Title: THE COMBAT TRAUMA CONTINUUM AND VETERANS
1THE COMBAT TRAUMA CONTINUUM AND VETERANS
- Lessons from the Past, Wisdom from the Present,
Healing in the Future. - Robert J. Caffrey, LPC., J.D.
2THE COMBAT TRAUMA CONTINUUM AND VETERANS
- War and trauma take place on a continuum.
- Physical Continuum Combat Operational Stress
Reaction (COSR) to Post-Combat Trauma (PTSD). - Narrative Continuum Trauma is contextual, the
warrior and his/her culture give the combat
experience its meaning. - Historical continuum The wounds of war are
timeless.
3Overview
- The Paradox of the Warriors World - The Need
for Cultural Competence. - The Physiology of Combat The Re-wiring of the
Warriors Nervous and Emotional System. - Scars on a Warriors Heart A History of the
Impact of Warfare on Soldiers. - Healers and Warriors A Conversation about
Healing Invisible Wounds.
4A Warriors JourneyThe Bridge Between Worlds
5 6The Warriors Paradox
- Soldiers are not as other men . . .They are those
of a world apart, a very ancient world which
exists in parallel with the everyday world but
does not belong to it . . .The distance can
never be closed, for the culture of the warrior
can never be that of civilization itself. - A History of Warfare, John Keegan
7The Warriors Paradox
- Operating in a world of chaos
- Old English Wyrre to bring into confusion.
8The Warriors Paradox
- Combat Truths
- War is about combat, combat is about fighting,
fighting is about killing, and killing is a
traumatic personal experience. - Frequency of combat and proximity of killing is
directly proportional to the level of combat
stress. - A warrior must be able to psychologically and
emotionally distance themselves from the
environment, the killing, and the civilian world
to win and to survive. - There is, and always will be a deep and abiding
contextual and cultural gap between a combat
veteran and a civilian. - COL Timothy (BT) Hanifen, USMC
9The Warriors Paradox
- Warriors - those prepared to kill, or be killed
or maimed, to protect another from actual or
threatened violence. - Victor Davis Hanson The Western Way of War
- The culture of the Western warrior and the
Western way of war. - The Knight in a straight up fight!
10The Warriors Paradox
- Being a warrior is an inherently
self-destructive profession. Packing Inferno,
Tyler E. Boudreau - Agreeing to enter a world organized for the
specific purpose of annihilating you physically,
emotionally, mentally.
11The Warriors Paradox
- Warriors Narrative The story of I is an
individually, culturally, and historically
created construct. - But the warrior identity can be rewritten by
reality - The enemy has a vote!
- Cousteaus food chain
- Nietzsche, fighting monsters and gazing into
the abyss - John Rambo, the other guys and taking names.
12The Warriors Paradox
- I seek to take my enemys story from him, and he
seeks to take mine!
13The Warriors ParadoxThe Narratives 10 Elements
- The Transpersonal commitment v. Personal survival
- Reality v. Mythology
- Clean kills exist only in Hollywood
14The Warriors Paradox
- 3. Killing and the Gods The Temple of Mars,
Yahweh, Herem, and anthropology's insight. - 4. Skill v. Chance Von Clausewitz and the
iron dice of fate. - 5. Ferocity v. the Berserker.
- 6. Brotherhood v. Tribalism The creation of
the Other.
15The Warriors Paradox
- 7. The skill of killing v. the taking of
life. - Necessary violence v. needless destruction.
- Obedience v. toxic leadership.
- Loyalty v. Honor.
16The Warriors ParadoxThe Healers Role
- To help warriors live into rather than solve
their paradox, we need to be mindful that - 1. A warriors effectiveness depends on being
internally balanced. - 2. In war, what you dont know can and will hurt
you. - 3. In war, what you dont teach often has
dreadful consequences. - 4. In the absence of internal and external
leadership, there is only chaos!
17The Physiology of Combat
- Re-wiring the Warriors Nervous and Emotional
System
18The Physiology of Combat
- START ME UP!
