Title: OEI:%20Observed%20
1OEIObserved Experiential Integrationfor
Trauma A New Trauma TherapyRick Bradshaw,
PhD, RPsychTrinity Western Universityrickphyl_at_te
lus.net Laurie Detwiler, M.A., C.C.C.Kwantlen
Polytechnic University(laurie.detwiler_at_kwantlen.c
a)
CCPA Annual Conference Ottawa, ON May 18, 2011
2Polyvagal Theory Co-Activation of Sympathetic
Parasympathetic
- Stephen Porges (2001, 2007) Polyvagal Theory
- Social Connection Ventral Vagal Complex (VVC)
Brake On - Fight or Flight Sympathetic Nervous System
VVC Brake Off - Freeze Dorsal Vagal Complex
- OEI Neuro-Activation Micro-Attunement
together - Mirror Neurons, Embodied Simulation, Intentional
Attunement - OEI Switching for Titration, Glitch Massaging,
Transference - Extraocular muscles, Intraocular muscles, and
Proprioception - OEI Switching for Artifacts, Release Points,
Sweeping - Feigned Death (Freeze) responses Chest, Airway,
Stomach
3Observed Experiential Integration (OEI) What
is it?
- SWITCH Alternately covering uncovering the
eyes - SWEEP Covering one eye, guiding other eye
across - TRACK Guiding one or both eyes, watching for
glitches - GLITCH MASSAGE Guiding eye(s) over/out of
glitches - GLITCH HOLD Bilaterally stimulating, holding in
glitches - RELEASE POINTS Places to guide eyes for release
of - Hyperventilation temporary cessation of
breathing - Chest compression throat constriction (LR
Abducens) - Nausea, queasiness, abdominal cramping (SO
Trochlear) - Jaw tension and tooth grinding
4OEI What is it used for?
- Rapid de-escalation of affective somatic
intensity - Assessment treatment of negative transference
- Avoidance of, and relief from, panic attacks
- Overcoming addictions, including self-harm
- Dissolving barriers to performance
5The Self-Trauma Model Briere
- Flashbacks constitute natural attempts of the
human brain to desensitize traumatic material,
but - In those with severe, prolonged childhood trauma
there is often a developed capacity to dissociate
when overwhelmed (Lanius) - This leads to cycles of abreaction and
dissociation (PTSD, CPTSD, DDs)
6OEI the Abreaction-Dissociation Cycle
Therapeutic Window
Staying within the
7Once upon a time.
- Two psychotherapists in Vancouver Canada
- (Audrey Cook Rick Bradshaw)
- Working with abuse, neglect and other trauma
- Finding talk therapies ineffective for PTSD,
Complex PTSD, and Dissociative Disorders - likely because
- Psychological trauma affects different areas of
the brain than speaking and listening.
81994 95 Audrey Cook found that
- EMDR wasnt working with some CPTSD/DD clients
- Those with lazy eyes couldnt track their
therapists fingers with both eyes at the same
time - Some clients were too dissociated disconnected
- Some clients were overwhelmed by intense
abreactions - Thought I wonder if it would work one eye at a
time - Led to OEI Switching (alt covering
eyes) - SWITCHING VIDEO DEMO
9OEI and EMDR Differences
EMDR Doesnt address negative transference between therapist patient OEI Includes transference checks clearances for individuals groups
No acknowledgement of tiny halts or hesitations in eye movements Involves identification and resolution of tiny halts or hesitations-eye movement
No recognition of side effects of trauma processing on additional aspects of the past Techniques for resolving artifacts like headaches, dizziness/drowsiness, and visual distortions
10OEI and EMDR Differences
EMDR Mechanism eye saccades and rhythmic sounds or taps (PGO region of the brain) OEI Mechanism different than eye saccades and rhythmic sounds / taps Can involve simple covering of eyes
Cognitions are essential in protocol Negative Cognition, Positive Cognition, SUDS, VoC Cognitions not in protocol. Numbers optional rather than required. Observe Intensity Conflict Markers
11OEI and EMDR Differences
EMDR Requires use of both eyes simultaneously OEI One eye at a time or two eyes
Vision not required. Can use sound or touch to stimulate the brain mechanism Requires vision to sense light track movement across both visual fields
Does not acknowledge or address nausea, hyperventilation cessation of breathing, chest tightening, or jaw clamping Includes release points for nausea, hyperventilation cessation of breathing, chest tightening, and jaw clamping
12OEI and EMDR Similarities
Can be performed using both eyes. Procedures in both therapies involve the tracking of a moving object (therapist finger, wand, etc.)
