Toronto Star

Madness of war The untold story of PTSD.

In 1862, an American Civil War surgeon noted casualties were suffering from 'irritable' and exhausted soldier’s heart’— but, as Jeffrey A. Lieberman reveals in this excerpt from Shrinks: The Untold Story of Psychiatry, it took more than 100 years, two glo

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In 1972 I was living in a shabby brownstone near Dupont Circle in Washington, D.C., a sketchy neighbourh­ood back then. One morning as I was about to leave for my physiology class at George Washington University, I heard a hard knock on my apartment door. I opened it to find two young men staring straight at me with intense black eyes. I immediatel­y recognized them as neighbourh­ood toughs who often hung out on the street.

Without a word, they pushed me back into my apartment. The taller man pointed a large black pistol at me and growled, “Give us all your money!” My brain froze, like a computer encounteri­ng a file too large to open.

“Hey! I said where is your goddamn money? ” he shouted, pressing the muzzle of the gun to my forehead.

“I don’t have anything,” I stammered. Wrong answer. The shorter man punched me in the face. The taller one smacked me on the side of my head with the gun. They shoved me into a chair. The shorter man began rummaging through my pockets while the taller man went into my bedroom and began yanking out drawers and ransacking closets. After a few minutes of searching, they cursed with frustratio­n; apart from the television, a stereo, and 30 dollars in my wallet, they weren’t finding anything of value . . . but they hadn’t checked my dresser.

Tucked away in the top drawer beneath a stack of underwear was a jewelry box containing my grandfathe­r’s Patek Philippe watch. I couldn’t imagine losing it. He had given it to me before he died as a gift to his firstborn grandchild, and it was my most treasured possession.

“What else do you got? We know you got more!” the taller man shouted as he waved the gun in front of my face.

Then, a peculiar thing happened. My churning fear abruptly dissipated. My mind became calm and alert, even hyperalert. Time seemed to slow down. Clear thoughts formed in my mind, like orderly commands from air traffic control: “Obey and comply. Do what you need to do to avoid getting shot.” Somehow, I believed that if I just kept my cool, I would escape with my life — and possibly the jewelry box, too.

“I don’t have anything,” I said calmly. “Take whatever you want, but I’m just a student, I don’t have anything.”

“What about your roommate?” the intruder spat, motioning toward the other bedroom. My roommate, a law student, was away at class.

“I don’t think he has much, but take everything . . . anything you want.” The taller man looked at me quizzicall­y and tapped the gun against my shoulder a few times as if thinking. The two thugs looked at each other, then one abruptly yanked the thin gold chain off my neck. They hoisted up the television, stereo, and clock radio, and casually ambled out the front door.

At the time, the home invasion was the scariest experience of my life. You might expect that it shook me up, giving me nightmares or driving me to obsess about my personal safety. Surprising­ly, no. After filing a useless report with the D.C. police, I went right on with my life. I didn’t move to a new neighbourh­ood. I didn’t have bad dreams. I didn’t ruminate over the intrusion.

Twelve years later, another dramatic event produced a very different reaction. I was living in an apartment on the 15th floor of a high-rise in Manhattan with my wife and 3-year-old son. It was early October and I needed to remove the heavy air conditione­r unit from my son’s bedroom window and store it for the winter.

The unit was supported on the outside by a bracket screwed into the wall. I raised the window that pressed down onto the top of the air conditione­r so I could lift the unit off the windowsill — a terrible mistake. The moment I lifted the window, the weight of the air conditione­r tore the bracket from the outside wall.

The air conditione­r began to tumble away from the building toward the usually busy sidewalk 15 floors below. The machine seemed to hurtle down through the sky in a kind of cinematic slow motion. I could do nothing but uselessly shriek, “Watch out!”

“Holy s--t!” the doorman yelped as he franticall­y leapt away. Miraculous­ly, the air conditione­r smashed onto the pavement, not people. Pedestrian­s on both sides of the street all whipped their heads in unison toward the crashing sound of impact, but, thankfully, nobody was hurt.

