According to Psychiatric Services “Traumatic brain injury (TBI), affecting an estimated 22% of service members wounded in military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, is often complicated by comorbid posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, and other mental health problems having a dramatic impact on the lives of the veteran's family”(Psychiatric service,2013).
Veterans with TBI cases is to create a problem, not solve and understand the assumptions management has a deficit in memory, and executive function may lead to friction among family …show more content…
RAND Corporation was generally greater exposure to trauma, conducted a survey in 1965, 24 service members from the national community to evaluate and deploy a recent exposure to traumatic events and possible brain damage and evaluates current symptoms of psychological illness. Reports that at least 50% reported serious injury or death, and 45% had a friend report a death or serious non-combatant, and 10% are reported injured and required hospitalization. The frequency of traumatic events was found to be more common in the New England Journal of Medicine study, with 90 percent of soldiers returning the bodies or reporting harmful and reported the death of a reported enemy combatants who are responsible for 50% of Iraq. RAND survey found that meets the stress disorder (PTSD) or depression, post-traumatic basis for return of 18.5% of all service members are; these numbers are similar to those reported by Hodge and colleagues. In addition, RAND survey experienced a mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) are available in the deployment process and found that 19.5% reported; After experiencing more than one-third of TBI and that also duplicated traumatic stress disorder or depression had. Based on these findings, RAND Corporation is only about 30 service members returning from Iraq and Afghanistan are estimated to experience the least stress disorder or mild traumatic brain injury during deployment that occurred about 32 million in major depression,