Involves focusing on trauma in multi-sensory fashion to expose individual to the intensity of past experiences
Involves arousal of fight-or-flight response and/or freeze response via midbrain forebrain.
13Speech Area Speech Production
14Listening Area Understanding Speech
15Limbic Paralimbic Structures
- The parts of the brain most involved in producing
intense symptoms, like - Panic, flashbacks, startle response, nausea, and
throat or chest constriction - Are not directly affected by talking or listening
16Limbic System Midbrain
17Anterior Cingulate Gyrus
18Eye Brain Connections
- Both eyes have connections to both halves of the
brain - Half of each visual field in each eye is
associated with half of the brain, and the other
half of each visual field is associated with the
other side of the brain. Integration can occur
with one eye at a time or both eyes
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20OEI Techniques Applications
- An Overview of OEI Procedures
- with
- Treatment Targets
- by
- Dr. Rick Bradshaw
215 Building Blocks of OEI
Level I Techniques
Level II Techniques
22OBSERVATIONS DISCOVERIES 1
- Core Trauma Symptoms
- Encountered during processing of traumatic
material - In the center or core of the body. Symptoms
include - Hyperventilation
- temporary cessation of breathing
- chest compression
- throat constriction
- nausea
- OEI switching reduce glitch work dissipates
intensity - Intensity, type of emotion, location of body
sensation usually differs, depending on which
eye is covered
23Core Trauma vs Artifacts
p. 30
24OBSERVATIONS DISCOVERIES 2
- Dissociative Artifacts
- In response to intensity of trauma processing
- Outside (peripheral to) the core of the body
- Symptoms include
- visual blurring occlusions
- headaches pressures
- tingling numbness (hands, face, feet)
- Dizziness, lightheadedness, loss of balance
- drowsiness
- Usually dissipated quickly with switching
sweeping - Balance boards to assess minimize dissociation
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26OBSERVATIONS DISCOVERIES 3
- Shock Can you believe it.?
- Incongruence Severity of incident not
accompanied by expected emotional physical
intensity markers - Process seems blocked by shock
- Switching and asking the questions
- Can you believe __(name)__ did that to you?
- Can you believe ___(name)___ was killed?
- Can you believe you cant believe it?
- Can you believe any man would do that to
anyone? - Shifts clients out of disconnected states
- Not unusual for clients to be connected to the
reality of an event with one eye open but not
with the other open
27OBSERVATIONS DISCOVERIES 5
- Eye Dom. Affective/Somatic Differences
- Dominance check The Dominance Factor (Carla
Hannaford) - Majority of clients more fear anxiety w
dominant eye - sadness
despair w non-dominant - If much early onset abandonment/abuse, less
predictable - Often sad
mad or sad afraid - Difficulty holding gaze shame or fear of
disapproval
28OBSERVATIONS DISCOVERIES 4
- Transference Checking Clearing
- During switching for core trauma symptoms and
dissociative artifacts, clients disclose
differences in perceptions of therapists,
depending on which eye is covered, including
differences in - Perceived proximity of person (close, distant)
- Color (green or gray to red or yellow)
- Perceived age or facial expression (angry,
caring) - Perceived proportions of head body
- Perceived attitude or mood of therapist
- Switching dissolves these perceptual distortions
- Sometimes add glitch work for resistant
distortions - Extended to
- Mirror work - body/facial dysmorphic disorder
- Body image perceptions eating disorders
- Families groups (couples/parenting/attachment)
- Substitutions (photos, videos, symbols objects)
29OBSERVATIONS DISCOVERIES 6
- Release Points
- Glitches most intense place in most intense eye
- Release least intense place in least intense
eye - Respiratory system cover Dom eye, lowest rib, ND
side - Gastrointestinal cover Dom eye, lowest rib, Dom
side - Jaw Tension alt cover eyes, level of lips, 180º
to 90º - VIDEO OF RELEASE POINTS
P. 27
30Release Points
P. 27
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32Key External Events 1
- 1999 Audrey has discovered use of both objective
and - subjective applications for glitch
resolution - EMDR International Association
Conference, Las - Vegas First Clinician Manual, First