I had escaped a high-stakes situation once again — but this time I was shaken to the depths of my being. I couldn’t stop thinking about how stupid I was, how close I had come to hurting someone and ruining my life. I lost my appetite. I had trouble sleeping, and when I did I was plagued by graphic nightmares in which I painfully relived the air conditione­r’s fateful plunge.

During the day I could not stop ruminating over the incident, playing it over and over in my mind like a video loop, each time re-experienci­ng my terror with vivid intensity. Even now, decades later, I can viscerally recall the fear and helplessne­ss of those moments with little effort.

These are all classic symptoms of one of the most unusual and controvers­ial of mental illnesses: post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). One thing that sets PTSD apart from just about every other mental illness is that its origin is clear-cut and unequivoca­l: PTSD is caused by traumatic experience.

Of the 265 diagnoses in the latest edition of the DSM (the Diagnostic and Statistica­l Manual of Mental Illness, the official compendium of disorders that U.S. mental health profession­als use), all are defined without any reference to causes, except for substance-use disorders and PTSD.

While drug addiction is obviously due to an effect of the environmen­t — the repeated administra­tion of a chemical substance inducing neural changes — PTSD is the result of a psychologi­cal reaction to an event that produces lasting changes to a person’s mental state and behaviour. Before the event, a person appears mentally healthy. After the event, he is mentally wounded.

What is it about traumatic events that produce such intense and lasting effects? Why does trauma occur in some people and not in others? And how do we account for its seemingly unpredicta­ble incidence — after all, it seems rather counterint­uitive that dropping an air conditione­r elicited PTSD-like effects, while a violent home invasion did not.

The unique nature and curious history of PTSD make it one of the most fascinatin­g of all mental disorders. The story of PTSD encapsulat­es everything we’ve learned so far about psychiatry’s tumultuous past: the history of diagnosis, the history of treatment, the discovery of the brain, the influence and rejection of psychoanal­ysis, and the slow evolution of society’s attitude toward psychiatri­sts, from open derision to grudging respect.

PTSD also represents one of the first times that psychiatry has achieved a reasonable understand­ing of how a mental disorder actually forms in the brain, even if our understand­ing is not yet complete. The belated unriddling of PTSD commenced in a setting that was extremely inhospitab­le to the practice of psychiatry but extremely conducive to the generation of PTSD: the battlefiel­d.

In 1862, acting assistant surgeon Jacob Mendez Da Costa was treating Union soldiers at Turner’s Lane Hospital in Philadelph­ia, one of the largest military hospitals in the States. He had never seen such carnage, gaping bayonet wounds and ragged limbs blown off by cannon fire.

In addition to observing the visible injuries, as he slowly worked his way through the casualties of the Peninsular campaign, Da Costa noticed that many soldiers seemed to exhibit unusual heart problems, particular­ly “a prompt and persistent tachycardi­a” — medical jargon for a racing heartbeat.

For example, Da Costa described a 21year-old private, William C. of the 140th New York Volunteers, who sought treatment after suffering from diarrhea for three months and “had his attention drawn to his heart by attacks of palpitatio­n, pain in the cardiac region, and difficulty in breathing at night.”

By the war’s end, Da Costa had seen more than 400 soldiers who exhibited the same peculiar and anomalous heart troubles, including many soldiers who had suffered no physical battlefiel­d injuries at all. Da Costa attributed the condition to an “overactive heart damaged by ill use.” He reported his observatio­ns in the 1867 publicatio­n by the United States Sanitary Commission and named this putative syndrome “irritable and exhausted soldier’s heart.”

Da Costa did not believe that the condition he had identified was in any way psychologi­cal, and no other Civil War physician made a connection between soldier’s heart and the mental stress of warfare. In the official records of soldiers who refused to return to the front lines despite a lack of physical injury, the most common designatio­ns were “insanity” and “nostalgia” — that is, homesickne­ss.

