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Preventive Treatment for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder

Researchers identify pretrauma predictors and preventive coping skills for participants at risk for developing PTSD.


 

Identifying people who might be at risk for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) before the trauma—and teaching them preventive coping skills—could reduce or prevent long-term effects, according to University of Oxford in Oxford, United Kingdom, and King’s College London, United Kingdom, researchers.

They assessed 453 newly recruited paramedics every 4 months for 2 years. Of those, 386 paramedics participated in follow-up interviews.

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Over the 2 years, 32 participants (8.3%) had an episode of PTSD, and 41 participants had (10.6%) an episode of major depression (MD). Most of the episodes were moderate and short lived. In most cases, the participant had recovered by the next 4-month assessment. However, at 2 years, those who had experienced episodes of PTSD or MD during the follow-up period reported more days off work, poorer sleep, poorer quality of life, and greater burn out as well as weight gain (mean gain, 6.9 kg) for those with PTSD.

Ten participants who developed PTSD received treatment during follow-up, as did 12 participants who developed MD. Five of 9 participants who had recurrent PTSD or MD received treatment during the follow-up period but did not recover.

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The researchers tested a number of possible pretrauma predictors of PTSD and MD. They correlated several: cognitive style (eg, suppression, rumination, intentional numbing), coping style (eg, avoidant styles, such as wishful thinking), and psychological traits (eg, neuroticism). However, they found rumination about memories of stressful events uniquely predicted an episode of PTSD. Perceived resilience uniquely predicted an episode of MD.

Interestingly, about 42% of the study participants had a psychiatric history before training—more than the general population. That might be a factor that draws them to emergency work, the researchers suggest.

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Some predictors, such as psychiatric history, are fixed, the researchers note. But others, such as cognitive styles, can be modified or taught. Studies have shown that rumination can be redirected through training in concrete thinking, for instance, and psychoeducation and cognitive behavioral techniques (eg, modifying interpretations of stressful events) have been used to strengthen resilience. The predictors they identified in their study could serve as targets, the researchers suggest, for modifying future resilience programs.

Source:
Wild J, Smith KV, Thompson E, Béar F, Lommen MJ, Ehlers A. Psychol Med . 2016;46(12):2571-2582. doi: 10.1017/S0033291716000532.

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