The Therapist Directory



For service personnel who are serving or retired, who are presenting symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress. All therapists offering their services through the PTSDhelp web site provide their professional services at no more than £40.00 for an individual treatment session for a minimum of 6 sessions. Read More....


PTSDhelp a web site dedicated to providing affordable alternative and complementary health care, treatment and advice for the service men and women of the UK, serving or retired who have already given so much.

The 1900’s During WWI overwhelming mental fatigue was diagnosed as "soldier’s heart"
and "the effort syndrome". An article published on a now restricted Internet web
site maintained by Med. Access entitled "Chronic Fatigue Syndrome" states that "...some
60,000 of the British forces were diagnosed with the problem and 44,000 of these
were retired from the military because they could no longer function in combat".
(www.medaccess.com/cfs/cfs_02.htm (this page is no longer accessible))
As a side note all 306 soldiers executed for cowardice during the 1914 / 18 war have since been pardoned as the evidence suggests that the majority of these men were suffering from PTSD
The term "shell shock" emerged during WWI followed in WWII by the term "combat fatigue." These terms were used to describe those veterans who exhibited stress and anxiety as the result of combat trauma. The official designation of "Post Traumatic Stress Disorder" did not come about until 1980 when the Third edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) was published.
You may have noticed above that what started out as a "syndrome" turned into a "disorder". According to Taber’s Cyclopedic Medical Dictionary a "syndrome" is "a group of signs and symptoms that collectively characterize or indicate a particular disease or abnormal condition" and a "disorder" is an illness. PTSD changed from being part of a collective indicator to a singular illness, a significant medical distinction.
With few exceptions, up until DSM-
The initial definition of PTSD described a psychological condition experienced by
a person who had faced a traumatic event which caused a catastrophic stressor outside
the range of usual human experience (an event such as war, torture, rape, or natural
disaster). This definition separated PTSD stressors from the "ordinary stressors"
that were characterized in DSM-
To be continued.
During the Great War of 1914-
The pretexts for execution for British soldiers had a common theme, many were suffering
shell shock (also called "war neurosis" or "combat stress" and now recognised as
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or PTSD), and most were deliberately picked out and
convicted "as a lesson to others". Charges included desertion (walking around dazed
and confused suffering from PTSD), cowardice (ditto), or insubordination (any minor
action that could be pressed into service as an excuse for execution). Some were
simply obeying orders to carry information from one trench to another. Most of those
shot were young, defenceless and vulnerable teenagers who had enthusiastically volunteered
for duty. They were selected, charged, and subjected to a field trial often without
defence, convicted one day, then shot at dawn the next . Eye-