Video - Audrey demonstrating subjective glitch
track hold - w bilateral audio stimulation in Las
Vegas (video) - 2002 2nd ed. of OEI Clinician Manual His,
Los, I/O, H/V/D - 2003 OEI Training DVD, first OEI RCT (delayed C)
33Key External Events 2
- 2004 Combine OEI with body therapies
(massage) - Start arc patterns to reduce lens
refocusing - 2005-6 Comparative experimental RCT (18-mo RCT)
- Titrate with therapist body face,
postures - 2007-8 20 conference papers, OEI Client
Handbook - Glitch massage proximal-distal
movements
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36New Applications Combinations
- Process chemical addictions, eating disorders
(urges) - Inner voices, self-loathing, and self-harming
behaviours - Peak performance (focus on goals, target
interferences) - Dissociative disorders attachment difficulties
(states) - Somatic symptoms (fibromyalgia, MS, PNES, chronic
pain) - Combined w language acquisition accent
reduction - Combined w systematic desensitization
psychodrama
37Cross-cultural applications
- Indonesia
- GAM vs Military conflict Tsunami expatriates vs
locals - Massage your brain using your eyes to lift your
heavy heart - Gender differences (vulnerable vs guarded
emotions) - Korea
- Expert professionals fix problems
- Somatic symptoms less loss of face
- Medical procedures to treat symptoms
- 1st Nations
- Family members community share
- Attending to quality of relationships
- Healing broken attachments (RHAP)
38Glitch Tracking Massaging
- Saw note (EMDR listserve) skips/halts in eye
movement -
- Resolution of intensity dissociation with
massage - Patterns were associated with different
targets/events - Glitches seem to clear after massaging stuck
points - Thought I wonder if continued work will bring
healing? Led to OEI Tracking Glitch
Work/Massage - TRACKING GLITCH MASSAGE VIDEO DEMO
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41The Future of OEI - Part I
- Unique Contributions of OEI
- Easily quickly integrated with other therapies
- Reduces interference with cognition speech (top
down) - Psychological Emergency Room procedures
- Self-help procedures facilitate affect regulation
- Increases midbrain-to-prefrontal integration
(bottom up) - Reduces addictive self-harming urges
42Complex PTSD Symptoms OEI(CPTSD was defined by
Herman, elaborated by Curtois)
- There are OEI techniques that address these
- Affect Dysregulation
- Dissociation/Numbing
- Negative Self-Perceptions
- Internalized Perpetrator Beliefs
- Difficulties in Relationships with Others
- Somatic Symptoms Abuse-Specific, Other
- Despair Shattered Assumptions of Hope
See one-page handout for details
43Observed Experiential
- Observed
- Therapist watches for glitches while tracking
- Therapist watches for conflict intensity
markers - Therapist watches for visual splitting/dilation
- Experienced Client cues therapist during
tracking (Track-to-Target) - Client notices reports all artifacts
- Client notices reports level of intensity
44Integration
- Equalization intensity, colour, light, body
tension - Combination emotions (mad sad) blend or
dissolve - Joining alters (infant, child, teen, adult)
merge - Sensory double vision clears, pains resolve
- Dissolution visual distortions clear
- Resolution objects that were invisible
materialize
45First Study of OEI with PTSD
- Mixed Traumas (witnessing suicides, MVAs,
assaults, accidental deaths) and mixed gender - Random Assignment to OEI or delayed treatment
control group, only switching - Script-driven symptom provocation, C 2 Exp
- CAPS and IES-R
46Treatment vs Control CAPS
Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS) scores
from Time 1 to Time 2 for control group (n 5)
and treatment group (n 5). The dashed
horizontal line reflects a threshold for
clinically significant levels of PTSD symptoms
(Orr, 1997).
47IES-R Avoidance/Numbing
Impact of Event Scale-Revised (IES-R) Avoidance
Numbing subscale scores, Time 1 to Time 2 for
control group (N 5) and treatment group (N 5).
48Presentation by Laurie Detwiler, Faculty
Member,
49The Place of Trauma Therapy in the Process of
Recovery from PTSD
- CCPA Annual Conference
- May 18, 2011
50Research Questions
- What critical incident helped or hindered your
process of recovery from PTSD? - What event or experience helped or hindered your
process of recovery from PTSD? -
- Follow up questions fit well with the method.
