Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (CBT)

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Early treatment of Post-traumatic stress disorder was often ineffective. Treatment for PTSD during WWI was a few days of rest, before being shipped back into a war zone. For the worst cases of PTSD, clients received electroconvulsive therapy, hydrotherapy and hypnosis (Friedman, 2015). During WWII, individuals with PTSD were treated using PIE. PIE was used in hopes of returning soldiers to battle as quickly as possible. The 1980s saw the most growth in the recognition and treatment of PTSD (Friedman, 2015). This is because returning soldiers from the Vietnam War provided new information for clinicians to learn about and treat PTSD. Around this time, CBT was becoming increasingly popular making it an easy choice to use on PTSD clients. Major …show more content…

One way CBT can be used to benefit a client is in altering negative thinking patterns. Pain management is also another advantage of CBT. This form of CBT could be useful for returning soldiers because many suffer from chronic pain. CBT can be used for Pain Management by implementing the fear-avoidance model of CBT (Cheng & Flamenbaum, 2016). This model of CBT looks to reduce anxiety, and work with clients to confront their pain. By confronting their pain and working through it, a client can lower their anxiety by reducing the fear associated to the chronic pain. By reducing this fear the chronic pain also diminishes in …show more content…

Researchers tend to lump wars together, such as considering Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom the same conflict, some researchers go even farther than this and consider all veterans the same without considering the importance of what war they served in, by considering Vietnam War veterans as the same as veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Research is also lacking in terms of experiments. There is little research available that follows a group of individuals who are receiving the same type of CBT that notes individual progress and effectiveness of treatment. Researchers also consider each branch of the military as the same. This is a mistake because each branch is faced with different training, and military

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