Psychiatric Casualties during the Korean War: Focusing on American and Common Wealth Soldiers

A crucial gap in the medical history of the Korean War is the history of psychiatry during the Korean War. War puts those who participate in it through physical and mental extremes, inflicting not only physical injuries but also psychological trauma and damage. However, studies of the medical aspect...

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Main Author: In-sok YEO
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korean Society for the History of Medicine 2023-12-01
Series:Uisahak
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.medhist.or.kr/upload/pdf/kjmh-32-3-865.pdf
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author In-sok YEO
author_facet In-sok YEO
author_sort In-sok YEO
collection DOAJ
description A crucial gap in the medical history of the Korean War is the history of psychiatry during the Korean War. War puts those who participate in it through physical and mental extremes, inflicting not only physical injuries but also psychological trauma and damage. However, studies of the medical aspects of the Korean War have been limited to topics related to physical injuries and their treatment, and there are no studies that systematically summarize the traumatic effects on the human mind thrown into the midst of the war, the consequences of these effects, and the medical efforts made to deal with these problems. As the Korean War was fought only five years after the end of the Second World War, the experiences and achievements of the Second World War were used in the Korean War. In terms of personnel, many of the soldiers who fought in the Second World War also fought in the Korean War. This continuity with the Second World War had both positive and negative aspects. On the positive side, treatment and transport systems were quickly put in place to respond to the large numbers of soldiers with psychiatric problems on the front lines early in the war. This is an example of a positive use of the legacy of the Second World War. On the other hand, the negative side of the coin was the much higher frequency of psychiatric symptoms among veterans of the Second World War. This could be explained by the fact that the psychological trauma experienced on the battlefield during the Second World War remained latent and was reactivated in the Korean War as a kind of conditioned reflex. In addition, the brainwashing of prisoners of war and their subsequent psychological problems are also characteristic of the Korean War in the context of the Cold War. These psychiatric features of the Korean War will provide a useful historical example for understanding and helping those who are inevitably involved in war and suffer from mental distress.
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spelling doaj.art-7f2b5cb52fd140628ab2060a068b85732024-02-15T04:11:45ZengKorean Society for the History of MedicineUisahak1225-505X2093-56092023-12-0132386588910.13081/kjmh.2023.32.8652460Psychiatric Casualties during the Korean War: Focusing on American and Common Wealth SoldiersIn-sok YEOA crucial gap in the medical history of the Korean War is the history of psychiatry during the Korean War. War puts those who participate in it through physical and mental extremes, inflicting not only physical injuries but also psychological trauma and damage. However, studies of the medical aspects of the Korean War have been limited to topics related to physical injuries and their treatment, and there are no studies that systematically summarize the traumatic effects on the human mind thrown into the midst of the war, the consequences of these effects, and the medical efforts made to deal with these problems. As the Korean War was fought only five years after the end of the Second World War, the experiences and achievements of the Second World War were used in the Korean War. In terms of personnel, many of the soldiers who fought in the Second World War also fought in the Korean War. This continuity with the Second World War had both positive and negative aspects. On the positive side, treatment and transport systems were quickly put in place to respond to the large numbers of soldiers with psychiatric problems on the front lines early in the war. This is an example of a positive use of the legacy of the Second World War. On the other hand, the negative side of the coin was the much higher frequency of psychiatric symptoms among veterans of the Second World War. This could be explained by the fact that the psychological trauma experienced on the battlefield during the Second World War remained latent and was reactivated in the Korean War as a kind of conditioned reflex. In addition, the brainwashing of prisoners of war and their subsequent psychological problems are also characteristic of the Korean War in the context of the Cold War. These psychiatric features of the Korean War will provide a useful historical example for understanding and helping those who are inevitably involved in war and suffer from mental distress.http://www.medhist.or.kr/upload/pdf/kjmh-32-3-865.pdfbrainwashingcombat fatiguekorean warprisoners of warpsychiatry
spellingShingle In-sok YEO
Psychiatric Casualties during the Korean War: Focusing on American and Common Wealth Soldiers
Uisahak
brainwashing
combat fatigue
korean war
prisoners of war
psychiatry
title Psychiatric Casualties during the Korean War: Focusing on American and Common Wealth Soldiers
title_full Psychiatric Casualties during the Korean War: Focusing on American and Common Wealth Soldiers
title_fullStr Psychiatric Casualties during the Korean War: Focusing on American and Common Wealth Soldiers
title_full_unstemmed Psychiatric Casualties during the Korean War: Focusing on American and Common Wealth Soldiers
title_short Psychiatric Casualties during the Korean War: Focusing on American and Common Wealth Soldiers
title_sort psychiatric casualties during the korean war focusing on american and common wealth soldiers
topic brainwashing
combat fatigue
korean war
prisoners of war
psychiatry
url http://www.medhist.or.kr/upload/pdf/kjmh-32-3-865.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT insokyeo psychiatriccasualtiesduringthekoreanwarfocusingonamericanandcommonwealthsoldiers