- In response to threat, the limbic system releases
hormones telling the amygdala to alert the
hypothalamus to activate the sympathetic nervous
system (SNS) to release neurotransmitters
epinephrine (EPI) and norepinephrine (NE) to
activate the body for fight/flight/freeze
response. - Respiration and heart rate increase (NE) moving
blood to skin and muscles for rapid response.
19The Physiology of Combat
- SHUT ME DOWN!
- At the same time, the SNS releases
corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH or CRF). - CRH/CRF stimulate the pituitary gland to release
adrenocortico-tropic hormone (ACTH) causing
adrenals to release hydrocortisone (AKA
cortisol). - Threat is over, cortisol stops production of EPI
and NE.
20The Physiology of Combat
- The Inevitability of Startle/Flinch!
21The Physiology of CombatThe Survival Stress
Reaction (SSR)
- Fear activated heart rate increase Erosion of
combat skills! - Combat 70 BPM to 220 BPM in ½ second
- High and even moderate levels of stress interfere
with fine muscular control decision making. - Most life and death confrontations 145 BPM in
tenths of a second!
22The Physiology of CombatThe Survival Stress
Reaction (SSR)
- 70 BPM Normal.
- 115 BPM Fine complex motor skills begin
deterioration (Hand-eye co-ordination and some
form of digital actions, multi-tasking). - 115-145 BPM Optimal survival combat
performance / complex motor skills high
functioning ( The Combat Rush).
23The Physiology of Combat
- 145 BPM - Complex motor skills ( 3 designed
to work in unison) deteriorate - Brain center for hearing shuts down Didnt
hear/couldnt make sense, understand
24The Physiology of Combat
- 175 BPM 185 BPM
- Cognitive processing deteriorates.
- Tunneling -visual system decreases peripheral
info, combatant often retreats from the threat to
widen the peripheral field. Pupils dilate to
gather more information depth perception is
diminished - Perceptual Narrowing occurs (Coning) narrowing
of visual system slows processing of information,
anxiety increases as combatant attempts to direct
field of focus to threat. - Critical Stress Amnesia What happened? Who did
what? - ---
25The Physiology of Combat
- 185 - 220 BPM Hyper-vigilance (Freezing)
Irrational Behavior. The Dead Zone! - BPM increases trigger SNS - cerebral cortex is
by-passed to large extent as brain stem and
amgydala prepare combatant for flight, fight
freeze. - Hyperventilation associated with impairments in
memory, concentration and diminished
discrimination or perceptual abilities. Men in
combat often square on the target due to loss
of visual focus during stress.
26The Physiology of Combat
- Increased heart rates have a catastrophic affect
on perceptual skills, cognitive processing
skills, reaction time and motor skill
performance. - Absent proper training in performing needed
survival skill, anxiety increases, stress
increases, BPM increases, and combatant descends
into trauma vortex. - Breathing to control BPM is critical to managing
stress and trauma.
27The Physiology of Combat
- The Terror of the Boyd Cycle
- OODA
- Observe
- Orient
- Decide
- Act
- Hicks Law and Its' Consequences
28The Impact of Combat
- Sensory Overload (Observe Orient) How does
the mind respond to the inability to identify
danger in a foreign culture? - THE FIRST TEAM FOOT PATROL IN AL NASARIYHA.
(April, 2003) - Uncertainty (Decide) The constant
anticipation of being attacked can have a
profoundly toxic effect, especially when this
stress continues for months and years. - THE GARBAGE PILE AT CAMP WAR EAGLE. (February,
2004)
29The Impact of Combat
- Combat skills and the Combat Rush In combat,
the midbrain has learned to bypass logical
thought processes and established conditioned
reflexes or SNS responses, instantly, without
having to be told to do it. - The Drunk at Square Town. ( October, 2003)
(OODA COMPLETED)
30The Physiology of PTSD
- Combat Frozen in Time PTSD
- The never ending trauma loop
- PTSD sufferers hypersecrete CRF and have
subnormal levels of cortisol. - Result 1 there is no shut off valve. With no
ability to halt the bodys alarm reaction,
flight/fight/freeze response continues unabated. - Hyperarousal and exaggerated startle response may
occur. - Result 2 The nervous system is always on high
alert. PTSD sufferers and those exposed to
trauma hyper secrete NE. - SNS responds with tachycardia, hypertension,
dizziness, increased perspiration. - Elevated NE believed to play a role in flashback
and panic attacks.
