Shell Shock

1402 Words3 Pages

An outcome of World War I was a new medical disorder classified as Shell Shock. Shell Shock is a medical disorder developed to describe the symptoms that soldiers developed without a probable or obvious lesion as the cause after serving time on the war front. Shell Shock is one of the most prominent injuries of World War I; the symptoms varied among each soldier, treatments were still being developed, and doctors were still trying to understand the severity of the disorder. The symptoms soldiers described are due to the stress they encountered while they served on the front line. Shell Shock is a condition that soldiers have begun to develop after serving in the war.

Soldiers that are experiencing Shell Shock report having a wide variety of symptoms. It has been discovered that the symptoms that soldiers report experiencing are more mental than physical. Symptoms that we are looking for in Shell Shock victims include, amnesia, poor concentration, headaches, hypersensitivity to noise, dizziness, tremors, fatigue, memory loss, nervousness, reduced visual field, loss of smell and taste, and trouble sleeping. These symptoms are due to the stress that soldiers experienced while fighting on the war front. Other symptoms that soldiers are experiencing with Shell Shock are more emotional symptoms such as, general excitement, anxiety, remorse, anger, depression, irritability, and fear of frightful events. Soldiers are also experiencing symptoms when they experience events that remind them of trench welfare conditions. When soldiers are put in a situation that reminds them of trench welfare they start to experience symptoms of pain, distress, disgust or nausea. The emotional symptoms create a distressed mental state, and...

... middle of paper ...

...n. 2012.

Bourke, Joanna. "Shell Shock during World War One." BBC. BBC, 10 Mar. 2010. Web. 1 Feb. 2012.

Jones, Edgar, Nicola T. Fear, and Simon Wessely. "Shell Shock and Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: A Historical Review." The American Journal of Psychiatry 164.11 (2007): 1641-5. http://0-search.proquest.com.library.francis.edu/docview/220510935/fulltextPDF/134DFDDE4904573C8F8/1?accountid=4216 (accessed January 23, 2012).

Mosse, George L. “Shell-Shock as a Social Disease.” Journal of Contemporary History 35.1 (Jan. 2000): 101-108. JSTOR. Web. 23 Jan. 2012.

Pear, Tom Hatherly and Grafton Elliot Smith. Shell Shock and its Lessons. First Edition. England: Manchester University Press, 1917. http://www.vlib.us/medical/shshock/index.htm (assessed February 10, 2012).

Ryan, E. "A Case of Shell Shock." Canadian Medical Association Journal. 6.12 (1916): 1095-9. Print.

Open Document