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Military Mental Health Workers in Iraq - to heal or to patch

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donsu Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-30-05 01:02 PM
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Military Mental Health Workers in Iraq - to heal or to patch

http://www.counterpunch.com/

The Wall Street Journal has a new article on the role of mental health professionals in treating war trauma in Iraq . The military has caught on to how these workers can aid the war effort and has increased their per capita numbers. Rather than seeking the best treatment to help traumatized soldiers recover from their stressful and horrific experiences, these professionals attempt to patch soldiers in order to return them to combat. As the article illustrates in its lead paragraph:

Lt. Maria Kimble, an Army mental-health worker, runs a two-person counseling team out of a small plywood office here. As part of a "combat stress detachment," her job is to help soldiers cope with the horror of the battlefield -- so that they can return to it as soon as possible.

Ethical questions are raised, and then ignored by these workers, who after all, are primarily involved in serving the war effort:

"There are a lot of ethical questions about it," says Col. Levandowski. "The oath I take as a physician is to do no harm," he says. But "ultimately, we are in the business of prosecuting a war."

Clearly, the best interests of the patients are at best one of several factors weighed by these professionals:

"I do ache for these guys," says Col. Levandowski. "But if you send too many (soldiers) home, the risk is that mental health will be seen as a ticket out of country."
-snip-
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our troops get screwed whatever way they turn

sigh
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BlueIris Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-30-05 01:07 PM
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1. Ouch. My heart re-breaks for the troops daily.
These men and women will need long-term mental health care for the rest of their lives. It's clear that the military may not be able to give it to them. I really hope our civilian mental health professionals can be motivated (and subsidized) to help pick up the slack.
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