51 Validity Reliability
- Careful definition of the purpose of the research
- Qualified observers
- Final follow up
- Independent judge sorted 25 incidents into
helping and hindering categories - Interpreter reliability 92 inter-rater
agreement between judge and primary rater
52Interpret and Report
- 8 people, 6 women and 2 men, aged 28 to 54 yrs
(average 45 yrs) - 6 Caucasian, 2 Caucasian First Nations
- Diagnosed with PTSD in 2003 during a trauma
therapy study - Traumatic incidents ranged from sexual assault,
emotional abuse, witnessing a death and car
accidents - Range of events time since traumatic event
-
53Categorical Descriptions(helping)
- Awareness of Recovery Coming From Involvement in
Trauma Therapy Study - Resources, including Spirituality,
Marital/Family, Financial, Physical - Coping Strategies
- Developing New Positive Relationship With Self
54Categorical Descriptions(helping)
- Growth From Trauma
- Understanding Your Own Life Experience
- The Importance of Being Listened to, Cared For,
Validated and Accepted For Who You Are by a
Professional Helper - Making Personal Choices to Lead a Healthy Life
55Categorical Descriptions(helping)
- Unexpected Positive Circumstances
- Knowing That You Are Not Alone
- Talking Today Was Impactful
- Forgiveness
56Categorical Descriptions(hindering)
- Limitations in Resources
- ICBC Is An Unhelpful System
- When Boundaries Fall
- Difficulty Coping
57Categorical Descriptions(hindering)
- Fear Magnification
- The Physical Pain Cycle
- Harmful Healers
- Being In Situations Similar to the Original
Trauma
58Categorical Descriptions(hindering)
- Unexpected Negative Circumstances
- Can Not Forgive Self
- Sexual Difficulties
59Follow Up Themes
- Recovery is a process which includes more than
therapy, and all categories are important - However, OEI was very important in recovery for
all 8 (two said 10/10, average score 8/10) - Lack of Social Support as a theme was big, in
particular Brewins (2003) Other as Betraying - Also Other as Abandoning Brewin (2003)
60Latest Sexual Assault PTSD Study
- Comparative Experimental Treatment Outcome
- 1 year to recruit 137 women, screened to 33, 18
Months from Start to Finish, Participants - Quantitative, Qualitative Psychophysiological
Measures in cross-over design
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62Research Design I
- Selected Trauma of Interest 20 of women
sexually assaulted in lifetimes and almost 50 of
those develop PTSD - Script-Driven Symptom Provocation 50-second
audiotape of most intense portion of trauma
played on 4 occasions TMI-PS - Cross-Over Design CPT-R in phase I gets OEI in
phase II, OEI in phase I to CPT-R
63Research Design II
- Controls Random (Wave) Assignment to Groups and
Therapists within Groups - Assessors Blind to Group Assignments
- All Participants Receive Control Condition
(B.R.A.I.N.) and Active Therapy Participants
Receive 3 sessions of OEI or CPT plus 4 hours of
Psychoed (sessions groups videotaped) - Credibility Checks for all Interventions (COTQ)
- Manualized Treatments
64Results - CAPS
Time F(2,21) 49.62, p .04, ?2
.83 TimeGroup F(4,42) 2.96, p .03, ?2
.22 Group F(2,22) 1.32, p . .29, ?2 .11
65Results IES-R Numb/Avoid
? Control Group ? Cognitive
Processing Therapy
One Eye Integration
66Qualitative Interview Findings
- Randomly selected cases from OEI CPTSD groups,
interviewed at 3-month follow up - OEI More profound reduction of PTSD symptoms
- CPT-R Improved coping self-referencing
beliefs - When participants interviewed after cross-over
- Majority of participants ( 75) chose OEI as
most beneficial of the two therapies after
having both - Therapy preference Interesting trend by
MBTI-Thinkers to prefer CPT-R (makes sense,
logical)
67Limitations
- Small N significant screening process
- Females, mainly Caucasian, sexual assault
- Manualization may have affected bond OEI
- Script-driven symptom provocation 1 trauma
- Small treatment doses (3 hrs. individual plus 4
hours group per therapy, along with exposure
psychoeducation components) - Extended periods with no active treatment (3
months 3 months), additional traumas
68The Future of OEI - Part II (You)
- Diffusion of Innovation Theory
- Diffusion of Innovations 5th ed. (Rogers, 2003)
- Lovejoy, Demireva, Grayson, McNamara (2009)
- Relative Advantage better job performance s
- Compatibility congruence with existing frames
- Complexity difficulty in learning, comprehending
- Trialability pilot testability on small scale
- Observability visibility of positive outcomes
69Acknowledgements
Fahs-Beck Foundation for Experimental Research
New York Community Trust
Dr. Marvin McDonald, Dr. Paul Swingle, Dr. Jose
Domene, Kristelle Heinrichs, Dave Grice, Marie
Amos, Karen Williams, Kiloko Ndunda, Jessica
Houghton, Jake Khym, Becky Stewart, Jen McInnes,
Darlene Allard, Tanya Bedford, Heather Bowden,
Gillian Drader, Brenda DeVries, Danielle
Duplassie, Sandra Dykstra, Ida Fan, Esther
Graham, Maren Heldberg, Nadia Larsen, Michael
Mariano, Beverly Ogden, Steivan Pinoesch, Mandana
Sharifi, Nidhi Sharma, Chris Tse, Dana
Vanderwiel, Dawne Visbeek, Melissa Warren, Linda
Gibson, Andrea Busby, Melissa Ducklow, Kwantlen
nurses, TWU UG Psych students.