Soldiers go to war to fight for our country, and the majority of the soldiers operate in several tours fighting in wars and facing unimaginable sights. When soldiers come back from the wars and began to live at home again they struggle to be normal again. They develop a disorder that makes them violent. Their personalities completely change, and they begin to fear loud noises. The soldiers become obsessed with protecting their possessions. These are all symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, or PTSD. While soldiers are the main group of citizens who acquire Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, the development of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder is not limited to only soldiers and veterans. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder can be brought on by any traumatic situation, such as a car accident or a sexual assault. Post traumatic stress disorder patients get Post Traumatic Stress Disorder from a traumatic incident that has occurred at some point in their life; many Post Traumatic Stress Disorder patients use experimental drugs to help relieve the symptoms of their disorder, but others struggle to get medical care at all because their situation was not traumatic enough.