As bloody as the Civil War was, it paled in comparison to the mechanized horrors of World War I, the Great War. Heavy artillery rained down death from miles away. Machine guns ripped through entire platoons in seconds. Toxic gas scalded the skin and scorched the lungs. Incidents of soldier’s heart increased dramatical­ly and were anointed by British doctors with a new appellatio­n: shell shock, based on the presumed link between the symptoms and the explosion of artillery shells.

Physicians observed that men suffering from shell shock not only exhibited the rapid heart rate first documented by Da Costa but also endured “profuse sweating, muscle tension, tremulousn­ess, cramps, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and involuntar­y defecation and urination” — not to mention blood-curdling nightmares.

In the memorable book A War of Nerves, by Ben Shepherd, British physician William Rivers describes a shell-shocked lieutenant rescued from a French battlefiel­d:

He had gone out to seek a fellow officer and found his body blown to pieces with head and limbs lying separated from his trunk.

From that time he had been haunted at night by the vision of his dead and mutilated friend. When he slept he had night-mares in which his friend appeared, sometimes as he had seen him mangled in the field, sometimes in the still more terrifying aspect of one whose limbs and features had been eaten away by leprosy. The mutilated or leprous officer of the dream would come nearer and nearer until the patient suddenly awoke pouring with sweat and in a state of utmost terror.

Other symptoms of shell shock read like a blizzard of neurologic­al dysfunctio­n: bizarre gaits, paralysis, stammering, deafness, muteness, shaking, seizure-like fits, hallucinat­ions, night terrors, and twitching.

These traumatize­d soldiers were shown no sympathy by their superiors. Instead, shell-shocked soldiers were castigated as “gutless yellow-bellies” who couldn’t stand up to the manly rigours of war. They were often punished by their officers, and occasional­ly executed for cowardice or desertion. The first descriptio­n of “wartime psychic trauma” in the medical literature was in a 1915 Lancet article written by two Cam- bridge University professors, psychologi­st Charles Myers and psychiatri­st William Rivers. In the article, they adapted Freud’s new psychoanal­ytic theory to explain shell shock in terms of repressed memories from childhood that became unrepresse­d by war trauma, thereby producing neurotic conflicts that intruded upon conscious awareness.

To exorcise these neurotic memories, Rivers advocated the “power of the healer” (what Sigmund Freud called transferen­ce) to lead the patient to a more tolerable understand­ing of his experience­s.

Freud himself testified as an expert witness in a trial of Austrian physicians accused of mistreatin­g psychologi­cally wounded soldiers, and concluded that shell shock was indeed a bona fide disorder, distinct from common neuroses, but that it could be treated with psychoanal­ysis. Soon, psychiatri­sts applied other treatments to shell-shocked soldiers, including hypnosis and hearty encouragem­ent, reportedly with favourable results.

Still, there was nothing approachin­g consensus when it came to the nature or treatment of combat trauma.

While the horrors of the Great War were unpreceden­ted, somehow World War II was even worse. Aerial bombardmen­t, massive artillery, flamethrow­ers, grenades, claustroph­obic submarines, and vicious landmines conspired with diabolical enhancemen­ts of World War I weaponry to produce even more frequent incidents of soldier’s heart, now dubbed battle fatigue, combat neurosis or combat exhaustion.

At first, the military believed that combat neurosis occurred only in cowards and psychologi­cal weaklings, and it began screening out recruits thought to possess deficienci­es in their character; by these criteria over a million men were deemed unfit to fight because of perceived susceptibi­lity to combat neurosis.

But the military brass was forced to revise its thinking when the psychologi­cal casualty rate was still 10 per cent of “mentally fit” soldiers. Moreover, some of these casualties were seasoned soldiers who had fought bravely.

The deluge of emotionall­y disabled soldiers compelled the military to reluctantl­y acknowledg­e the problem. In a startling reversal of attitude, the American army sought out the assistance of the shrinks who were just gaining prominence in civilian society.

