Video-game treatment for traumatized troops
The Washington Post‘s scathing reporting on the lousy conditions for veterans’ outpatient care at Walter Reed Army Medical Hospital has put the spotlight, however briefly, on a subject that often takes a backseat to more immediate concerns when waging war. Namely, how should the United States care for veterans returning from combat? The transition from ...
The Washington Post's scathing reporting on the lousy conditions for veterans' outpatient care at Walter Reed Army Medical Hospital has put the spotlight, however briefly, on a subject that often takes a backseat to more immediate concerns when waging war. Namely, how should the United States care for veterans returning from combat? The transition from the mean streets of Baghdad back to Anytown, USA is hardly easy, to say the least.
The Washington Post‘s scathing reporting on the lousy conditions for veterans’ outpatient care at Walter Reed Army Medical Hospital has put the spotlight, however briefly, on a subject that often takes a backseat to more immediate concerns when waging war. Namely, how should the United States care for veterans returning from combat? The transition from the mean streets of Baghdad back to Anytown, USA is hardly easy, to say the least.
With some therapies for PTSD treatment already available, the hardest part of the effort might have been recreating a virtual Iraq and Afghanistan from scratch. Fortunately, someone else had already laid the groundwork: The VR simulations used to treat PTSD are modified scenarios from Full Spectrum Warrior—a video game developed for the Xbox.
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