Elsevier

The Lancet

Volume 381, Issue 9870, 16–22 March 2013, Pages 883-884
The Lancet

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When the violence of war comes home

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(13)60635-2Get rights and content

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    Previous experience of combat interferes with peacekeeping efforts since combatants continue to cause further destabilisation (Hecker & Haer, 2015; Maedl, Schauer, Odenwald, & Elbert, 2010). Post conflict aggression perpetrated by former combatants outside of the context of combat has been reported as intimate partner violence (Jones, 2012; Klostermann, Mignone, Kelley, Musson, & Bohall, 2012; Marshall, Panuzio, & Taft, 2005), and violence within the wider civilian community (Augsburger, Meyer-Parlapanis, Bambonye, Elbert, & Crombach, 2015; Forbes & Bryant, 2013; MacManus & Wessely, 2011). In addition to the mental health problems typically affecting combatants, appetitive aggression (Elbert, Schauer, & Moran, 2018; Elbert, Weierstall, & Schauer, 2010), the intrinsic sense of finding violence appealing, has been postulated to contribute to the ongoing violence often observed in post conflict settings.

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    Furthermore, research literature has described patients’ subjective experiences of symptom relief not being captured by self-report measures (Creamer, Morris, Biddle, & Elliot, 1999; Forbes, Creamer, & Biddle, 2001). Dysregulated anger is becoming a well-recognized, important target of treatment with discussions of an independent diagnostic categorization and increased research on efficacy of specialized treatment (Ahmed et al., 2012; Forbes & Bryant, 2013; McHugh et al., 2012; Morland et al., 2012). We found that those veterans with PTSD and problematic anger who reported increased ability to calm physiologic arousal experienced the greatest reduction in anger and anger-related behaviors across a number of symptom domains and were able to maintain these gains over time.

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