Sentence examples for war neurosis from inspiring English sources

Exact(13)

WWI left Graves in a precarious state, shell-shocked and suffering from severe war neurosis.

Many clinical exemples allow to discover another time traumatic neurosis or war neurosis which are actually observed in the frame of disaster events.

But nightmares, startled reactions, anxiety and other symptoms persisted as "battle fatigue" or "war neurosis," a condition whose treatment was heavily influenced by the rise of Freudian psychoanalysis.

Although the disorder has been known for a long time (it was once called war neurosis), even in adults its many causes and manifestations often go unrecognized.

By M. Bell and Russell Maloney The New Yorker, January 10 , 1942P. 9 A while ago the Academy of Medicine offered a lecture by an English psychiatrist on the subject of war neurosis.

Until recently nothing much has been done about rehabilitating cases of traumatic war neurosis, even in the Army and Navy, and no one bothered with the Merchant Marine The Service has been formed by the shipping industry and the War Shipping Administration, It isn't philanthropic.

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At once absorbing historical narrative and intellectual detective story, A War of Nerves weaves together the literary, medical, and military lore to give us a fascinating history of war neuroses and their treatment, from the World Wars through Vietnam and up to the Gulf War.

He discovered that soldiers coming off the battlefields of World War I suffering from so-called war neuroses dreamed not, as he would have expected, of a world made once again whole and safe -- his theory of dreams being that they gratified deep-seated wishes -- but of the event that had shattered their psyches.

Moreover, the treatment of war neuroses with faradism was practiced at Queen Square and indeed internationally (Roudebush, 2001; Linden and Jones, 2012) before Yealland arrived on the scene.

Unlike war neuroses which commonly developed far away from the front line and persisted for a long time, they constituted acute and short-lived reactions to combat stress and were therefore rarely seen in military hospitals at home.

In their article on 'Some common war neuroses' published in the Lancet on 9 June 1917, Yealland and Adrian lamented the neglect of the treatment of 'hysterical disorders' in the recent English medical literature '… and we are left with the impression that our task is at an end when we have succeeded in establishing the diagnosis.

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