Back From War, Fear and Danger Fill Driver’s Seat
By JAMES DAO
Back in the States, Ms. Max, an Army reservist, found herself avoiding cramped parking lots without obvious escape routes. She straddled the middle line, as if bombs might be buried in the curbs. Gray sport-utility vehicles came to remind her of the unarmored vehicles she rode nervously through
“I used to like driving,” Ms. Max, 63, said. “Now my family doesn’t feel safe driving with me.”
For thousands of combat veterans, driving has become an ordeal. Once their problems were viewed mainly as a form of road rage or thrill seeking. But increasingly, erratic driving by returning troops is being identified as a symptom of traumatic brain injury or post-traumatic stress disorder, or P.T.S.D. — and coming under greater scrutiny amid concerns about higher accident rates among veterans.
The insurance industry has taken notice. In a review of driving records for tens of thousands of troops before and after deployments, USAA, a leading insurer of active-duty troops, discovered that auto accidents in which the service members were at fault went up by 13 percent after deployments. Accidents were particularly common in the six months after an overseas tour, according to the review, which covered the years 2007-2010.
The company is now working with researchers, the armed services and insurance industry groups to expand research and education on the issue. The Army says that fatal accidents — which rose early in the wars — have declined in recent years, in part from improved education. Still, 48 soldiers died in vehicle accidents while off duty last year, the highest total in three years, Army statistics show.
The Pentagon and Department of Veterans Affairs are also supporting several new studies into potential links between deployment and dangerously aggressive or overly defensive driving. The Veterans Affairs health center in
“I can’t talk with somebody who is a returned service member without them telling me about driving issues,” said Erica Stern , an associate professor of occupational therapy at the
Though bad driving among combat veterans is not new — research has found that
“There is no accepted treatment for this,” said Dr. Steven H. Woodward , a clinical psychologist with the Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System who is leading a study of potential therapies for veterans with P.T.S.D.-related driving problems. “It’s a new phenomenon.”
Though there has been some research into road rage among veterans, therapists and psychologists have only recently begun to view traumatic brain injuries and P.T.S.D. as factors in prolonging driving problems, probably by causing people to perceive threats where none exist — such as in tunnels, overpasses, construction crews or roadside debris.
“In an ambiguous situation, they are more likely to see hostile intent,” said Eric Kuhn , a psychologist with the Palo Alto Veterans Affairs Health Care System, who has studied driving problems. He said his research found that veterans who report more severe P.T.S.D. symptoms also tend to report being more aggressive drivers.
Experts note that driving problems are not always the result of the disorder. In some cases, returning troops may be reflexively applying driving techniques taught in
In a study of Minnesota National Guard soldiers who returned from
Though driving problems seemed to decrease the longer the troops were home, they did not always vanish. Dr. Stern found that many Guard members remained anxious about certain roadway situations, including night driving or passing unexpected things.
“Those are things they associated with threats they saw in combat,” she said.
Ms. Max, a grandmother of four, was deployed at the age of 60 to
Upon returning to
“My whole driving behavior changed,” she said. “I live in a state of anxiety when I’m driving.”
Ms. Max recently participated in a clinical trial to develop and test therapies, such as deep breathing, that might overcome such anxieties. In a Pontiac Bonneville sedan outfitted with equipment to track the driver’s visual focus, heart rate and breathing, as well as to measure changes in the speed and direction of the car, the researchers take patients onto highways and observe their reactions to traffic hazards, real and imagined.
On a recent spin through the hills of Palo Alto, Ms. Max drove while Dr. Woodward monitored her heart rate and breathing on a laptop in the back seat. In front, Marc Samuels, a driving rehabilitation specialist who offers one of the only programs for P.T.S.D.-related driving problems in the nation, directed her along a preplanned route, prepared to grab the wheel if anything went awry.
Ms. Max mostly drove fine, but was startled slightly when passing a construction site and then again when two cars momentarily boxed her in. Finally, when her stress level spiked in a small parking lot, Mr. Samuels told her to stop the car and regain her composure.
Ms. Max said that the clinics had made her more aware of the things that made her nervous, a first step to conquering them. But she says she does not expect to ever feel truly comfortable driving again and has no plans to replace her beloved Mustang, which she sold just before her deployment.
“Why get a hot car?” she said. “I’m not going to enjoy it.”
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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