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The Alpha Company humvee destroyed on Smugglers Road. Four guardsmen were killed and the driver was thrown from the vehicle. <br />
Alpha Company
The Alpha Company humvee destroyed on Smugglers Road. Four guardsmen were killed and the driver was thrown from the vehicle.
RELATED STORIES
Part 1
 
Alpha Company: Their War Comes Home
 
Alpha Company hit hard by post-traumatic stress
Part 2
 
Rebuilding their lives
Part 3
 
Haunted, again and again
Part 4
 
The Battles Past and Ahead
 
Certain of their own action if not the mission
 
Series home page
 
How this series was reported
Videos
 
Dan South: Thrown from a humvee
 
Inquirer reporter Tom Infield on the series
 
Mike Sarro and John Ashenfelder: Ambush aftermath
 
Robert Jackson: Can’t shake images of Iraq
 
Lorenzo Martinez : The war outside his window
 
Anthony Callum: 'Flying by the seat of our pants'
 
Allan Dempster: A sword on S. Broad St.
 
Harold Myers: ‘Every night I cried’
Previous Alpha coverage
 
From deployment to return
Graphics
 
Timeline: Starting with the mobilization
 
Profiles of Alpha Company members
 
How the ambush happened
 
Alpha Company survey: What they're doing now
From the front lines
 
A Guard member shares e-mails to his family
Discussion boards
 
Being a soldier at war
 
Soldiers returning home from war
 
Getting help with PTSD
Getting help for PTSD
 
National Center for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
 
Pennsylvania Army National Guard
 
Army Behavioral Health
 
Tricare Behavioral Health Plan (Military Health System)
 
David Baldwin's Trauma Information Pages
More about traumatic brain injury
 
What it is, treatment, prognosis
Getting help
 
Links to information on PTSD and TBI


Alpha Company: Their War Comes Home

Alpha Company hit hard by post-traumatic stress

In all, 46 percent said they had been treated at clinics or hospitals. “Those are big numbers,” one expert said.

Of all the things that Alpha Company has had to struggle with since it came home from Iraq, the most pervasive may be post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.

Of the 126 veterans interviewed or surveyed by The Inquirer, almost half - 46 percent - said they had been treated for PTSD, most at VA hospitals and clinics in the region.

Alpha's rate of PTSD is higher than that of most U.S. troops who served in Iraq or Afghanistan - partly, no doubt, as a result of its being a frontline combat unit that lost six men.

Shelley M. MacDermid, a Purdue University professor who served on a Defense Department mental-health task force last year, said typical PTSD rates among returning veterans were about 14 percent.

"Those are big numbers," she said of The Inquirer's Alpha findings.

National Guard and Reserve units, in general, have shown slightly higher PTSD rates than have regular Army units, she said.

The Defense Department task force said this might be in part because civilian-soldiers were separated after they returned home, rather than staying together as units in which the members could support one another.

Ira Katz, director of mental-health services for the Department of Veterans Affairs, said that among the 300,000 or so veterans who have been seen by the VA, about 20 percent have been diagnosed with PTSD.

But he said that twice that number - about 40 percent - have had some "mental condition."

"That's not all that different from your [46] percent," he said.

Both MacDermid and Katz said that PTSD had become a popular shorthand for all sorts of emotional symptoms that veterans experience. These may include depression and anxiety disorders, but not rise to the level of PTSD.

Steven Silver, who recently retired as director of the inpatient PTSD unit at the Coatesville VA hospital, predicted that as time went on, more and more combat veterans would be shown to have the high PTSD rate Alpha now shows.

PTSD, as a term, has been used only since 1980. World War II soldiers talked of battle fatigue. In World War I, it was shell shock.

Silver said that both the military and the VA had become more aggressive in warning troops about PTSD and getting them treatment.

He said that although Alpha's rate was high, "in some ways, it's good news. It means that people are coming in for help."

PTSD typically is treated with psychotherapy and antidepressant drugs, including Zoloft and Paxil.

About two-thirds of Alpha veterans have received care at VA hospitals and clinics - for PTSD, physical ailments, or both.

Of those who expressed an opinion, 57 said they were satisfied with VA care and 19 said they were not.


Contact staff writer Tom Infield at 610-313-8205 or tinfield@phillynews.com.

 

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