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In times of war, psychological trauma has been known as shell shock or combat stress reaction.
Soldiers who feel confident in their own abilities and those of their squad are far less likely to suffer from combat stress reaction.
Eventually, Tinker fell victim to combat stress reaction due to the constant combat.
A Service member suffering from combat stress reaction is having a crisis, and there are two basic elements to that crisis working in opposite directions.
The U.S. soldiers experienced an unusually high number of severe cases of combat stress reaction.
Combat stress reaction, or "shell shock"
Though set in the years immediately following World War I, the novel featured the timely subject of combat stress reaction, or "shellshock."
It is linked to, but not synonymous with, the more modern concepts of combat stress reaction and posttraumatic stress disorder.
After a few months, epidemics of combat fatigue (now called Combat stress reaction) would drastically reduce the efficiency of units.
As traumatic brain injury and combat stress reaction have very different causes yet result in similar neurologic symptoms, researchers emphasize the need for greater diagnostic care.
Combat stress reaction is an acute reaction including a range of behaviours resulting from the stress of battle which decrease the combatant's fighting efficiency.
Lack of Moral Fibre, a diagnosis for combat stress reactions commonly used used in World War II.
Today, it is called combat stress reaction, and in Iraq hundreds of soldiers like Private Labier have suffered at least some of its symptoms, medical officials here said.
Medical history has shown, he said, that soldiers may be able to overcome the trauma - known as combat stress reaction, or shell shock - with several days of rest and quiet.
Combat stress reaction symptoms align with the symptoms also found in psychological trauma, which is closely related to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
It is now felt by many that these "shot at dawn" men were unfairly tried and executed as they may have been suffering from combat stress reaction rather than acting in cowardice.
The Canadian Army recognized combat stress reaction as "Battle Exhaustion" during the Second World War and classified it as a separate type of combat wound.
Combat stress reaction (CSR), is a term used within the military to describe acute behavioural disorganisation seen by medical personnel as a direct result of the trauma of war.
In World War II and thereafter, diagnosis of "shell shock" was replaced by that of combat stress reaction, a similar but not identical response to the trauma of warfare.
PTSD is different from traumatic stress, which is less intense and shorter, and combat stress reaction, which happens to soldiers in wartime situations and usually goes away.
While in reserve, O'Connor maintained an active correspondence with Churchill, Montgomery and others, making suggestions for improvements of armoured vehicles and addressing various other problems such as Combat stress reaction.
Proponents of the PIE and BICEPS principles argue that it leads to a reduction of long-term disability but opponents argue that combat stress reactions lead to long-term problems such as post-traumatic stress disorder.
He was hospitalized for a few weeks for combat stress reaction after Germany was defeated, and he later told his daughter: "You never really get the smell of burning flesh out of your nose entirely, no matter how long you live."
The CSC team coordinates with the unit's leaders to learn whether the overstressed individual was a good performer prior to the combat stress reaction, or whether he was always a marginal or problem performer whom the team would rather see replaced than returned.
A few days later, after he was confined to his room and put on a suicide watch, he was taken to a bigger base where he met with a psychologist who evaluated him and wrote, "the soldier reported signs and symptoms consistent with those of a normal combat stress reaction."