You might be wondering, “When do I stop, shake and scream.” Well all of these are typical reactions of people with post traumatic stress disorder also known as PTSD. This disorder is show in, All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque, in 1928. This story is a novel that takes place during World War One. Shellshock, as it was once known, is a physiological disorder which is normally caused by a person's exposure to horror, such as warfare activity which causes a person to reminisce older experiences. However, PTSD was different one hundred years ago than it is now. Shell shock from World War One in Germany, from World War One and the Iraq war in Britain, and PTSD from the Syrian civil war with Turkey can be used to …show more content…
An example of this is Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen (The Red Animal Project). They both served for Britain during World War One and both had been hospitalized for PTSD. This shows the care that the british had for their soldiers because they were hospitalized for PTSD, unlike the Germans who made people with this disorder go back to the front. However, not all people with this were treated with attention. Some affected soldiers in Britain were charged by desertion, cowardice, or insubordination, and also used as models to show other soldiers what not to do (Stress Injury to Health Trauma, PTSD). The term Shellshock was then changed to PTSD in Britain is still very common. The last recorded British combat with records of PTSD is from British soldiers that were sent to Iraq in 2014. Mental health disorders are increased by nineteen percent in the last year that troops were in Afghanistan (Ben Farmer). Troops now are not charged with death penalties and distortion, but do get to be excused from combat. Soldiers with this disorder are treated by professional doctors and helped by organizations and the government. An example of an organization is March in March. This organization helps fund and interact with servicemen who have PTSD (Combat Stress). This shows the difference between British society in the twenty-first century and in the twentieth