White Rose's Adventures

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Study: Fast morphine treatment may prevent PTSD

By LINDA A. JOHNSON
Associated Press Writer

Quickly giving morphine to wounded troops cuts in half the chance they will develop post-traumatic stress disorder, according to a provocative study that suggests a new strategy for preventing the psychological fallout of war.

Researchers at the U.S. Naval Health Research Center led the study of about 700 troops injured in Iraq from 2004 through 2006.

“It was surprising how strong the effect of the morphine was,” said study leader Troy Lisa Holbrook, an epidemiologist at the naval center. The findings were published in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medicine.

Whether the Pentagon will adopt the practice on the battlefield remains to be seen. Dr. Jack Smith, acting deputy assistant secretary of defense for clinical and program policy, said in an e-mail that the “very interesting findings” are “likely to stimulate further research.”

About 53,000 troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan have been treated for PTSD, a disorder in which someone who has endured a traumatic event keeps re-experiencing it and the fear it caused. Patients often have trouble with work, relationships, substance abuse and physical ailments.

Researchers have been testing ways to treat it, and the new study looked at whether fast and strong pain relief can help prevent it.

It was unclear whether it was the fast pain treatment or something specific to morphine that made the difference.

But researchers theorize that simply easing pain might reduce the severity of the psychological trauma, or that prompt relief might alter the way the brain remembers the attack or injury – in essence, causing the mind to file away the episode as less traumatic.

Troops in the study initially were treated at military medical facilities in Iraq, mainly for wounds caused by roadside bombs, bullets, grenades or mortar fire. A few dozen had burns or were hurt in crashes or falls. The decision on whether to give morphine was up to the individual doctor, based on the patient’s condition.

Of the 696 troops in the study, 493 – about 70 percent – were given morphine, most within an hour of injury. Two years later, 147 of them had developed PTSD. Of the 203 not given morphine early on, 96 developed PTSD.

That worked out to a 53 percent lower risk of developing PTSD for those treated early with morphine. No other factor, such as the nature or severity of injuries, had much effect on the chances of developing PTSD, Holbrook said.

“These are provocative and thought-provoking findings that should lead scientists to investigate the underlying mechanisms” in future studies, said JoAnn Difede, a PTSD researcher at New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center.

Difede and Barbara Rothbaum, who heads the Trauma and Anxiety Recovery Program at Emory University School of Medicine, said that until more research backs up the findings, the study probably won’t lead to many more patients in civilian emergency rooms getting morphine.

“At this point, I don’t see it having a huge impact” for civilians, Rothbaum said.

A second study in the journal found that Army wives were more likely to develop depression or sleep problems the longer, or the more times, their spouses were sent to Iraq or Afghanistan.

That study, by researchers at the University of North Carolina and elsewhere, examined medical records for outpatient care of about 250,000 wives of active-duty soldiers from 2003 through 2006.

Compared with wives whose husbands stayed home, those whose husbands were deployed for up to 11 months were 18 percent more likely to be diagnosed with depression and at least 20 percent more likely to be diagnosed with sleep disorders, anxiety and acute stress.

For wives whose husbands were deployed for more than 11 months, problems were even more common: They were at least 24 percent more likely to be diagnosed with depression or anxiety, and about 40 percent more likely to be diagnosed with acute stress or sleep problems.

The researchers didn’t have data showing whether husbands were deployed or at home when the wives were being treated for mental health problems.

That meant the scientists couldn’t conclude whether those problems were caused by worries about the spouse’s safety and the difficulties of being a single parent, or by stress caused by the returning spouse’s psychological problems or other behavior changes.

“I suspect that if you look at the Reserve and National Guard wives, the toll might be even worse,” because they have less social support than families living in a military community, Rothbaum said.

She said the effects of deployment on children also need to be studied so the military can figure out how to provide more help to families.

On the Net: http://www.nejm.org

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Tommy has Escaped

I am at Anaconda and doing fine. Well, I am doing as best as can be expected. I was hooking my air lines up the other day and slipped and hit my left knee on the frame rail. I have a cut on the knee cap and have bruised it pretty good. I am restricted from driving for 2/3 days. So I am sitting here at Anaconda. I can still CC missions as long as I have a driver. All CC’s are supposed to have drivers anyway. Reefers are the last hold outs for doing that. My boss isn’t giving me any hassle about it. He is being vary good and so are all the guys. I really hate being babied as much as they are trying to do. But it is nice to know that my guys will take care of me like I take care of them.

