1. Educate yourself about PTSD, learn what it is, how it impacts victims, how it can be re mediated, who is
    afflicted with it.
  2. Think about how you can lend a hand in the advocacy of PTSD victims.
  3. Send us your ideas about how we can complete our mission at FIGHT-PTSD.ORG.
  4. Join our campaign of advocacy for active duty military personnel and veterans who are PTSD casualties.
  5. Become aware, appreciative, involved.
FIGHT-PTSD.ORG
Photos: Luis Simco/Los Angeles Times  

An advocacy site on behalf of active duty military personnel & veterans who have been casualties of Post Traumatic
Stress Disorder.

What You Can Do To Help

Click here to learn more
about MSC.
  1. Educate yourself about PTSD, learn what it is, how it impacts victims, how it can be re mediated, who is
    afflicted with it.
  2. Think about how you can lend a hand in the advocacy of PTSD victims.
  3. Read about our 2008/2009 Advocacy campaign at our Advocacy page.
  4. Join us in supporting MSC's efforts to serve active duty military personnel and veterans who are PTSD
    casualties.
  5. Become aware, appreciative, involved.
 
PTSD has been around throughout world history, for as long as
mankind has engaged in war.  In previous generations it may not have
been recognized as a long term disabling illness with legitimate and
catastrophic injury to humans, including death, if undiagnosed and
untreated.  During World Wars I and II, and later, it was commonly
attributed as "shell shock", and when manifest in the extreme in
troops in the theater of war would likely result in the affected troops
being removed from duty, and literally and figuratively ostracized by
their peers and superiors.

While strides have been made by society and the medical
establishment in civilian life in recent decades, so that PTSD is
recognized as a valid
mental health disorder that can be identified
and treated by medical professionals and skilled rehabilitation
professionals, similar progress in this arena by the United States
military establishment has not been demonstrated, and in fact, may be
institutionally "road blocked" by leadership in the military establishment.






FIGHT-PTSD.ORG will advocate on behalf of active duty military
personnel and veteran's to gain recognition of PTSD as a valid
medical casualty resulting from operations in a theater of warfare.  
We will advocate to gain appropriate medical treatment and
counseling and other appropriate services for active duty military
personnel who are PTSD casualties.  To the extent possible, we will
make available resource information and other services to assist
active duty military personnel and veterans in mitigating the effects of
their PSTD injuries.
 
As summarized by the BFD Blog!, in the posting titled "The Shafting
Of Our Career Soldiers: Continues Unabated" the Army Medical
Corps is systematically mis-diagnosing PTSD war casualties as
having a Personality Disorder, which then requires that these
solders be given Chapter 5-13 discharges, which in turn
disqualifies them from receiving any military medical or retirement
benefits and which places them outside of the umbrella of
Veterans Administration services.

Despite the general consensus of the medical profession, and
other experts in this field, and all of the evidence in front of her,
the acting Surgeon General of the United States Army, Major
General Gale Pollock continues to deny these soldiers honest and
correct medical diagnoses and any subsequent appropriate
medical services.  As the commanding officer of the United States
Army Medical Corps, General Pollock's behavior seems to be
derelict in her duty to the army and to the American People.  
Bureaucratic cost containment through the culling out of soldiers
who have been catastrophically injured in service to their country
instead of a mission to heal and rehabilitate seems to be General
Pollock's motivating factors.

Our military personnel, who have sacrificed their all for us need
our help to stop the forced discharges and to begin the healing
process.  General Pollock needs our help to remember what
motivated her to obtain her medical training in the first place and to
allow humanity and compassion to return to her value system.

To learn more about this compelling issue read
"How Specialist
Town Lost His Benefits" and "Specialist Town Takes His Case To
Washington", both reported by Joshua Kors in The Nation.

Our header photo array depicts three phases in the life of James Blake Miller, also known as the "Marlboro Marine".  Miller is
shown in the three pictures as a young, unscathed 20 year old Marine on initial deployment to Iraq in 2004, after being pinned
down during an all night firefight in Fallouja, Iraq, on November 8, 2004, and then almost three years later, after being discharged
from the Marines due to PTSD.  This is the face of a young American patriot who will be a disabled casualty for the rest of his life,
all because he served his country.  
Learn about Miller's full story here.

Copyright © 2007 FIGHT-PTSD.ORG

FAQ
Our Mission
As defined by the National Institute of
Mental Health, Post-Traumatic Stress
Disorder, PTSD, is an anxiety disorder that
can develop after exposure to a terrifying
event or ordeal in which grave physical harm
occurred or was threatened. Traumatic
events that may trigger PTSD include violent
personal assaults, natural or human-caused
disasters, accidents, or military combat.
U.S. Army Kicks
PTSD Casualties
Of Iraq War To
The Curb