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  1. Combat neurosis describes any personality disturbance that represents a response to the stress of war. It is closely related to post-traumatic stress disorder, and is often characterized under that term. Symptoms of the disturbance may appear during the battle itself, or may appear days, weeks, months, or even years later.

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  3. The German physician Honigman served in this body, and he was the first to coin the term “war neurosis” [Kriegsneurose] in 1907 for what was previously called “combat hysteria” and “combat neurasthenia”; also, he stressed the similarity between these cases and those reported by Oppenheim after railway accidents. 5

    • Marc-Antoine Crocq, Louis Crocq
    • 2000
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › NeurosisNeurosis - Wikipedia

    Neurosis (pl.: neuroses) is a term mainly used today by followers of Freudian thinking to describe mental disorders caused by past anxiety, often that has been repressed. In recent history, the term has been used to refer to anxiety-related conditions more generally.

    • Psychoneurosis, neurotic disorder
  5. War neuroses is a collective term used to denote the complex of nervous and mental disorders of soldiers in modern wartime societies. The term itself is inaccurate and has been the subject of debate since its first use in the psychiatric milieus during World War I ; the term has competed with other psychiatric labels, but was used through World ...

  6. In addition to losing a trained soldier from future combat, the distance from the field seemed to worsen the condition of combat neurosis. Captain Hanson’s Treatment Program Then in 1943, along came Captain Frederick Hanson, an Army neurologist and neurosurgeon, whose assignment was to deal with hundreds of combat-stressed soldiers after the ...

  7. Combat neurosis describes any behavioral health disturbance that represents a response to the stress of war or any combat setting. Witnessing any war-related act, whether actual battle, acts of terror, torture, killing of military personnel or civilians, or widespread environmental or human devastation, may cause combat neurosis.

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