I was so glad to hear that Tommy was alive and well and back with us. Several of us had heard that his headless body had been strapped to a hood and drive all around town. This bit of news about him escaping helps everyone sprits. You should have heard the hoops and hollers that came across the radio and all round when it came across our qualcoms and someone radioed it out to all.

I have so much to tell and not much time right now. I finally got my computer set up so that I can use it in the MWR instead of having to wait in line for the company computers. I will get an email out about the mission so far later today, I hope. We are not going any where. Things are shut down again.

For now, I want everyone to know that I am ok and getting bored of sitting.

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KBR casualties in Iraq

This is memo that was sent out by KBR in Houston.

TO: All Halliburton employees
FROM: Dave Lesar, chairman, president and CEO
SUBJECT: KBR casualties in Iraq

Our KBR colleagues in Iraq have suffered casualties in the renewed fighting over the past week. Several of our truck convoys were attacked during their work delivering fuel, food and supplies for the U.S. Army and the Iraqi people.

I am sorry to report that two members of the Halliburton family were killed. At this time there are six more employees missing, and one, Thomas (Tommy) Hamill, was captured and is being held hostage. Eighteen others were wounded. This is a grueling and difficult development, and we are working diligently to assist the families and the military in any way we can. KBR employees and subcontractors have all made courageous decisions to work in Iraq. Daily, they risk their personal security to serve the troops and deliver much-needed services to the Iraqi people.

We are in constant communication with the authorities in Iraq and the families of the lost, missing and captured employees. Out of concern for the safety of these individuals and the privacy of their families, we are not releasing their names at this time. I am sure you all join me in expressing our condolences to the families of those who were lost and in praying for the safety of Tommy Hamill and the six missing individuals, and for the recovery of the wounded. We are grateful and supportive of everyone who continues to assist with this effort.

This is a very trying time for them and for all our fellow employees in Iraq. We are working with the coalition authorities to provide for their safety and security. And we are firm in our resolve to stay and complete our mission to provide logistical support to the coalition troops, humanitarian and reconstruction aid to the Iraqi people, and help with rebuilding Iraq’s oil industry.

I am proud of the work KBR is doing in the Middle East. It is essential work, and KBR is the right group for the job. The KBR employees and subcontractors working there are showing great courage, as well as skill and professionalism. All of us stand behind them, and we send them our heartfelt thanks along with our concern for their safety.

I will keep you informed as we learn more about the seven missing and captured employees. Until then, let us keep them in our thoughts and prayers.

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what we are being told

I just wanted to let everyone know what we are being told here. We are back at start up status. That means that we are at the same status that they were when all this started. We are at war again and are treating as such. I am not getting all the information that we, the drivers, want at this time. I can say that as most of you know, there has been a KBR tanker driver kidnapped. There have been some KBR drivers killed and some are still missing. I have not heard from several of my friends that I know were up north. You would think with us sitting right here in the middle of it all that we would know more than the news, but it is not always that way. Drivers are quitting and going home at a very rapid pace. I can not and will not condemn them for doing that. I just know that I am going to stay. I can’t tell you how I will react or what I will do if one of my convoys is ever hit. That may be enough for me to come home and then it may not. I ask of everyone there in the states to just pray for our guys and gals over here. We have lots of new people over here that are not familiar with he area and we have lots of people that were supposed to be going home in the next few days that are not going to be. My friend Keith is one of them. He was due to fly out on the 14th. They recalled his unit and now after being here a year, he doesn’t know how much longer he will have to stay.

Now as for our convoy security, we are supposed to be getting more escorts and several other things. Because of the possible chance that this email could be seen by the “bad guys” I can not tell you what that is. Just trust me that they are doing everything in their power to keep us as safe as possible. I have a couple of friends that are former military and are helping me in knowing what to do if attacked. They are big help and I thank God that I am lucky to have them in my life at this time. They help me keep my mind in check on all this. I know everyone over there is going to worry about me and all the others that are here, I wish you wouldn’t. What we are doing here is a really good thing and we are doing good here. I know ya’ll may not be seeing that in the news. The news has a thing for only reporting the bad things.

Now, just so you know that it is not all bad stuff here, I am adding a few pictures to the group site, that a friend took of me on the beach here at the villa the day I took off from work. I know that it is not of what I am doing in Iraq, but I want ya’ll to see that I am doing great and a picture says a thousand words.

I need to get to bed now, I have to go in early tomorrow. I have now idea when I will be going back out. But as soon as I know I will let ya’ll know. Ya’ll take care and don’t worry!

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