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Psychological Disorder: A Psychological Analysis

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War, the incarnation of hate and ignorance that plagues both the human name and mind. It is evident that throughout history, “ war is one of the constants,” and “in the last 3,421 years of recorded history, only 268 have seen no war” (Purwar). For the longest time, the only obvious negative outcome of war is being on the losing side. As of the First World War, the term “PTSD” had not been developed, however the term “shell shock” had been created as a precursor to an unknown condition. As the field of medical examinations advances, psychological disorders such as PTSD became noticed and identified; however, these terms went only as far as to label disorders in the involved combatants, not the affected bystanders. The psychological impact of …show more content…

Being a child soldier, without a doubt can be worse than the role of bystander. For example, those children who are forced to become soldiers are “raised in an environment of severe violence, experience it, and subsequently often commit cruelties and atrocities of the worst kind” (Schauer). V.A., a woman who was abducted by the LRA (The Lord’s Resistance Army) at the age of ten and remained a captive for ten more years reported her experience: “One day when I was 12 years old, we saw how children in a school were forced to eat their own teacher by the LRA,” this only being the surface of the atrocities experienced. K.K.G., another survivor, being male had experienced a different life: “When I was out in the forest, I was feeling nothing, I was drugged all the time…. I get these terrible nightmares. They are always about the children we killed” (Schauer). No matter the personality, acts such as these can only come from a spoken …show more content…

To prevent situations such as those stated would be something of great difficulty; however, part of the solution includes the removal of the harmful ideologies such as of those followed by the LRA. This also includes the equality in both education and civil liberties of those in developing countries. According to Western countries with World War two veterans or political prisoners, PTSD has been found to persist as long as up to 40 years after the trauma has been experienced; even when symptoms have been observed in decline, it does not conclude complete recovery (Schauer). Treatments, however, may work and prove effective; for example “40% of children in the Gaza strip who had been initially diagnosed with PTSD decreased to 10% one year later with the onset of the peace process” (Purwar). There have also been studies that consistently show “the value of both physical support and psychological support in minimizing the effects of war-related traumas, as well as the role of religion and cultural practices as ways of coping” (“Mental

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