PTSD “The invisible wounds of War”

The Impact of Chronic Illness
September 27, 2020
Topic: Evidence-Based Practice and Applied Nursing Research
September 27, 2020

PTSD “The invisible wounds of War”

PTSD “The invisible wounds of War”

Project description
*Note* You must be familiar with the book:
“The Invisible Wounds of War: Coming Home from Iraq and Afghanistan” http://www.amazon.com/Invisible-Wounds-War-Coming-Afghanistan/dp/1616145536

*Note* I cannot extend the deadline for any reason.

You can put up to 3 sources if needed.

I want you to write about the book “”The invisible wounds of War:Coming Home from Iraq and Afghanistan” and tie it to PTSD on how did the soldiers get it in the first

place,
3 types of PTSD (Re-Experience, Avoidance and numbering symptoms and arousal symptoms)
-How will conclusions affect you after you have left the service.
-Why is July dominant in suicides
-How and why is it linked to sexual assault

Thank You for your time and efforts.

Write using Paraphrasing (Do Not Directly Quote Material)

In your paper you will paraphrase information not directly quote it from your sources. The most significant reason for using paraphrasing is to provide support for

your claims or add credibility to your writing. If you want to incorporate information into your Argumentative Research Essay effectively, you must manage your sources

skillfully and accurately.

Keep these rules in mind:

1. No more than 15% of your paper should be paraphrased. Most of the writing should be your own. Use words and opinions of others only to support your own points and

ideas.
2. Keep paraphrases short. Resist the temptation to quote long passages of text, even if it seems remarkable and strikingly worded. Instead, smoothly incorporate

fragments of paraphrases into your own sentences, making certain that the sentence structure is correct and makes sense.
3. Clearly identify each paraphrase. If the purpose of paraphrasing is to lend credibility to your writing, and you should indicate the authority behind the words. Use

a signal phrase to set up the direct quotation or paraphrase properly.
4. Precede and follow paraphrases with your own commentary. Don’t use a paraphrase to make your point. Instead, state your idea in your own words, and supplement that

with cited material from an expert.
5. Interweave your sources. When paraphrases from the same source are all clustered in one portion of a paper, it can be a clear sign of an author that is not

supporting their topics with analysis. Instead, the paper should blend information from different sources to create and support your own analysis.

Writing your paper

Begin writing a 3-5 page paper not including the APA Title Page and APA Reference Page (with these pages the paper should be 5-7 pages long). The paper should be

double spaced, and written in 12 point Times New Roman font.
Your paper does not need an Abstract!
Along with a minimum three (3) supporting pages of text in the body of your paper about your subject and argument. You will also provide a clear and concise

conclusion, that will demonstrate how you have proven your thesis and argument at the end of your paper.
The paper must be a Microsoft Word document in APA Style and include:
1. Title Page
2. Running Head
3. Page Numbers
4. Body Text – 3 to 5 pages
5. Introduction with a clear Thesis Statement
6. Three (3) Paraphrased Sources (do not directly quote material)
b. One (1) or more academic sources from the Internet (Wikipedia is not an acceptable academic source)
7. In-Text Citations
8. Conclusion
9. Reference Page
10. Reference List Entries