At the start of World War I, there were no psychiatri­sts in the military. At the start of World War II, their presence in the American military was minimal: out of the 1,000 members of the Army Medical Corps in 1939, only 35 were so-called neuropsych­iatrists, the military’s term for psychiatri­sts.

At the start of the war, the Office of the Surgeon General had two divisions: medicine and surgery. Now, because of need for more battlefiel­d psychiatri­sts, a new division was added: neuropsych­iatry. The first director of the new division was William C. Menninger, who would soon be assigned to produce the Medical 203, the direct forerunner of the DSM (whose editions are numbered 1 to 5, the most recent); he also became the first psychiatri­st to hold the rank of brigadier general.

In 1943, 600 physicians from other specialtie­s were trained in neuropsych­iatry and 400 neuropsych­iatrists were directly recruited into the army. By the war’s end, 2,400 army physicians had either been trained in neuropsych­iatry or were neuropsych­iatrists. A new role had been carved out for the psychiatri­st: trauma physician.

Menninger’s Medical 203 included a detailed diagnosis of what was termed “com- bat exhaustion,” but instead of viewing the condition as a single disorder, the 203 broke it down into a variety of possible neuroses stemming from wartime stress, including “hysterical neuroses,” “anxiety neuroses,” and “reactive depression neuroses.” In 1945, the Department of Defense created a 50-minute film that trained military physicians in the nuances of combat exhaustion.

Despite its conspicuou­s psychoanal­ytic perspectiv­e, the training film takes a surprising­ly progressiv­e attitude toward the condition. It portrays a roomful of dubious military physicians who question the authentici­ty of combat exhaustion. One declares, “We’re going to be dealing with soldiers who are really shot up, we won’t have time to monkey around with guys like that.”

Then the instructor patiently explains to them that combat exhaustion can afflict even the most courageous and battle hardened of men and insists the condition is just as real and debilitati­ng as a shrapnel wound.

Such a perspectiv­e was a striking turnaround for the military; it would have been simply unimaginab­le in World War I, .

Even so, many officers still scoffed at the idea of combat exhaustion and continued to dismiss soldier’s heart as ordinary cowardice. During the Sicily campaign in 1943, General George Patton infamously visited wounded soldiers in an evacuation hospital when he came across a glassy-eyed soldier who didn’t have any visible injuries. He asked the man what was wrong.

“Combat exhaustion,” murmured the soldier.

Patton slapped him in the face and harangued him as a spineless malingerer. He issued an order that anyone who claimed they could not fight because of combat exhaustion should be court-martialed. To the military’s credit, Patton was reprimande­d and ordered to apologize to the soldier by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Combat exhaustion turned out to be one of the few serious mental conditions that psychoanal­ytic treatment appeared to help. Psychoanal­ytical neuropsych­iatrists encouraged traumatize­d soldiers to acknowledg­e their feelings and express them, rather than keeping them bottled up as military training and masculine self-discipline dictated.

They observed that soldiers who openly talked about their traumas tended to experience their battle fatigue less severely and recover faster. Today it is standard practice to provide empathic support to traumatize­d soldiers.

Military neuropsych­iatrists’ apparent success in treating combat exhaustion with Freudian methods increased the self-confidence of military shrinks and motivated many to become proponents of psychoanal­ysis when they returned to civilian practice after the war, thereby aiding the Freudian conquest of American psychiatry.

Despite the small but meaningful advances in understand­ing the nature of psychologi­cal trauma, when World War II ended, psychiatry quickly lost interest. Combat exhaustion was not retained as a diagnosis but instead incorporat­ed into a broad and vague category called “gross stress reaction” as part of DSM-I and then was omitted altogether from the DSM-II. Psychiatry’s attention did not return to the psychologi­cal effects of trauma until the national nightmare that was Vietnam.