31The Physiology of PTSD
- MEMORIES OF TERROR ARE OUR GHOSTS IN THE
MACHINE - PTSD results in the decrease and impairment of
hippocampal activity( explicit memory, facts,
concepts, ideas, language dependent storage and
retrieval of memories). - Amygdala governs implicit memories( based on
senses, emotions) and is functioning no matter
how high the level of arousal. - Hippocampal activity decreases and is impaired by
trauma. - During trauma, some events maybe stored in the
implicit, but not the explicit memory.
32The Physiology of Combat
- MEMORIES OF TERROR ARE OUR GHOSTS IN THE
MACHINE ( continued) - Lack of explicit memory leaves trauma memory
devoid of placement in space and time. - Inability to contextualize memories causes
flashbacks and experience of reliving trauma. - Serotonin levels decrease due to PTSD in the
orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), which processes
social and emotional information and plays a role
in the emotional processing of affective
memories. - Decreased serotonin in OFC potentially
contributes to misinterpretation on emotional
stimuli, impulsivity aggression and inappropriate
decision-making.
33 COMBAT TRAUMAA Historical Perspective
34Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Post-combat numbing, nightmares, dissociation,
intrusive recollections. - Epic of Gilgamesh (2750 2500 B.C.E.) Sumer.
- Homers Iliad (850 B.C.E.).
35Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
36Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Civil War (1861 1865) Nostalgia and
Soldiers Heart. - Lethargy, fits of hysteria, withdrawal, numbing,
extreme emotionality in soldiers from North and
South.
37Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
-
- Two-thirds of those committed to Northern
insane asylums after the Civil War were veterans. - Virtually all of the 291 veterans in the Indiana
State Insane Asylum demonstrated classic symptoms
of PTSD- hyper-vigilance, irrational fear of
impending danger, resultant paranoia.
38Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
39Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Shell shock.
- Artillery bombardment and intense fear,
helplessness, or horror. - Exaggerated startle response, stupor, traumatic
dreams, irritability, trembling. - W.H. Rivers utilized Freuds talking therapy
as well as oral and written trauma narratives.
40Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- 72,000 neuropsychiatric discharges by 1918
- 112,000 receiving benefits by 1922
- Historys Lesson -Combat stress casualties appear
to worsen or become symptomatic with the passage
of time.
41Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
42Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Post - WW I Theory advanced that certain
individuals predisposed to psychic trauma. - WW II 1.6 million men rejected for psychiatric
reasons. - U.S. lost 504,000 men (50 divisions) due to
psychiatric collapse. - Army recognizes that any individual will succumb
to trauma at personal breaking point.
43Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Historys Lesson Longer the exposure to combat,
greater the likelihood of psychic injury. - WW II after 60 days of continuous combat 98 of
surviving soldiers will be some kind of
psychiatric casualty. - Historys Lesson Critical factors are time in
combat and intensity of combat.
44Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Historys Lesson Support troops not involved in
direct combat are also susceptible to becoming
psychiatric casualties. - Pre-existing trauma history, attachment issues
play a greater role for these individuals. - Stressors include separation from home and
friends, social and physical deprivations,
boredom, lower unit cohesion.
45Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Historys Lesson Front line treatment v.
removal from theater, proved more effective. - P.I.E. Proximity, immediacy and expectancy.
- WW II 60 returned to duty with their division
90 returned to some duty in theater.
46Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Despite frontline treatment, after 4 years of war
of the 800,000 U.S. soldiers that saw ground
combat 37.5 became such serious psychiatric
casualties that they were permanently lost from
the war effort.
47Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
48Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Korea 24 of U.S. soldiers became serious
psychiatric casualties during tour. - Korea Of these 88 returned to duty with
division 97 some duty in theater. - Korea 1 year rotation policy initiated.
- ---
49Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Vietnam Psychiatric casualty rates reported
between 2 - 5 during combat phase (1965-1975). - Post Vietnam VA estimate was 15 of vets
suffered from PTSD. Figures of other groups
range from 18 - 54. - 2.8 million Vietnam vets 420,00 and 1.5 million
suffered from PTSD at sometime after the conflict.
50Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Iraq/Afghanistan 2.3 million deployed (2011)
- 977,542 deployed more than once
- 107,000 deployed 3 or more times
- 2008 Rand Study 14 met PTSD and depression
criteria - 1.3 million have left the service
- 711,986 used VA healthcare (2002 2011)
51Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- THE IMPACT OF KILLING AND THE RESISTANCE TO
KILLING - Thou shalt do no murder. Exodus 2013
- Jesus said, Thou shalt do no murder. Matthew
1918
52Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- THE IMPACT OF KILLING AND THE RESISTANCE TO
KILLING - US murder rate 6 per 100,000.
- US aggravated assault 4 per 1,000.
- Present day US fire rates estimated at 95 -
98. - What is the psychic cost of being trained to
kill? - Of actually killing or seeing others killed?
53Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- S.L.A. Marshall Men Against Fire and the WW
II 15 - 25 fire rate. - Changed training doctrine Human shaped targets,
pop up. - Fire ratios Korea 50, Vietnam 95, Iraq
Afghanistan 95 - 98.
54Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Studies suggest a correlation between
post-traumatic stress and killing. - 1988 Research by Stellman and Stellman found a
correlation between intensity and frequency of
combat experience and PTSD in Vietnam veterans,
yet great majority seeking mental health
services were never asked about combat experience.
55Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- The Impact of Killing Study S. Maugen, et al.
- Study of Vietnam vets 47 reported killing or
believing they killed a combatant, 13 a
non-combatant. - After accounting for demographics and general
combat exposure, killing was associated with PTSD
symptoms, dissociative experiences, functional
impairment and violent behavior.
56Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- OIF 2004 NEJM study by C.W. Hoge, et al. 48-65
reported being responsible for the death of an
enemy combatant, 14-28 for death of a
noncombatant. - OIF 90 reported having been shot at.
- OIF 71 to 86 reported engagement in firefight
with 5 being the median number. - OEF 36 reported participating in a firefight
with 2 being the median number in Afghanistan.
57Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Prevalence of PTSD increased with number of
firefights. - OIF 0 4.5 1-2 9.3 3 -5 12.7 5
19.3. - OEF 0 4.5 1-2 8.2 3-5 8.3 5
18.9.
58Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Combat frequency As of 2008 30 of OIF OEF
soldiers were on their THIRD TOUR! - 15 to 20 of all soldiers fighting in Iraq and
Afghanistan at that time, were then showing signs
of depression or PTSD. - This rate jumps to 30 for soldiers that have
been on 3 or more tours.
59Scars on a Warriors Heart Psychic Trauma and
Warfarethroughout History
- Conclusions
- Stress of combat operations ultimately effects
all warriors, some more than others. - Duration of tour and intensity of combat appears
to be causally connected to post-combat trauma. - Killing in and of itself may be a causal
ingredient in the development of combat related
PTSD beyond general combat experiences. - OIF/OEF veterans are engaged in an unprecedented
operational tempo and combat cycle.
60Healers and Warriors
61Healers and Warriors Preparing for a
Conversation about Healing Invisible Wounds
- 1. Become a student of war To normalize one
needs fact based understanding. - 2. Assume you are entering a different culture.
- 3. Let each veteran understand that each
warriors journey is unique and each story fits
in the narrative of their life. - 3. Expect it to be worse than you anticipate.
- 4. The mind leads the body and the body leads
the mind. The need for Awareness based
intervention. - 5. Combat history, frequency, and severity is of
critical importance. - 6. Unit integrity, morale and leadership quality
play a critical role in resilience needed to ward
off combat stress and PTSD.
