Former U.S. senator Bill Bradley (D-NJ), NBA Hall of Famer, and Rhodes Scholar, had this to say in a commentary published in Vanity Fair today about PTSD. The occasion was the premiere of the Tom Hanks/Steven Spielberg/HBO miniseries, "The Pacific," about U.S. Marines in the Pacific during World War II, also getting screened privately at the White House today.
Bradley thinks there are several things that the president and the first lady should be thinking about while they watch the miniseries. One of those topics is PTSD. Says Bradley:
"Both The Pacific and Band of Brothers focus on the horrors of the war and the emotional trauma that a soldier or Marine can endure. P.T.S.D. should be treated with as much seriousness as a gunshot wound. If the president is going to send tens of thousands more troops [into combat], he also needs to consider the emotional payload. With suicide rates up among veterans -- accounting for 20 percent* of all suicides among Americans -- the government must dedicate more money to support programs for our returning troops."
Editor's note: If 8,000 veterans kill themselves every year, conservatively, and the national suicide rate is close to 34,000, according to the NIMH, the percentage of suicides who are veterans is closer to *25%. They also represent almost 50% of the homeless population. So yes, please, let's do that...and sooner rather than later...
(The full commentary is linked here.)