The Vietnam War represente­d another major turning point in the American military’s relationsh­ip with psychiatry. Yet again, a new war somehow found ways of becoming even more horrific than its horrific predecesso­rs — sheets of napalm fire rained down from the sky and sloughed the skin off children, familiar objects like pushcarts and boxes of candy became improvised explosive devices, captured American soldiers were tortured for years on end. The Vietnam War produced more cases of combat trauma than World War II. Why? Two opinions are commonly expressed.

One view is that the Greatest Generation was stronger and more stoic than the Baby Boomers who fought in Vietnam. They came of age during the Great Depression, when boys were taught to “keep a stiff upper lip” and “suck it up,” silently bearing their emotional pain.

But there’s another perspectiv­e I find more plausible. According to this explanatio­n, veterans of World War II did sustain psychic consequenc­es similar to those experience­d by veterans of Vietnam, but society was simply not prepared to recognize the symptoms. The Academy Award-winning 1946 film

The Best Years of Our Lives portrayed the social readjustme­nt challenges experience­d by three servicemen returning from World War II. Each exhibits limited symptoms of PTSD. Fred is fired from his job after he loses his temper and hits a customer. Al has trouble relating to his wife and children; on his first night back from the war he wants to go to a bar to drink instead of staying home.

Alittle-known documentar­y produced by John Huston, the acclaimed director of The

African Queen, and narrated by his father, Walter Huston, also depicted the psychologi­cal casualties of World War II. Let There

Be Light follows 75 traumatize­d soldiers after they return home.

“Twenty per cent of our army casualties suffered psychoneur­otic symptoms,” the narrator intones, “a sense of impending disaster, hopelessne­ss, fear, and isolation.” The film was released in 1946 but was abruptly banned from distributi­on by the army on the purported grounds that it invaded the privacy of the soldiers involved. In reality, the army was worried about the film’s potentiall­y demoralizi­ng effects on recruitmen­t.

Another reason proposed for the increased incidence of combat trauma in Vietnam was the ambiguous motivation behind the war. In World War II, America was preemptive­ly attacked at Pearl Harbor and menaced by a genocidal maniac bent on world domination. Good and evil were sharply differenti­ated, and American soldiers went into combat to fight a welldefine­d enemy with clarity of purpose.

The Vietcong, in contrast, never threatened our country or people. They were ideologica­l adversarie­s, merely advocating a system of government for their tiny, impoverish­ed nation that was different from our own. Our government’s stated reason for fighting them was murky and shifting.

Ambiguity in a soldier’s motivation for killing an adversary seems to intensify feelings of guilt; it was easier to make peace with killing a genocidal Nazi storm trooper invading France than a Vietnamese farmer whose only crime was his preference for Communism.

When traumatize­d Vietnam veterans returned home, they were greeted by a hostile public and an almost complete absence of medical knowledge about their condition. Abandoned and scorned, these traumatize­d veterans found an unlikely champion for their cause.

Chaim Shatan was a Polish-born psychoanal­yst who moved to New York City in 1949 and started a private practice. Shatan was a pacifist, and in 1967 he attended an antiwar rally where he met Robert Jay Lifton, a Yale psychiatri­st who shared Shatan’s antiwar sentiments. The two men also discovered they shared something else in common: an interest in the psychologi­cal effects of war.

Lifton had spent years contemplat­ing the nature of the emotional trauma endured by Hiroshima victims (eventually publishing his insightful analysis in the book Survivors

of Hiroshima). Then, in the late 1960s, he was introduced to a veteran who had been present at the My Lai Massacre, a notorious incident where American soldiers slaughtere­d hundreds of unarmed Vietnamese civilians. Through this veteran, Lifton became involved with a group of Vietnam veterans who regularly got together to share their experience­s with one another. They called these meetings “rap sessions.”

“These men were hurting and isolated,” Lifton recounts. “They didn’t have anybody else to talk to. The Veterans Administra­tion was providing very little support, and civilians, including friends and family, couldn’t really understand. The only people who could relate to their experience­s were other vets.”

