Podcasts

AUDIO: The 'moral injury' suffered after killing on command


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY NEWS BOARD MEMBER

How does killing another person because you’ve been commanded to affect one’s mental health? Does it bring on an existential crisis, and does that contribute to posttraumatic stress disorder?

Col. Elspeth Ritchie, U.S. Army retired and an Army psychiatrist, explains how participating in "vast amounts of death and destruction" affects a person’s ability to cope afterward.

wmcknight@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @whitneymcknight

Recommended Reading

Intervention manages cardiac patients with depression, anxiety
MDedge Internal Medicine
Biomarkers of vulnerability for schizophrenia identified in youth
MDedge Internal Medicine
Block marketing of e-cigs to kids, senators urge FDA
MDedge Internal Medicine
AUDIO – How PTSD got its name
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: Link found between neuroinflammation and suicide attempts
MDedge Internal Medicine
Studies highlight insomnia-depression link, underscore role for brief CBT
MDedge Internal Medicine
Reduced risk of RA in schizophrenia may be bias, not biology
MDedge Internal Medicine
Tobacco use tied to 53% of deaths in schizophrenia patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: Virtual adjunct psychotherapies used to de-escalate suicide risk
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: No longer ‘haunted’: a novel treatment for PTSD
MDedge Internal Medicine