilian society during the Vietnam era affected soldiers’ mental
health. Veterans of the Vietnam War also came home to an unwelcoming
society and felt isolated and rejected, something that contributed to
the development of PTSD.
Purvis said he thinks these differences may mean that younger veterans
will have an easier time overcoming PTSD.
“I think we’re trying to do a number of things to help the younger
veterans because of the lessons learned from Vietnam,” he said.
Problems still exist
But, there is still a stigma associated with mental illness, both in the
military and in civilian society, that prevents some veterans from
getting help for mental health issues.
Both Clark and Darr said they tried to deny that they had a problem in
the first place, a common response in veterans with PTSD, and both men
said many of their friends claim there is nothing wrong with them even
though they suffer from many of the symptoms of PTSD.
“They often think they’re the only ones who are affected that way,”
Krueger said.
Clark said he realizes now that he isn’t alone and the help he has
received at the VA has helped him with his symptoms.
He is less irritable with other people and realizes he doesn’t have to
constantly be on alert, but Clark said he still suffers from occasional
nightmares and anxiety.
“I don’t know if it goes away or not,” he said.
But, Purvis said that if veterans get help soon enough and they receive
the proper care, they can overcome PTSD.
“I think you can put a great deal of it behind you,” he said.
What PTSD sufferers can do
How to get help:
People who suffer from PTSD should see a therapist to help them deal
with their symptoms. Veterans can call the VA Health Benefits Service
Center at (877) 222-VETS to find the closest VA Hospital or Veterans
Center.
Help in WNC:
Veterans who want help at the VA Medical Center need to get into the VA
system. They can do that by visiting admissions at the VA hospital. For
emergencies, veterans should go to the emergency room. Veterans need to
prove their eligibility for services by bringing a copy of their DD214.
The Asheville VA Medical Center is at 1100 Tunnel Road. Veterans can
also call the hospital at 298-7911.
Veterans also can visit the Veterans Center in Greenville, S.C. The
Veterans Center does not require any paperwork and accepts walk-ins. For
more information, call David Hollingsworth at (864) 271-2711. The Vet
Center is at 14 Lavinia Ave., Greenville.
On Wednesdays, Hollingsworth comes to the Pardee Health Center in the
Blue Ridge Mall in Hendersonville.
For more information, call 692-4600. There are group sessions at noon
and 6 p.m. Individual counseling is available by appointment. There is
also a spousal support group that meets once a month.
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Larry Scott