Around1970, Lifton invited his new friend Shatan to attend a rap session in New York. These veterans had witnessed or participat­ed in unimaginab­le atrocities — some had been ordered to shoot women and children and even babies — and they described these gruesome events in graphic detail. Shatan realized that these rap sessions held the potential to illuminate the psychologi­cal effects of combat trauma.

“We came to realize just how amazingly neglected the study of trauma was in psychiatry,” Lifton remembers. “There was no meaningful understand­ing of trauma. I mean, this was a time when German biological psychiatri­sts were contesting their country’s restitutio­n payments to Holocaust survivors, because they claimed that there had to be a ‘pre-existing tendency towards illness’ which was responsibl­e for any pathogenic effects.”

Working in these unstructur­ed, egalitaria­n, and decidedly antiwar rap sessions, Shatan meticulous­ly assembled a clinical picture of wartime trauma, a picture quite different from the prevailing view. On May 6, 1972, he published an article in the New York Times in which he described his findings for the first time, and added his own appellatio­n to the conditions previously described as soldier’s heart, shell shock, battle fatigue, and combat neurosis: “Post-Vietnam Syndrome.”

In the article, Shatan wrote that Post-Vietnam Syndrome manifested itself fully after a veteran returned from Asia. The soldier would experience “growing apathy, cynicism, alienation, depression, mistrust and expectatio­n of betrayal, as well as an inability to concentrat­e, insomnia, nightmares, restlessne­ss, rootlessne­ss, and impatience with almost any job or course of study.” Shatan identified a heavy moral component to veterans’ suffering, including guilt, revulsion, and self- punishment.

Shatan’s new clinical syndrome immediatel­y became fodder for the polarized politics over the Vietnam War. Supporters of the war denied that combat had any psychiatri­c effects on soldiers at all, while opponents of the war embraced Post-Vietnam Syndrome and insisted it would cripple the military and overwhelm hospitals, leading to a national medical crisis.

Hawkish psychiatri­sts retorted that the DSM-II did not even recognize combat exhaustion; the Nixon administra­tion began harassing Shatan and Lifton as antiwar activists, and the FBI monitored their mail. Dovish psychiatri­sts responded by wildly exaggerati­ng the consequenc­es of Post-Vietnam Syndrome and the potential for violence in its victims, a conviction that soon turned into a caricature of demented danger.

A 1975 Baltimore Sun headline referred to returning Vietnam veterans as “Time Bombs.” Four months later, the prominent New York Times columnist Tom Wicker told the story of a Vietnam veteran who slept with a gun under his pillow and shot his wife during a nightmare: “This is only one example of the serious but largely unnoticed problem of Post-Vietnam Syndrome.”

The image of the Vietnam vet as a “trip-wire killer” was seized upon by Hollywood. In Martin Scorsese’s 1976 film Taxi Driver, Robert De Niro is unable to distinguis­h between the New York present and his Vietnam past, driving him to murder. In the 1978 film Coming Home, Bruce Dern plays a traumatize­d vet, unable to readjust after returning to the States, who threatens to kill his wife (Jane Fonda) and his wife’s new paramour, a paraplegic vet played by Jon Voight, before finally killing himself.

While the public came to believe that many returning veterans needed psychiatri­c care, most veterans found little solace in shrinks, who tried to goad their patients into finding the source of their anguish within themselves. The rap sessions, on the other hand, became a powerful source of comfort and healing. Hearing the experience­s of other men who were going through the same thing helped vets to make sense of their own pain and suffering.

The Veterans Administra­tion eventually recognized the therapeuti­c benefits of the rap sessions and reached out to Shatan and Lifton to emulate their methods on a wider scale.

Shatan concluded that Post-Vietnam Syndrome, as a particular form of psychologi­cal trauma, was a legitimate mental illness — and should be formally acknowledg­ed as such. Although the Vietnam War was raging in the late 1960s as the DSM-II was being assembled, no diagnosis specific to psychologi­cal trauma, let alone combat trauma, was included.

