Vietnam: The Battle Still Rages On After ten years of war, the battle scars are not the only things the 2.6 million returning Vietnam Veterans brought home with them. A large number brought home the battles themselves, be it in their memories or nightmares or with any physical wounds they endured and suffered. America welcomed home the Veterans from World War II with open arms, parades, and celebrated them as heroes. But the returning Vietnam Veterans were welcomed home with no parades, angry protesters, being spat upon, being called baby killers, and having food thrown at them. None of the returning Veterans were celebrated as heroes. This was not the kind of welcome the returning soldiers were looking forward to, especially after serving their country, even though many didn’t even sign up for service, but were drafted. Returning Veterans had a hard time coping with civilian life not only for the atrocities they inflicted, witnessed and took part in, but in coming home as the pariah of society. In 1973, …show more content…
Treating PTSD has several dynamics that need to be considered when a Veteran is seeking treatment. The process would be in recognizing three main components: medical factors, personal factors and social factors. “Medical factors are represented by the quality of service provided by the healthcare system, the medical providers performance, advancements made in treatments, and timely response to needs of the patient.” (Ghaff) Personal factors are going to depend on the patient and their “willingness to receive care and their compliance with treatments.” Social factors will “include how families, relatives, friends and society in general influence PTSD