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pnwmom

(108,980 posts)
Sun Feb 7, 2016, 07:27 PM Feb 2016

In new DSM-5 (psychiatrists' "bible") PTSD definition now covers "racial battle fatigue"

http://www.medicaldaily.com/changes-dsm-5-racism-can-cause-ptsd-similar-soldiers-after-war-246177#.VrZsKNHawQc.facebook

Dr. Monnica T. Williams suggests that proposed changes in the criteria for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in the fifth edition of the Diagnostic Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) could increase the potential for better recognition of race-based trauma in racial and ethnic minorities.

In a recent article in Psychology Today, Williams, who is a clinical psychologist and the associate director of the University of Louisville's Center for Mental Health Disparities, said that before the release of the DSM-5 Thursday, racism was recognized as a trauma that could potentially cause PTSD, but only in relation to a specific event. There had to be an incident of intense fear, helplessness, or horror for such consideration. For instance, if someone was assaulted in a racially-motivated event, then racism qualified as a sufficient trauma to be categorized as a cause of PTSD.

SNIP

In 2011, researchers found that African Americans who reported experiences of racial discrimination had higher odds of suffering from generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). An article on PsychCentral termed the phenomenon as "racial battle fatigue,” saying that "exposure to racial discrimination is analogous to the constant pressure soldiers face on the battlefield."

"While the term [racial battle fatigue] is certainly not trying to say that the conditions are exactly what soldiers face on a battlefield, it borrows from the idea that stress is created in chronically unsafe or hostile environments," said Dr. Jose Soto, Ph.D., associate professor of psychology at University of California, Berkeley.

Williams builds on that concept, saying that many minorities experience lasting, cumulative effects of racism that could lead to the development of PTSD. "It was found that in many cases, such as soldiers trained in combat, emotional responses are only felt afterward, once removed from the traumatic setting," she wrote. So, even when experiences aren't immediate and earth-shattering, their effects can have the magnitude to cause long-lasting trauma.

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In new DSM-5 (psychiatrists' "bible") PTSD definition now covers "racial battle fatigue" (Original Post) pnwmom Feb 2016 OP
I have many patients who are coping with the effects of racism gwheezie Feb 2016 #1
I was in support of Obama fast tracking PTSD settlements and many vets now randys1 Feb 2016 #11
Theres loads of evidence to support this finding, too, but DU doesn't care of course. Liberal_Stalwart71 Feb 2016 #2
Hopefully this new DSM will help it to become broadly recognized. n/t pnwmom Feb 2016 #3
The stress of living with racism and downright hostility brer cat Feb 2016 #4
You're welcome, brer cat. n/t pnwmom Feb 2016 #5
That is interesting, I hope it proves helpful treestar Feb 2016 #6
This seems legit to me. Brickbat Feb 2016 #7
Good nadinbrzezinski Feb 2016 #8
I'm sure it is. nt pnwmom Feb 2016 #9
This is very real. Cheese Sandwich Feb 2016 #10

gwheezie

(3,580 posts)
1. I have many patients who are coping with the effects of racism
Sun Feb 7, 2016, 07:52 PM
Feb 2016

It's ignored. I think this is important work and should be persued.

randys1

(16,286 posts)
11. I was in support of Obama fast tracking PTSD settlements and many vets now
Mon Feb 8, 2016, 05:14 PM
Feb 2016

get very nice monthly checks, thanks to Obama.

Time to do the same for this issue.

brer cat

(24,577 posts)
4. The stress of living with racism and downright hostility
Sun Feb 7, 2016, 08:15 PM
Feb 2016

has to be profoundly impacting their mental and physical health. It is an unrelenting pressure cooker. I think this is encouraging news, which could lead to better treatment options. ot, but I have long wondered if stress was a major reason AAs have higher rates of high blood pressure. It is a killer, and the more we know the better our chances of preventing premature deaths.

Thanks for posting, pnwmom.

 

Cheese Sandwich

(9,086 posts)
10. This is very real.
Mon Feb 8, 2016, 02:09 AM
Feb 2016

I don't like how everything has to be made clinical because it kind of turns it from a social issue into an individual health issue.

But I'm glad they finally recognized this so hopefully we can get better help.

What happens when you go seek mental health counseling and the counselor is racist? Not on purpose but lots of professionals are sort of accidentally racist. Hopefully this new diagnose will help give them a clue.

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