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Hosp Community Psychiatry 36:150-153, February 1985
© 1985 American Psychiatric Association
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Vietnam Veterans in the General Hospital

Kenneth E. Callen M.D.1, Michael E. Reaves M.D.2, Michael J. Maxwell B.S.3, and Bentson H. McFarland M.D.,Ph.D.

1 The Psychiatry Consultation Service, The Oregon Health Sciences University in Portland
2 The Psychiatry Inpatient Service at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Portland, Oregon
3 The Portland Vietnam Veterans Outreach Center

The medical center, P.O. Box 1034, Portland, Oregon 97207

Posttraumatic stress disorder is now well known to occur among Vietnam combat veterans. The interest in this diagnosis may have caused an unintentional neglect of veterans with problems that do not meet the strict criteria of DSM-III for this disorder. The authors studied 300 Vietnam veterans admitted to a general hospital to determine their level of symptomatology and to gather data on this previously unstudied group. More than 75 percent of the sample were medical-surgical patients; about 50 percent had high levels of depression and symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder, or both. Combat veterans were considerably more symptomatic; more than 50 percent of the patients with the highest levels of combat activity were on nonpsychiatric wards. The authors suggest the need to identify Vietnam veterans on medical and surgical wards. Reluctance to talk about war experiences makes Vietnam veterans a group likely to be overlooked.




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Arch Gen PsychiatryHome page
J. Davidson, H. Kudler, R. Smith, S. L. Mahorney, S. Lipper, E. Hammett, W. B. Saunders, and J. O. Cavenar Jr
Treatment of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder With Amitriptyline and Placebo
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