Page 280 - Total War on PTSD
P. 280
Schuetz, A. (1945). The homecomer. American Journal of Sociology, 369-376.
Scott, J. C., Pietrzak, R. H., Southwick, S. M., Jordan, J., Silliker, N., Brandt, C. A., &
Haskell, S. G. (2014). Military sexual trauma interacts with combat exposure to increase risk for posttraumatic stress symptomatology in female Iraq and Afghanistan veterans. The Journal of clinical psychiatry, 75(6), 637-643.
Shatan, C. F. (1973). The grief of soldiers: Vietnam combat veterans' self-help movement. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 43(4), 640-653. doi: 10.1111/j. 1939-0025.1973.tb00834.x
Shay, J. (1994). Achilles in Vietnam: Combat trauma and the undoing of character. New York, NY, US: Atheneum Publishers/Macmillan Publishing Co.
Shay, J. (2002). Odysseus in America: Combat trauma and the trials of homecoming. New York, NY: Scribner.
Shay, J. (2007). Forward. In C. R. Figley & W. P. Nash (Eds.), Combat stress injury: Theory, research, and management (pp. xvii-xx). London, Engleand: Routledge.
Sherman, N. (2015). Afterwar: Healing the moral wounds of our soldiers. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Smith, C. P., & Freyd, J. J. (2014). Institutional betrayal. American Psychologist, 69(6), 575.
Smith, R. T., & True, G. (2014). Warring identities: Identity conflict and the mental distress of American veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Society and mental Health, 4(2), 147-161.
280 of 1042