Casualties of World War II receive medical aid in New York, United States. Emotionally and mentally disturbed soldiers in the Mason General Hospital. A commanding officer addresses the patients in the hospital. The patients (suffering what has been more recently termed post traumatic stress disorder or PTSD) include men who tremble, men who cannot sleep, men who cannot remember and men who have a paralysis of mental origin. Patients are being admitted in the hospital. A psychiatrist listen to the patient's story. The patients share one common anxiety : death and fear of death.
Mental and psychiatric casualties (post traumatic stress disorder or PTSD) of World War II receive medical aid in New York, United States. A psychiatrist listens to the story of a military soldier victim in the Mason General Hospital. Another psychiatrist listens to the story of another patient. The patient tells him how he lost his comrade.
Casualties of World War II receive mental aid in New York, United States. A psychiatrist listens to the story of a military patient in the Mason General Hospital suffering from mental and emotional trauma. The patient, an African American U.S. Army soldier from the Headquarters detachment of the 50th Quartermaster battalion, Mobile, Alabama, cries as he tells the doctor how he suffered headaches, grief and homesickness (or "nostalgia" as he put it) on receiving a photograph of his girlfriend shortly before the war and missing her greatly.
Casualties of World War II receive medical aid in New York, United States. A psychiatrist listens to the story of a patient in the Mason General Hospital. The patient, suffering emotional and mental distress, tells the doctor how his brother was killed serving in the military in Guadalcanal during the war, and how he suffered depression symptoms.
Mental and emotional trauma patients of World War II receive medical aid in New York, United States. A psychiatrist listens to the story of a soldier patient in the Mason General Hospital suffering post traumatic disorders (like PTSD). Some military patients facing the problem of stammering.
Casualties of World War II (symptoms like PTSD) receive emotional and mental medical aid in New York, United States. A diagnostic report regarding a patient's anxiety being spoken into and dictaphone and then seen being typed in a typewriter. Patients make free long distance call and are seen seated in a long row of telephone booths. Patients settle in at the Mason General Hospital for the ten weeks treatment program. A man sleeping and another one sitting on a bed and unpacking. American flag being hoisted in front of the hospital premises.
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