From the Los Angeles Times
Iraq war veterans often delay mental
reactions
For
many, depression, stress and relationship trouble don't show up until
months after soldiers return, a study shows. The finding may help
prevent the problems suffered by many Vietnam vets.
By Thomas H. Maugh II
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
9:28 PM PST, November 14, 2007
The stress and depression caused by combat in Iraq often don't appear
until a few months after a soldier has returned home, researchers
reported today.
Six months after their deployment ended, the number of soldiers
referred for mental health care was nearly three times as high as when
they first returned, and the number reporting relationship problems
with their families and others had quadrupled, according to results
from a new screening tool used by the military to assess the troops'
mental health.
Overall, about 20% of active-duty Army soldiers and more than 40% of
National Guardsmen and reservists were referred for care or had sought
care on their own, a military team reported in the Journal of the
American Medical Assn.
Psychologists hope that catching problems early and getting soldiers
into treatment will prevent the type of long-term mental health
problems that afflicted many soldiers who fought in Vietnam, said Dr.
Charles S. Milliken of the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, who
led the study.
"We know from civilian studies and others . . . that if you can get to
these problems earlier, the chances of effectively treating them are
much better," he said.
The incidence of mental health problems during the Vietnam War was
about the same as that of the current war, he noted. But studies have
shown that as many as 10% of Vietnam vets still suffer chronic and
disabling symptoms.
The trends reported by Milliken and his colleagues are similar to those
seen in smaller studies of returning Iraqi veterans, but some experts
cautioned that the absolute numbers of troubled soldiers may be
artificially high because of the nature of the questionnaires used.
Psychologist Richard J. McNally of Harvard University noted that he and
Dutch colleagues published a study on Dutch soldiers earlier this year
using a similar questionnaire. The questionnaire showed that about 20%
of the professional soldiers suffered symptoms of depression and
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
But when the subjects underwent clinical interviews, they found, only
about 4% actually suffered the disorders.
Milliken conceded that the large numbers did not represent clinical
diagnoses.
"We have intentionally set the bar pretty low," he said. "We're hoping
to find early symptoms and intervene before they can become
full-fledged clinical diagnoses."
The study reflects an increased emphasis by the military on catching
incipient mental health problems when veterans return from combat duty.
Beginning in May 2003, the Department of Defense began administering
the Post-Deployment Health Assessment to all returning soldiers.
Milliken, Dr. Charles W. Hoge of Walter Reed and their colleagues
reported in March 2006 on the first results from the survey. They found
that about one in eight soldiers suffered from PTSD or other disorders,
but they speculated that the number would grow as the soldiers began
re-integrating into society.
A small preliminary assessment confirmed that speculation, and the Army
initiated a second survey six months after the soldiers' return.
The new report details the outcome for the first 88,235 soldiers who
took both surveys.
Of those, 4.4% were referred for mental health care in the first
screening, and an additional 11.7% were referred during the second
screening.
Three-quarters of those who later received mental health care had not
been referred for care, but sought it out themselves. Overall, 20.3% of
active-duty personnel and 42.2% of reservists and guardsmen surveyed
underwent some form of treatment.
The results were not surprising, said Paul Rieckhoff, executive
director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. The initial
screening was performed while the troops were on the way home, and
soldiers may have minimized symptoms for fear that admitting to an
illness would delay their reunions with their families.
There is also a well-known "honeymoon period" after return that
persists until their experiences begin to sink in.
The higher rates among reservists and guardsmen are also not
surprising, Rieckhoff said. A stigma is still associated with mental
health problems, and career soldiers may be less likely to admit to
them.
But the reservists may be more likely to suffer problems because they
are dropped back into society without having the fellowship of a
community of others who shared their experiences.
"You can literally be in Baghdad one week and Brooklyn the next," he
said. "That's a pretty tough shift."
The quadrupling of those reporting interpersonal conflicts also was
understandable, experts said. Despite the wide availability of
telephone calls and Internet connections in this war, the soldiers were
still isolated from their family and friends at the time of the first
assessment, so few conflicts would be expected.
But after six months of close contact with friends and family,
frictions would be much more likely.
One surprising finding of the new study was the lack of correlation
between treatment and improvement in symptoms. More than half of those
identified as having problems in the original study "improved without
treatment," and many of those who received treatment did not improve,
Milliken said.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times