Donate for PTSD
Donate - PTSD Forum is quite costly to run, maintain and improve. All donations are appreciated.
New To PTSD Forum
FAQ's - All you need to know contained in Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ).
PTSD Forum Extra's
PTSD Forms - PTSD Forum provide a PTSD assessment and self analysis form.

PTSD Learning - Contains some PTSD learning information and presentations.
Recommendation
Firefox Browser PTSD Forum recommends the use of Firefox Browser with Search Status add-on, plus your countries relevant English dictionary add-on. This enables forum members to spell check and remove typical toolbars from their browser.

Go Back   PTSD Forum > Break The Ice > World PTSD News
Register Blogs FAQ Members List Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Notices

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 18-08-2006, 10:50 AM
anthony's Avatar
anthony anthony is offline Gender Male
Administrative Editor PTSD
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Posts: 7,302
Blog Entries: 9
anthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud ofanthony has much to be proud of
Default Politicized Science Produces Bad Public Policy

A new study about post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among Vietnam veterans once again spotlights the need to separate the process of establishing veterans’ benefits from scientific research.

Researchers reported in Science (Aug. 18) that among 260 Vietnam vets studied, 18.7 percent had developed war-related PTSD during their lifetimes and 9.1 percent were currently suffering from PTSD.

This is obviously a very small study (approximately 2.6 million soldiers served within the borders of South Vietnam during the war) but its results differ significantly with earlier research.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported in 1988 that 14.7 percent of male veterans developed PTSD after serving in Vietnam but only 2.2 percent still suffered at that time from the condition. The study results spawned newspaper reports such as “Vietnam Veterans’ Health: No Worse Than Others” (New York Times, May 13, 1988) and editorials such as “Misplaced Pity for Vietnam Vets” (Washington Post, June 12, 1988).

The CDC study also spawned politically powerful criticism. The American Legion, for example, responded with its own survey of Vietnam vets and reported that those exposed to heavy combat suffered more post-war emotional problems than those who weren’t.

This political pressure forced Congress to authorize the National Vietnam Veterans’ Readjustment Study (NVVRS), which reported results more acceptable to Vietnam veterans groups, including that 30.9 percent of Vietnam veterans developed PTSD, another 22.5 percent developed partial PTSD, and 15.2 still suffered from the condition in 1990 – a rate seven times higher than that reported by the CDC.

As pointed out in an editorial accompanying this week’s study, “[In 1990] Congress had been poised to phase-out counseling and other services for Vietnam veterans, but the NVVRS triggered an abrupt about-face. The government poured funds into clinical services and research designed to cope with an apparent epidemic of chronic PTSD among Vietnam veterans.”

But the NVVRS had its critics, too, who pointed out many problems in the study, including that while only about 15 percent of Vietnam vets were assigned to combat units, more than 53 percent of the vets had developed full- or partial-PTSD; the PTSD diagnostic criteria used in the NVVRS did not require symptoms that produced functional impairment; and the pattern of PTSD among Vietnam vets differed significantly from the “shell shock” and “combat fatigue” cases of World War I and World War II, respectively.

As is not uncommon in the field of “political” science, this week’s study, which re-assessed 260 vets from the NVVRS study, came up with “Goldilocks” results – reporting much more PTSD than reported by the CDC in 1988 but much less than reported by the NVVRS in 1990.

What are we to make of all these differing results? Should we just accept the new results because they split the difference between the results from CDC and NVVRS? What are the public policy implications of relying on such Goldilocks-type science?

It appears pointless -- all these years after the war -- to debate the statistics of PTSD among Vietnam vets. We’ll never know the precise numbers simply because data collection has been incomplete and their analyses are fraught with insurmountable methodological problems and biases. Certainly many vets experienced war-related PTSD. Some are, no doubt, still affected by it.

That’s about all one can reasonably conclude based on the available data. So what are the implications for veterans’ benefits?

In a rational world devoid of politics, Congress might reasonably restrict benefits to the small minority of veterans whose PTSD claims can be verified against their combat experiences. But in our very different -- sometimes surreal -- world, powerful veterans’ lobbies pressure Congress to increase benefits with few if any restrictions, regardless of the relevant facts and science. Not many politicians are willing to be seen as saying “no” to veterans.

This has happened before in the cases of Vietnam, Cold War-era and Gulf War vets making scientifically questionable claims of health effects caused by Agent Orange, nuclear weapons testing, and depleted uranium weapons, respectively. In those cases, the process of science was misused and abused in order to justify broad health care benefits.

One possible solution is simply for Congress to provide that certain types of military service -- such as any service in theaters of combat, not just actual combat experience, and other forms of hazardous duty -- automatically qualify veterans for lifetime health benefits.

That way, scientific research involving combat veterans will be less politicized and results will be less likely to have been pre-determined and/or skewed by the hidden and not-so-hidden agendas of researchers and their funders.

In the end, unbiased science stands a greater chance of providing policymakers with useful information and -- more importantly -- helping those who have sacrificed and suffered for their country.

Source: Fox News

Last edited by anthony; 18-08-2006 at 04:01 PM.
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 19-08-2006, 10:26 AM
Roerich Roerich is offline Gender Male
M.D.
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Ohio, USA
Posts: 87
Roerich is on a distinguished road
Default Selective research skews results

Not including witnesses of traumatic events skews research and is a far cry from scientific objectivity or the DSM-IV criteria for the diagnosis of PTSD upon which research is based.

Roerich

Vietnam stress data re-evaluated

"But other experts and some veterans groups criticized the study, saying it used criteria so narrow that it excluded many vets who should have been included.

"It uses a naive formulation of what represents a trauma exposure and so covers only a small percentage of people actually exposed to traumatic events," said Arthur Blank Jr., a Bethesda, Md., psychiatrist who treated soldiers in Vietnam and later served for 12 years as director of the federal network of counseling centers for combat vets."
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks
Digg del.icio.us StumbleUpon Google

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are Off
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off