An independent study released Thursday by the Rand Corp.
reveals that 20 percent of military service members who have returned from Iraq and Afghanistan are suffering from
major depression or post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
The 300,000 veterans involved in the study all suffered head
injuries from mild concussions to severe wounds. So far, only half of them have
sought treatment.
"There is a major health crisis facing those men and
women who have served our nation in Iraq
and Afghanistan,"
said Terri Tanielian, the project's co-leader and a researcher at the Rand
Corp., according to the Associated Press.
"Unless they receive appropriate and effective care for
these mental health conditions, there will be long-term consequences for them
and for the nation," she said in a statement.
Following reports of increased mental health problems, the
Army said it had been raising the number of soldier screenings. But the Rand study argues that mental problems of several
soldiers might go undetected, escaping the bureaucratic system.
It is very possible that some soldiers avoid seeking help
out of fear that their career would be ruined or their colleagues would not
trust them anymore.
"When we asked folks what was limiting them from
getting the help that they need, among the top barriers that were reported were
really negative career repercussions," Tanielian said.
That is why the study recommends finding ways in which
mental healthcare is provided confidentially so the ill service members do not
have to disclose their private matters to superior officers.
One of the main causes of the increasing incidence of
traumatic brain injury is represented by the troops’ exposure to roadside bombs
in Iraq and Afghanistan.
TBI, or traumatic brain injury, is considered one of the “invisible
wounds” of the war, and the Rand study tries
to make people more aware of the issue, helping them to better understand the
way it affects their lives.
"These conditions can impair relationships, disrupt
marriages, aggravate the difficulties of parenting, and cause problems in
children that may extend the consequences of combat trauma across generations,"
the study reads.
Lisa H.Jaycox, one of the study’s authors, warns the United States that
the failure to treat depression and other similar diseases could cost the
country around $6 billion.