(pic unrelated, but illustrative.)

she joined army in august, 2023, sent into gaza in early november 2023:

"I was with a paramedic and three other soldiers, and our job was to open stretchers and put wounded soldiers on them. I was in two difficult incidents with soldiers of the Nahal Brigade who had stepped on booby traps," she says.
"I remember the images of the wounded, the smells of death, the blood, the screaming. More than anything, I remember putting a soldier's body on a stretcher. That's something you don't forget."
After a month and a half of service in Gaza, at the height of ground operations, she went to officer school. "I suddenly began to have sleeping disorders and anxiety attacks," she says. "I felt very alert at nights, but I didn't make the connection to Gaza."

After the course, she was made a platoon commander. "I was there for a month and was suffering from depression," she says. "I was crying every day, but I thought these were just problems with acclimating."
She then received a mission – to head an arrest in a West Bank refugee camp. "They told me that booby traps were a possibility. I had a panic attack; I felt I couldn't breathe and that my feet, legs and arms were asleep. Only after that happened did I realize that I had to see a mental health officer."
After that meeting, she was sent to a special center set up by the army after the war started. There, she was diagnosed with PTSD. Three weeks later, she received the choice of launching discharge procedures or being transferred to a noncombat job.