Psychosocial Rehabilitation After Moral Injury and Loss With Adaptive Disclosure
Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, Moral Injury, Traumatic Loss
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Post-traumatic Stress Disorder focused on measuring Moral Injury, Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, Traumatic Loss, Adaptive Disclosure, Veterans
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- deployed to the Afghanistan and/or Iraq Wars
- meet the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for PTSD
Exclusion Criteria:
- bipolar or psychotic disorders
- current drug or alcohol dependence (other than caffeine or tobacco dependence)
- evidence of traumatic brain injury severe enough to influence the ability to understand and respond to study procedures
- suicidal or homicidal ideation severe enough to warrant immediate attention
concurrent enrollment in any cognitive-behavioral treatment or any other treatment that involves systematic disclosure of troubling deployment-related memories
- participants may continue current pharmacological treatment if stable on medication for at least 6 weeks, marital counseling, or any supportive therapy6.
- Lack of or inconsistent access to a useable phone
Sites / Locations
- VA San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, CA
- San Francisco VA Medical Center, San Francisco, CA
- VA Boston Healthcare System Jamaica Plain Campus, Jamaica Plain, MA
- Minneapolis VA Health Care System, Minneapolis, MN
- Central Texas Veterans Health Care System Waco VA Medical Center, Waco, TX
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Active Comparator
Adaptive Disclosure for Moral Injury and Loss
Present Centered Therapy
Ad-MIL is a 12-session treatment designed to address shame and guilt and to develop compassion for the self and the other. At the outset of AD-MIL, the investigators ask Veterans to enlist a family member or friend to provide support and to reinforce their plan for adaptive, purposeful functioning moving forward. The sessions that follow homework assignments involve a discussion to reinforce positive steps taken and identifying obstacles to completion (e.g., self-defeating beliefs). There is a special emphasis on discussing self-handicapping, namely feeling unworthy of getting better or living a good life. The goal is not only for Veterans to develop a sense of mastery in accomplishing tasks and to experience the benefits of the activities, but also to work on overcoming feelings of unworthiness.
PCT is a manualized evidenced-based PTSD treatment used in several large-scale PTSD trials. It incorporates the essential therapeutic elements common to different types of psychotherapies, including supportive empathic listening and unconditional positive regard. The therapist plays an active role, but does not impart any systematic training. The focus is to create an understanding of how the symptoms of PTSD are related to day-to-day difficulties and to help patients develop new, more adaptive responses to these stressors with a problem-focused and problem-solving approach. In prior trials, PCT showed equivalent change to active therapies at the last follow-up. The VA offers PCT as an evidence-based therapy for PTSD.