Title: The Role of Trauma
1The Role of Trauma
- Trauma is related to early abuse and/or neglect,
is in the histories of public mental health
individuals who frequently are self-harming, high
users of costly services and who carry multiple
diagnosis-BPD,DID, or PTSD.
2General Population
- 10 of women and 5 of men are likely to suffer
PTSD - 33.3 will have symptoms lasting several months
- Those most vulnerable - inadequate social
support, survivors of child hood sexual abuse
3Public Mental Health Consumers
- 98 of 275 consumers had exposure to severely
traumatic events - 43 suffered from PTSD
- Chart review 2 had diagnosis on chart
- Another study - 34 admitted to psychiatric state
hospital had PTSD - secondary to CSA
4The Internal Classification of Diseases
(IDC-10) Has described a diagnosis - Enduring
personality changes after catastrophic stress
5Substance Abuse and Trauma
- PTSD 5 times likelihood of alcohol abuse
dependence - PTSD and veterans - 75 met criteria for alcohol
abuse - 60 women 20 men in alcohol recovery programs
sexual abuse as child - 80 reporting physical abuse as children - in
above recovery program
6Effects on Dual Diagnosis When Disclosed
- Positive
- Increased trust
- Increased understanding D/A effects
- Differentiate D/A, MI abuse
- Devise treatment plan
- Negative
- Increase D/A
- Increase MI symptoms
- Avoid deal D/A or MI
7Effects on Dual Diagnosis Treatment When Not
Disclosed
- Significant factor in substance use remains
undisclosed - Potential destabilizing factor when kept a secret
- Secret interferes with treatment
- Secret maintains a lower level of trust
- Treatable condition remains untreated
8Sexual Abuse invisibleWhy is there so little
treatment?
- Professionals do not recognize the abuse
- Symptoms vary greatly
- Symptoms surface years after abuse
- Abuse is rarely volunteered
- Pervasive avoidance and denial
- Misdiagnose
- Mid 70s not seen as a problem
9Core Beliefs
- The shame and despair that come from the
- powerlessness and unmanageability help
crystallize the - core beliefs about personal unworthiness that
were part - of the persons initial addictive system
- I am basically a bad, unworthy person
- No none would love me as I am
- My needs are never going to be met if I have to
depend on others - Sex is my most important need
- (Adapted from Carnes, 1989)
10The Addictive Cycle
- Preoccupation
- Ritualization
- Acting out
- Despair
- Shame blame cycle
- Unmanageability
11Multiple Addictions
- Sex addiction is seldom isolated
- More than 83 report multiple addictions
- Chemical dependency (42)
- Eating disorders (38)
- Compulsive working (28)
- Compulsive spending (26)
- Compulsive gambling (5)
- Studies of alcoholism treatment find sexual
compulsion in clients, ranging from 42 to 73. - (NCSAC webpage, 2000)
12Complex Post-TraumaticStress Disorder
- A history of subjection to totalitarian control
over a prolonged period (months to years) - Alterations in affect regulation
- Alterations in consciousness
- Alterations in self-perception
- Alterations in perception of perpetrator
- Alterations in relations with others
- Alterations in systems of meaning
- (Herman, 1992)
13High Comorbidity for PTSD
- Substance related disorders
- Mood disorders
- Other anxiety disorders
- Personality disorders
- (Adapted from Maldonado Spiegel)
14FOCUS ON TREATMENT AND ASSESSMENT
15Assessing Psychological Resilience
- Insight into oneself and others
- Supple sense of self-esteem
- Ability to learn from experience
- High tolerance for distress
- Low tolerance for outrageous behavior
- Open-mindedness
16Assessing Psychological Resilience (Cont.)
- Courage
- Personal discipline
- Creativity
- Integrity
- Keen sense of humor, constructive philosophy of
life that gives life meaning - Willingness to dream dreams that inspire and give
hope - (Adapted from Wolf Mosnaim, 1990)
17Assessment Process
- You will have to ask questions to assess
- If symptoms are resulting from abuse.
- This should not be used to dredge up
- repressed memories.
