In the United States of America, 70% of adults have experienced a traumatic event according to PTSD statistics(2022). When challenged mentally, physically, and spiritually a human can be affected by a traumatic event, but there can be different reactions for different individuals. Trauma is to be deeply disturbed or distressed after a traumatic experience and can affect many individuals in many ways but is also treatable, some even curable to a point, many around the world have to deal with trauma and most don't make it through. For those who’ve had a traumatic event happen to them in recent times it would be easier to treat than ten years ago because, in the last ten years, many people's lives have either been good or worse. Over the last …show more content…
Traumatic experiences can lead to many diverse types of mental health issues; an example is PTSD or Post-Traumatic stress disorder. The effect PTSD has on those who experienced something traumatic will have a more fight or flight reaction to life even when it is not life-threatening, it may also affect sleeping habits, and consumption consistency. Depression is another that can be shown but this can depend on the efficiency and the event that occurred. Events like close friends or family members passing away even the deaths of our pets can cause this feeling, another feeling common with depression is the feeling of being alone. the Boston Marathon bombings where the bomb went off and killed three people, one only being a small child, would traumatize a nation and cause a depressive state for the ones who lost someone that day and would cause PTSD for those who survived either injured or who watched in terror. Other mental health issues that can be caused also can be cured or …show more content…
Interestingly enough many of the people would think that it was a sickness that could be cleaned with their gods or even a sacrifice. Others would believe it was a possession so having mental issues like depression or you developed schizophrenia. To sum it up, back then it seemed like you were not going to get much help. Great minds like Claudius Galen believed that letting blood or purging one's body would rid them of the issue (CSPGlobal2023). Most treatments like leeches for bloodletting were used for diabetes and other illnesses surely this was not necessarily effective. The most interesting one of them seems to be the Insulin Coma Treatment introduced in 1927 until 1960. This was where doctors would put patients in a low blood sugar coma for either one to four hours, but sadly this practice failed because the patient would go into unconsciousness and die or a prolonged coma meaning the person would probably never get out of it. This went far enough to implement seizures into the scheme of treatment because they believed it would treat severe depression patients but would go severely wrong leading to torn muscles or fractured bones or other adverse effects. The worst of all would be lobotomy because it was the practice of making a human into a mere emotionless