BraveMind: Advancing the Virtual Iraq/Afghanistan PTSD Exposure Therapy
TraumaPost-Traumatic Stress DisorderThe proposed study is designed to test the clinical efficacy of the BRAVEMIND military sexual trauma (MST) system in an initial feasibility and wait list clinical trial of 45 users. The following hypotheses will be tested: Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy (VRET) will be safely deliverable to persons with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) due to MST as evidenced by treatment dropout rates that are similar to existing Prolonged Exposure (PE) therapy delivered in military samples (20-40%) and by the absence of any critical incidents. Participants in the VRET group will show statistically and clinically meaningful reductions in PTSD and depression (PTSD Checklist-Military (PCL-M), Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS), and Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) scores and psychophysiological measures) following treatment. Participants in the VRET group will show statistically and clinically meaningful reductions in PTSD and depression (PCL-M, CAPS, PHQ-9 scores and psychophysiological measures) compared to wait-list results.
Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Pilot Study
Stress DisordersPost-Traumatic1 morePTSD is a common consequence of war, for soldiers and civilians. PTSD results in hyperarousal, avoidance, numbing, and re-experiencing, causing persistent decreased quality of life. Mindfulness involves the ability to bring attention to the present moment without judgment; this ability is correlated with measures of mental health. Within health care, mindfulness is taught as an 8-week course called Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR). MBSR is unstudied for PTSD. We propose to assess the feasibility of MBSR as an intervention for PTSD, since it may affect hypervigilance, avoidance, and reactivity associated with this disorder. Specific Aims: Aim 1: Assess the feasibility of recruiting and retaining a sample of veterans with PTSD to complete a study protocol that involves randomization to usual care or usual care plus MBSR. Aim 2: Apply measures of PTSD symptom severity, depression and quality of life before and after randomization, to assess whether there is evidence of benefit and whether MBSR warrants further study for PTSD, and allow calculation of standardized effect sizes. Aim 3: Apply a validated measure of mindfulness before and after treatment. Aim 4: Explore the relationship between PTSD symptoms, mindfulness score, and frequency of meditation practice.
Treating People With Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder With Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia...
Post-Traumatic Stress DisorderThis study will test the effectiveness of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia in treating sleep disturbances in people with post-traumatic stress disorder.
Efficacy of Cognitive Restructuring and Imagery Modification to Reduce the Feeling of Being Contaminated...
Sexual AbusePosttraumatic Stress DisorderThe purpose of this study is to determine whether a short term programme with internet research on the frequency of skin exchange and guided imagery modification is effective in the treatment of the feeling of being contaminated in female victims of childhood sexual abuse (CSA).
Comparison of Couple-Based PTSD Treatment and Couple-Based PTSD Education
Stress DisordersPost-TraumaticThe study is designed to evaluate the efficacy of a novel couple-based treatment for PTSD, called Structured Approach Therapy, to decrease PTSD and improve the marital and social functioning of Iraqi war Veterans and their partners. The effectiveness of couples therapy will be compared with the effectiveness of a couple-based educational intervention.
The Outcome of Treatment of Traumatised Refugees With Psychotherapy and/or Antidepressants
Post-Traumatic Stress DisorderThe purpose of the study is to investigate the effect of treatment of traumatized refugees with a diagnosis of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). The existing evidence point towards antidepressants of the type SSRI and trauma-focused cognitive Behavioural Therapy being the most effective treatments of PTSD, but very little evidence of treatment effects exist for the group of multitraumatized refugees. This study therefore seeks to investigate the treatment effect of 6 months drug therapy with antidepressants (Sertraline and/ or Mianserine) and/or trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy. A total of 200 individual will undergo treatment. They will be randomized to 4 different groups: antidepressants, psychotherapy, a combination og drug and psychotherapy and a waiting list. Outcome measures include symptoms, life quality and function. Patients with a diagnosis of drug abuse or psychosis will not be included. The hypothesis is that a combination of antidepressants and psychotherapy will be more effective than either of the two treatment regimes on their own.
Placebo Controled Clinical Trial Using Topiramate To Treat Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)...
Posttraumatic Stress DisorderThe study is 12-week randomized placebo controlled trial compared to topiramate to treat patients with posttraumatic stress disorder, according to DSM-IV criteria. Patients will receive topiramate or placebo, the dose will start with 25 mg/day and every week 25mg will be increment according to patients tolerance to side effects. Patients will be evaluated by blind raters using Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS), Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) , Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI), 36-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36), Social Adjustment Scale (SAS). the outcomes will be improvement on Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), Depression, Anxiety, quality of life and social adjustment scale according to scales above.
BRL29060A (Paroxetine Hydrochloride Hydrate) in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Post-Traumatic Stress DisorderThis was a 52-week, non-comparative, uncontrolled study of paroxetine in Japanese PTSD patients to obtain clinical experience regarding efficacy and safety. In this study, subjects received paroxetine 20mg-40mg once daily after an evening meal.
KIDNET vs Meditation/Relaxation - a Dissemination Randomized Controlled Trial for the Treatment...
Post-Traumatic Stress DisordersThe purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy of KIDNET versus a Meditation/Relaxation protocol in treating traumatized children when applied by locally trained teacher counsellors as well as the effectiveness and adequacy of such a treatment in a south-asian war affected stayee child community.
Improving Effectiveness: Treatment Outcome Research
Posttraumatic Stress DisorderThis proposal seeks to increase the effectiveness of an existing treatment strategy, cognitive processing therapy (CPT), for the remediation of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder among crime victims by varying the duration and content of the intervention in accordance with participants' needs. A secondary goal is to identify predictors of duration of treatment necessary to achieve good end state functioning, including individual and trauma variables, cognitive and emotional variables, and Axis II pathology. Finally, by including a sample of male participants, the generalizability of CPT will be tested. It is anticipated that these modifications will speed the dissemination of CPT to community practice thus benefiting more trauma victims. Fifty subjects will be randomly assigned to either the modified CPT condition or to a symptom-monitoring, minimal attention condition designed to control for the effects of the daily monitoring and the passage of time. Utilizing a semicrossover design, the control condition will be crossed over to the active treatment, allowing for a replication within the study. The entire treated sample (N = 50) will be compared to a sample (N = 50) receiving strict 12-session protocol-driven CPT through the course of a recent study conducted at the same site using the same primary outcome measures. Conducting the proposed study will have important implications on advancing the ecological validity and effectiveness of applied research on PTSD.