I'm having a good discussion with a friend of mine over the "PTS vs. PTSD" debate. He makes a solid case for dropping the "D," but I think it should remain. What are your thoughts?
I agree with dropping it. Calling it a "disorder" just adds to the stigma. It has been proven to be a true physical injury that can be easily diagnosed and treated.
I'm not exactly sure where or how it would matter either way?
Having watched the psych docs attempt to diagnose every catastrophically injured soldier with PTSD I am not a fan of how it's characterized or treated. Watching from a clinical perspective the D only matters to those looking to put a classification on someone or stigmatize them, even at WRNMMC.
I would like to see it totally reworked. I personally think it focuses too much on defining a person and not the issue at hand.
The appropriately nicknamed Mad Dog took aim at a dangerous moving target: Post-Traumatic Stress. "You've been told that you're broken," said Mattis, "That you're damaged goods" and should be labeled victims of two unjust and poorly executed wars. The truth, instead, is that we are the only folks with the skills, determination, and values to ensure American dominance in this chaotic world.
To a now-silent theater full of combat vets he explained how the nation has a "disease orientation" toward combat stress. Mad Dog's death blow was swift: "In America, victimhood is exalted."
So what's the problem? We fought, we got a little screwed-up, and now civilians try to get us to talk about it a lot. Big deal.
Except that it matters to General Mattis, and we should probably care what he thinks because chances are he's right. The problem, he contends, is that eventually we start believing it. We start seeing ourselves as broken. We buy into the myth.
The alternative is something so obvious that it is pathetic we don't talk about it more. "There is also Post-Traumatic Growth," Mattis told the crowd. "You come back from war stronger and more sure of who you are."