From Shell Shock to Brain Injury: How Society Treats Invisible Trauma
When we think of war, we often think of heroes returning home, medals, parades, and the relief of survival. But for many soldiers of World War I, the battle didn’t end at the front. It followed them home — in their minds, their bodies, and, for some, in the streets.
They called it “shell shock.”
What Shell Shock Meant
During WWI, soldiers exposed to relentless artillery bombardments developed symptoms that doctors didn’t fully understand:
- Trembling, shaking, or paralysis
- Nightmares, panic attacks, and flashbacks
- Emotional detachment, depression, or sudden anger
At the time, the medical community debated whether shell shock was physical (damage from explosions) or psychological (trauma from the horrors of war). In practice, the uncertainty often meant misunderstanding and mistreatment.
How Soldiers Were Treated
Treatment for shell shock was inconsistent — and often cruel:
- Rest and isolation: Soldiers were sent to hospitals or rest homes, sometimes far from home, to “recover.”
- Discipline and punishment: Some were accused of cowardice, court-martialed, or even executed.
- Experimental therapy: Hypnosis, electric shock, and rudimentary occupational therapy were tried, often with limited success.
For civilians, shell shock was invisible. Returning soldiers could appear “fine” yet carry profound trauma. Some ended up on the streets, homeless or misunderstood, their suffering invisible except to those who knew what to look for.
The Evolution of the Term
By WWII, “shell shock” became “combat fatigue” or “battle fatigue”.
Later, it evolved into Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) — a clinical term that names the condition but lacks the emotional punch of “shell shock.”
That shift matters. Words carry weight. “Shell shock” evokes trembling men, explosions, and raw human suffering. “PTSD” feels clinical, abstract, and sometimes sanitized.
Lessons for Today
Fast forward to now: the fentanyl crisis is creating a new wave of invisible injuries.
As Larry Campbell, former Vancouver mayor and senator, recently stated, he is seeing brain damage from fentanyl that he hadn’t seen before. These are people who survive repeated overdoses but may suffer cognitive impairment, memory loss, and executive dysfunction — injuries that are often invisible to those around them.
Much like shell-shocked veterans, these individuals face:
- Misunderstanding from society
- Insufficient or inappropriate care
- Homelessness or unstable housing
- Repeated cycles of emergency response instead of long-term support
The parallels are stark. Both then and now, society struggles to recognize and respond to invisible trauma, preferring quick fixes or punitive measures over sustained care.
The Cost of Ignoring Trauma
For WWI soldiers, the cost was human dignity, stable lives, and sometimes life itself.
For today’s population impacted by fentanyl, the cost is massive — hundreds of thousands of dollars per person in emergency services, hospitalizations, and policing, without addressing the root cause.
We’ve been here before. We know what happens when invisible trauma is ignored.
What We Can Learn
- Invisible injuries are real and life-altering.
- Language matters: the words we use shape understanding and empathy.
- Society must evolve from reactive responses to proactive care, whether for veterans or those harmed by drugs.
History should teach us that ignoring trauma is costly in every sense — emotionally, socially, and financially. The question remains: will we act before more lives are lost to misunderstanding and neglect?
💡 Reflection: Next time you see someone struggling — whether a veteran or a person affected by addiction — remember: not all injuries are visible, and care costs less than repeated crises.