18Assessment Questions
- In the course of the day/night, do you hear
voices in or outside your head? What are they
saying? What may cause you to hear these voices? - Do you ever try not to feel your feelings or
thoughts? Do you usually feel numb? - (Graves)
19Assessment Questions (Cont.)
- Have you ever been a victim of sexual abuse?
- Have you ever observed sexual abuse?
- Have you ever been the victim of physical abuse?
- Have you ever observed physical abuse?
- (van der Kolk)
20Continue if Yes to Any of the Above
- Do you ever have day dreams or think about the
sexual or physical abuse? - Night dreams Do you have them? Are they
nightmares? If not, do you have any night
dreamsare they neutral or bad? If bad, why
arent they nightmares? - Do you think about the above abuse during the
course of a day? - If yes, how and when does it come about?
- (Graves)
21Two Basic and Very Important Questions
- How did you get here today?
- What do you do that makes you feel good about
yourself? (Something you may have accomplished.) - (van der Kolk)
22Traditional Treatment Approaches
- Psychopharmacology
- Psychodynamic psychotherapy
- Group psychotherapy
- Family therapy
23Non-traditional Approaches to Uncovering and
Processing
- Direct therapeutic exposure
- Hypnosis
- EMDR
- Psychodrama and role play
- Creative therapies such as art therapy, music
therapy and dance therapy - Spiritual and religious ceremonies
- Testimony
- (Adapted from Turner, McFarlane van der Kolk)
24Stages of Recovery from Trauma
- Importance of the healing relationship
- Creating safety
- Naming the problem
- Restoring control
- Establishing a safe environment
- Reconstructing the story
- Transforming traumatic memory
25Stages of Recovery from Trauma (Cont.)
- Mourning traumatic loss
- Learning to fight
- Reconciling with oneself
- Reconnecting with others
- Finding a survivor mission
- Resolving the trauma
- (Adapted from Herman, 1992)
26TREM Model
- Trauma, recovery, empowerment
- Women with history of
- Serious mental illness
- Substance abuse
- Trauma
- Homelessness
- (Harris, 1998)
27Four Core Assumptions of TREM
- Symptoms originated as coping response to trauma
- Women with early trauma unable to develop adult
coping skills - Trauma severs connections
- Women with repeated abuse feel powerless.
- (Harris)
28Group Model
- 10 33 sessions
- 4 stages in group program
- Empowerment
- Trauma recovery
- Advanced trauma recovery
- Closing rituals
- (Harris)
29Training for Professionals
- Develop awareness of parallel process for
therapist in group - Address secondary trauma issues for therapist
- (Harris, 1998)
30Role of Case Management and Treatment
- Most of mental health system is impacted by
individuals with abuse - Case managers are involved in every part of
persons life - Individuals childhood abuse impacts every part
of their lives - Expansion/adaptation of roles by having protocol
assessment for functioning
31Psychodrama Multiple Addictions
- Model of addiction interaction (Carnes, 1994)
- Examples of models, switching, alternating,
masking, ritualizing - Psychodrama techniques of grounding in present
explore addiction patterns - Role reversal, doubling, mirroring demonstrate
splitting of self and choice of addiction - Psychodrama can explore denial in client and
therapist to protect beliefs and myths - (Sealy, 1999)
32Psychodrama/Addiction/Trauma
- Allows the traumatized inner child to come back
from the dead and feel alive again - Unspeakable can be spoken within framework of
safety and support - Experimentation of new roles and alternative ways
of being - Role training allow recovering people to work out
issues with new behavior - (Dayton, 1994)
33Traumatic Transference
- Therapist may suffer vicarious symptoms that
replicate PTSD - Repeated exposure to stories challenges
therapists basic faith - Heightens sense of personal vulnerability
- May share clients experience of helplessness
- As defense against helplessness may assume role
of rescuer - May violate boundaries of therapy
34Traumatic Transference (Cont.)
- Identification with clients rage
- Experience feelings of profound grief
- Identification with perpetrator
- Voyeuristic excitement, fascination and sexual
arousal - Witness guilt
- Existential panic
- (Adapted from Herman, 1992)