Combat stress reaction

 



Combat stress reaction is an acute reaction that includes a range of behaviors resulting from the stress of battle that decrease the combatant's fighting efficiency. 

In World War I, shell shock was considered a psychiatric illness resulting from injury to the nerves during combat. The nature of trench warfare meant that about 10% of the fighting soldiers were killed (compared to 4.5% during World War II) and the total proportion of troops who became casualties (killed or wounded) was about 57%.

Whether a person with shell-shock was considered "wounded" or "sick" depended on the circumstances. Soldiers were personally faulted for their mental breakdown rather than their war experience. The large proportion of World War I veterans in the European population meant that the symptoms were common to the culture.

In World War II it was determined by the US Army that the time it took for a soldier to experience combat fatigue while fighting on the front lines was somewhere between 60 and 240 days, depending on the intensity and frequency of combat. What had been known in previous wars as "nostalgia", "old sergeant's disease", and "shell shock", became known as "combat fatigue

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

What Soviet Soldiers Saw When They Accidentally Discovered Auschwitz

Spc. Monica Lin Brown in Afghanistan, 2008 - Saved five wounded soldiers from a roadside bomb.

Killing someone's Soul ...

Walking Through the Dead: A Visit to Nanjing and the Reality of the 1937 Massacre

In 1976, Shavarsh Karapetyan risk his career to save lives

Respect to Joseph Lee Galloway 'He is the only civilian to receive a medal from the U.S. Army for valor during the Vietnam War'

The Truth Behind 'Russian Popeye' story

He Was Only 17 When He Chose to Save Others

The Reason Magda Goebbels stole the lives of her six children.

When I Held My Uncle’s Hand After Death: What I Saw Changed How I Understand Life and God

Labels

Show more