62Healers and Warriors A Conversation about
Healing Invisible Wounds
- CULTURAL RESISTANCE
- Stoicism
- Refusal to admit vulnerability
- Loss of cultural status
- Shame and guilt
- Protectiveness
- Loss of warrior identity
- Language deficit
63Healers and Warriors
- Ultimately, combat trauma is a normal reaction to
an external threat rather than an illness. - Try to hear past the words to the statement of
emotional need underneath it. - Affirmation The war and the warrior are
separate and distinct. Whether we oppose the war
or not, we trained them, we sent them, they went
for us, they deserve our respect and need our
reassurance. - Support Identify and involve the soldiers
support network. Family, community, place of
worship.
64Healers and Warriors
- Normalizing the combat experience
- An abnormal response, to an abnormal situation,
is normal behavior. Victor Frankl - Combat reflexes will normally decay with time to
a greater or lesser degree. - Combat establishes neural networks that can be
reactivated. - Its a normal reaction. Heres what to do when
it happens. - Combat stress and trauma is simply how the
veteran is manifesting their experience of the
war. - Previous training, or the lack thereof, often
explains how feelings of fear, helplessness, or
horror were minimized, or not.
65Healers and Warriors
- Normalizing the combat experience (continued)
- intense fear, helplessness, or horror. DSM-IV
- Helplessness Did you know what to do?
- Horror Did things happen that you felt
unprepared for? - Fear What training did you have to manage
your fear? Tactical breathing? - Re-experiencing Was the soldier ever
debriefed about the incident/incidents?
66Healers and Warriors
- Exposure therapy and Cognitive Processing
therapy. - Body centered modalities EMDR, Somatic
Experiencing, autogenic breathing, open awareness
exercises. - Reconstruction of the narrative Post-traumatic
growth and the distinction between brooding and
reflective pondering.
67Healers and Warriors
- Open focus exercise Both PTSD and combat can
create experience of coning. Stress of not
being able to fully visualize environment can
accelerate stress response. - To break out of tunnel vision having combatants
scan and breathe - After taking a shot, by
physically turning the head and scanning the
battlefield after engagement seems to cause
tunnel vision to diminish.
68Healers and Warriors
69Healers and Warriors
- Pre-existing trauma history can play a huge role
in predisposing individuals to PTSD. - In 2007 study, 69.1 of women veterans suffering
from PTSD reported pre-enlistment sexual assault.
73 reported sexual trauma such as sexual
assault or rape while serving in the military.
70Healers and Warriors
- Studies suggest securely attached individuals,
with a history of high quality caregiver
relationships were less likely to develop PTSD
than their less securely attached counterparts. - Low cognitive function prior to exposure strongly
influenced measured vulnerability to developing
PTSD.
71Healers and Warriors
- In helping a veteran, remember the words of SMG
William Von Zehle - Sir, when engaging a target, slow is smooth, and
smooth is fast.
72THE COMBAT TRAUMA CONTINUUM AND VETERANS
- Resources
- www.realwarriors
- LTC Dave Grossman On Killing On Combat
- Babette Rothschild The Body Remembers
- Richard Holmes Acts of War
- Bruce K. Siddle Sharpening the Warriors Edge
- Daniel Goleman Emotional Intelligence
- Jonathan Shay, Ph.D. Achilles in Vietnam
Odysseus in America - Ben Shepard A War of Nerves
- Joanna Bourke An Intimate History of Killing
- John Keegan The Face of Battle A History of
Warfare - M.S. Micale P. Lerner (Eds.) Traumatic
Pasts History, Psychiatry and Trauma in the
Modern Ager, 1870 1930 - National Center for PTSD Veterans Administration
73THE COMBAT TRAUMA CONTINUUM AND VETERANS
- Bob Caffrey
- www.caffreycounseling.com
- rjcaffrey_at_gmail.com
- (860) 331-0641
- ----