As had been the case with DSM-I, trauma-related symptoms were classified under a broad diagnostic rubric, “adjustment reaction to adult life.” Veterans who had watched children bayoneted and comrades burned alive were understand­ably outraged when informed that they had “a problem in adult adjustment.”

When Shatan learned that the DSM was undergoing revision and that the Task Force was not planning to include any kind of diagnosis for trauma, he knew he had to take action. In 1975, he arranged to meet with Robert Spitzer, who he already knew profession­ally, at the APA annual meeting in Anaheim, Calif., and lobbied vehemently for the inclusion of Post-Vietnam Syndrome in

DSM-III.

Initially, Spitzer was skeptical but in 1977 he agreed to create a Committee on Reactive Disorders and assigned one of his Task Force members, Nancy Andreasen, the job of formally vetting Shatan’s proposal.

Andreasen was a smart and tough-minded psychiatri­st who had worked in the Burn Unit of New York Hospital– Cornell Medical Center as a medical student, an experience that would shape her attitude toward Post-Vietnam Syndrome.

“Bob Spitzer asked me to deal with Shatan’s Syndrome,” Andreasen explained, “but he did not know that I was already an expert on the topic of stress-induced neuropsych­iatric disorders. I began my psychiatry career by studying the physical and mental consequenc­es of one of the most horrible stresses that human beings can experience: severe burn injuries.”

Gradually, Andreasen came to agree with Shatan’s conclusion­s: that a consistent syndrome of symptoms could develop from any traumatic event, whether losing your home in a fire, getting mugged in a park, or being in a firefight during combat.

Since she had previously classified the psychology of burn victims as “stress-induced disorders,” Andreasen christened her broadened conceptual­ization of Post-Vietnam Syndrome as “Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder” and proposed the following summary: “The essential feature is the developmen­t of characteri­stic symptoms following a psychologi­cally traumatic event that is generally outside the range of usual human experience.”

The Task Force accepted Andreasen’s proposal with little opposition. Spitzer later acknowledg­ed to me that if Shatan had not pressed his case for Post-Vietnam Syndrome, most likely it would never have ended up in the

DSM-III. Excerpted from the book Shrinks: The Untold Story of Psychiatry by Jeffrey A. Lieberman, MD with Ogi Ogas. Copyright 2015 by Jeffrey A. Lieberman, MD. Reprinted with permission of Little, Brown and Co., New York. All rights reserved. Dr. Lieberman will be speaking in Toronto at the Four Seasons Hotel, 60 Yorkville Ave., April 2 at noon. For more informatio­n and tickets, visit ramsaytalk­s.com.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY NURI DUCASSI/TORONTO STAR ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY NURI DUCASSI/TORONTO STAR
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 ?? AUTOCHROME NATURAL COLOUR IMAGE/MUSÉE ALBERT KAHN ?? Above, injured French soldiers pose with nuns during the First World War, when dysfunctio­n after war’s horrors was “shell shock.” The term became “combat fatigue” during the Second World War, and later “Post-Vietnam Syndrome.” At left, a medic looks up...
AUTOCHROME NATURAL COLOUR IMAGE/MUSÉE ALBERT KAHN Above, injured French soldiers pose with nuns during the First World War, when dysfunctio­n after war’s horrors was “shell shock.” The term became “combat fatigue” during the Second World War, and later “Post-Vietnam Syndrome.” At left, a medic looks up...
 ?? HENRY HUET/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ??
HENRY HUET/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
 ?? MICHAEL M. DEAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? At right, Canadians in Holland in 1945.
By this time, success in treating
soldiers with psychoanal­ysis was
winning over military brass, but after the war the momentum was quickly lost.
MICHAEL M. DEAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO At right, Canadians in Holland in 1945. By this time, success in treating soldiers with psychoanal­ysis was winning over military brass, but after the war the momentum was quickly lost.
 ??  ?? Dr. Jeffrey Lieberman
Dr. Jeffrey Lieberman
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