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Ronald J. Glasser - Broken Bodies, Shattered Minds: A Medical Odyssey from Vietnam to Afghanistan

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Told in the narrative, and from personal experience, author traces changing nature of warfare from jungles of Vietnam to streets and mountains of Iraq and Afghanistan and the physical and psychological damage of wounds to troops in U.S. Army and Marine Corps. And what it has come to realize. The efficiency of evacuation units has led to quick treatment of IED-caused wounds resulting in life-saving amputation,most since American Civil War. Amputation on women soldiers and their difficulty using prosthetics designed for male soldiers is examined and, large scale concussive cerebral damage, a new phenomenon in military medical treatment requiring lifetime care of the wounded, is examined and the escalating, hidden costs of lifetime care put into perspective. New, previously unpublished studies on the concussive effects on the brain are presented. Something also relative to NFL interest.Using narrative vignettes,the rising medical and sociological costs of the Afghan War are clearly defined and the escalating hidden costs of long term medical care are put into projection.Lt. General Harold Moore wrote the Foreword.

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BROKEN BODIES/SHATTERED MINDS

A Medical Odyssey from Vietnam to Afghanistan

BROKEN BODIES/SHATTERED MINDS

A Medical Odyssey from Vietnam to Afghanistan

Ronald J. Glasser M.D.
Former Major, United States Army Medical Corp

Copyright 2011 by Ronald Glasser MD All rights reserved No part of this - photo 1

Copyright 2011 by Ronald Glasser M.D.

All rights reserved.

No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval

system, or transmitted in any form or by any meanselectronic,

mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwisewithout prior

written consent from the History Publishing Company.

Published in the United States by

History Publishing Company LLC

Palisades, NY 10964

www.historypublishingco.com

SAN: 850-5942

Glasser, Ronald J.

Broken bodies/shattered minds : a medical odyssey

from Vietnam to Afghanistan/Ronald J. Glasser.

p. cm.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

LCCN 2011927256

ISBN-13: 9781933909486

ISBN-10: 1933909471

ISBN-13: 9781933909486 (e-book)

ISBN-10: 193390948X (e-book)

1. Soldiers--Wounds and injuries--United States. 2. Soldiers--Health and hygiene--United States. 3. Soldiers--Mental health--United States. 4. United States--Armed Forces--Medical care. 5. Vietnam War, 1961-1975--Health aspects. 6. Afghan War, 2001---Health aspects. I. Title.

UH215.G53 2011 355.3450973

QBI11-600091

Printed in the United States on acid-free paper

9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

First Edition

In admiration and respect for Dr. Michael McCue, arguably one of the finest neurosurgeons in America, who cares for the wounded of Iraq and Afghanistan through the Department of Defense Heroes Program and who edited these pages for content and accuracyparagraph by paragraph and sentence by sentencewith a surgeons scalpel.

CONTENTS
FOREWORD

In a country that over the last forty years has grown more distant, becoming less involved and less concerned about its military, Dr. Glassers newest book is both a cautionary tale as well as a powerful redemptive work. Expertly crafted, there are sections of this book that could be used by active duty personnel to teach past military historyboth successes and failuresas well as become a primer on current strategy and tactics, including the liturgy of the ever-changing, ever-more-deadly, and evermore-challenging wounds of war.

The connections with our past wars, particularly between Vietnam and our current wars, are valid on factual grounds. We never had enough troops in Vietnam and we do not have enough troops in Afghanistan. We never sealed the borders in Vietnam and we cannot seal the borders in Afghanistan. We never had a real exit strategy in Vietnam and we clearly do not have an exit strategy of any merit or validity for Afghanistan. We trained a South Vietnamese Army that lasted a year. The Iraqi Army will last a few months, the Afghan Army a few weeks.

Dr. Glasser writes with a quiet elegance, factual precision, and emotional restraint that make this a book of great power and greater substance. It will enlighten, amaze, and trouble youand it is a book America needs now, more than ever.

Lt. General Harold G. Moore, U.S. Army (Retired)

1.
FORTY YEARS OF WAR

Why write anything? For those who arent there, its like it isnt happening, and for those who are, its like it doesnt count. But there have been 1.9 million soldiers and marines deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq over the last decade, with over 5,000 killed, some 300,000 wounded, another 250,000 diagnosed with PTSD and over 300,000 with traumatic brain or concussive central nervous system injuries, along with amputees approaching levels not seen since our Civil War. These are by any measurement or comparison truly enormous numbers. Youd think that so many wounded, if not dead, would be hard to ignore. But they are.

Yet, these numbers do count, not only to the families of those killed and wounded, but also to the nation. The Iraq and Afghanistan wars have become a 3 trillion dollar war that we can continue to ignore or simply write off. There will be both a moral and economic reckoning before these wars are over and we all finally do go home. And that is what this book is about, that reckoningthe physical, mental, and psychological costs of these wars, those real and those invisible wounds, the anguish and persistent suffering. Unlike all our other wars, the real legacy of Iraq and Afghanistan is not the graveyard but the orthopedics ward, the neurosurgical unit, and the psychiatric outpatient department.

This is a book about forty years of war. It is written from the bottom up rather than from the top down. These are the stories of the soldiers and the marines who actually did and still do make the fight, and those doctors, nurses, and medics who are there when they die and then simply turn around and go on to try to save those who have somehow managed to survive. It is not a book of memoirs or even remembrances, nor is it a book of narrative non-fiction; these stories are no more and no less than the truth. Everything in this book happened. All the numbers and facts are real.

But war is a brutal business. So in places Ive changed unit designations in the hopes of protecting those we have once again sent out to the Edge of Empires. In All the Toms and All the Jakes, the real Tom and Jake asked me not to use their names. I interviewed both a number of times. They not only survived their deployments, they survived intact. Tom is now in Special Forces and Jake will soon be leaving the Marines.

Yet, because of the confusion caused by the Armys and Marines multiple deployments, I merged Toms and Jakes stories with those battles and firefights they had heard about or those fought by other squads or platoons in their company, regiment, or brigade in order to give a clearer understanding of a history that had so quickly overtaken both the strategists as well as those making the fight. What is unchanging and unchangeable is that those things Tom and Jake saw and experienced were exactly the same things that were seen and experienced by every soldier and marine I talked to or interviewed. There is a terrible democracy to war.

The wounds though, those mangled arms and lost legs, the burns and penetrating head wounds, the transected spinal cords, the grief and the depression, the traumatic brain injuries, the blindness and the pain, all speak for themselves. As for the dead, we still have our poets:

You think their dying is the worst thing that can happen.

Then they stay dead.

2.
THE LATE GREAT 1968/WELCOME TO THE ARMY

During the decade of the Vietnam War, the Selective Service System swept up some 20,000 draftees every month! Over 4 million troops were sent to Southeast Asia to fight, to die, and be wounded in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. Whatever has been written or said about Vietnam, there was a regular harvesting of young men and little else before it was over.

By the time I was drafted in the summer of 1968the year that I completed my medical specialty training and ended my military defermentthe Army was not only running down, but running out of virtually everything, including physicians. The chief of the county hospital where I had finished my training as a pediatrician wanted me to stay on at the hospital to care for the pediatric patients of the countys indigent population. He actually sent a letter to the Pentagon, through our Senator, asking for an additional two-year deferment for me.

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