Websites
David Baldwin. Articles, support and research resources, links. http://www.trauma-pages.com/
Top fifty blogs on PTSD http://www.mastersinpsychology.net/the-top-50-bloggers-shedding-light-on-ptsd
Books
For Survivors
Bass, Ellen and Davis, Laura. (2008). The courage to heal: A guide for women survivors of sexual abuse. 20th anniversary edition. HarperCollins, NY, NY. Also available in Spanish.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Preface to the First Edition – Breaking Silence –
Believing It Happened – Healing Is Possible – Understanding That It
Wasn’t Your Fault – Using the Writing Exercises – Using Guided Imagery:
Grieving – Anger – Disclosures and Truth-Telling – TAKING STOCK TAKING
CARE: Forgiveness? – Spirituality – Recognizing the Damage – Honoring
What You Did – Resolution and Moving On – THE HEALING PROCESS: Getting
in Touch with Your Feelings – An Overview – Trauma and the Brain – The
Emergency Stage – Healthy Intimacy – Reclaiming Your Sexuality –
Children and Parenting – Relating to Your Family Now – The Basics –
Introduction – Anna Stevens – RESOURCE GUIDE: Finding Help Building
Community – Resilience – Special Topics – Abuse by Clergy –
Acknowledgments
NOTE: From the publisher: “The Courage to Heal is an
inspiring, comprehensive guide that offers hope and a map of the
healing journey to every woman who was sexually abused as a child.
Weaving together personal experience with professional knowledge, the
authors provide clear explanations, practical suggestions, and support
throughout the healing process. New material includes: contemporary
research on trauma and the brain; an overview of healing tools such as
imagery, meditation, and body-centered practices; additional stories
that reflect an even greater diversity of survivor experiences; the
reassuring accounts of survivors who have been healing for more than
twenty years; the most comprehensive, up-to-date resource guide in the
field; and insights from the authors’ decades of experience. Cherished
by survivors, and recommended by therapists and institutions everywhere,
The Courage to Heal has often been called the bible of healing from
child sexual abuse.” Includes some information on ritual abuse.
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Davis, Laura. (1990) The courage to heal workbook: for women and men survivors of child sexual abuse. Harper Collins, NY, NY.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Introduction – About the Exercises in This Book
– Survival Skills for Healing – Building Your Support System – Dealing
With Crisis – Nurturing Yourself – Marking The Way – Where Did I Come
From? How Did It Change My Life? How Did I Survive? Aspects of Healing
– Resolution And Moving on – Remembering – Believing It Happened –
Breaking Silence – Understanding That It Wasn’t Your Fault – Learning to
Trust Yourself – Grieving And Mourning – Anger – Confrontations
– Dealing With Your Family Now – Guidelines For Healing Sexually
– Resources
NOTE: From the publisher: “A combination of checklists,
writing and art projects, and open-ended questions and activities
expertly guides the survivor through the healing process. Survival
Skills — Teaches survivors to create a safe, supportive environment,
ask for help, deal with crisis periods, and choose therapy. Aspects Of
Healing — Focuses on the healing process: gaining a capacity for hope,
breaking silence, letting go of shame, turning anger into action,
planning a confrontation, preparing for family contact, and affirming
personal progress. Guidelines For Healing Sexually — Redefines the
concept of “safe sex” and establishes healthy ground rules for sexual
contact.” Carefully thought out cognitive and creative exercises to
accompany The Courage to heal. Respectful and empathetic throughout.
Davis says in “About These Exercises”, “There may be moments when you
feel inadequate, confused or unable to proceed…. That means there is a
flaw in the design of the book, not in you.”
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Handy, Marla. (2010) No comfort zone: Notes on living with PTSD. Mocassa Press, Madison, WI.
NOTE: Half a memoir, half a self-help book. The author experienced severe childhood abuse resulting in complex PTSD.
Matsakis, Aphrodite. (1996) I can’t get over it: A handbook for trauma survivors. New Harbinger Pub, Oakland, CA.
NOTE: From a reader’s review: “A tremendously useful book – I recommend
this to any client I have who is a trauma survivor dealing with PTSD
symptoms. It is a down-to-earth “owner’s manual” for improving one’s
quality of life by understanding the problem, reducing the frequency and
severity of symptoms being triggered, and speeding up the relief of
those symptoms when it does happen. Matsakis is one of the field’s
leading authorities on PTSD, and she has performed a work of real
service and compassion by writing this.”
Napier, Nancy J. Getting through the day: Strategies for adults hurt as children. Sidran Foundation Press, Baltimore, MD.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Introduction: I know I have Been Hurt, But Now What?
Dissociation and Childhood Hurts: When You Have a Need Not to Know
-Therapeutic Dissociation: A Better Way – Identifying Triggers: Why Am I
So Scared? Healing with “Mindfulness”: Something to Hold on to –
Containing and Sitting with Feelings: I Feel Like I’m Going to
…Disappointment and Despair: I Just Don’t Know What to Do – Dealing with
Inner Child Parts: What Do I Do with Them Now? Shame And the Disowned
Self: I Can’t Bear to Let You See…Your Future Self: Could That Possibly
Be Me? What about the People in My Life? What about My Therapist? In
Fact, What about Therapy?
NOTE: From the publisher: “ In
straightforward language, the author discusses the continuum of
dissociation and explains the difference between ordinary mood shifts
and trauma-induced dissociation. Chapters are devoted to the therapeutic
value of dissociation, triggers, mindfulness, “inner child” parts,
shame, your “future” self, and your relationships with family, friends,
and therapist.
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Oksana, Chrystine. (1994, 2001) Safe passage to healing: A guide for survivors of ritual abuse. Harper Perennial, NY. NY, and iUniverse, Lincoln, NB.
NOTE: Written in the format of Ellen Bass’ The courage to heal,
this is the first and still the best book on healing from Ritual Abuse.
The chapter on the crisis phase has probably saved more lives than any
other book written on ritual abuse. If you can only buy one book, buy
this one.
Schiraldi, Glenn. The Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder sourcebook: A Guide to healing, recovery, and growth. McGraw Hill, NY, NY.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: ABOUT PTSD – Understanding Anxiety and Dissociation –
Principles of Healing Recovery and Growth -Professional Medication –
Stabilization and Balance – Affect Management – Breathing Retraining –
About Relaxation – Autogenic Training – Meditation – Managing Anger –
Eye Movement – Intrusion Management – Principles of Memory Work –
Cognitive Restructuring – Confiding Concealed Wounds – Resolving Guilt –
Thought Field Therapy – The Rewind Technique – Traumatic Incident
Reduction TIR – Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing EMDR – The
Counting Method – Dream Management and Processing – Healing Imagery –
Healing Rituals – Grieving Losses – Coming to Terms with Suffering –
Hypnosis – Expressive Art Therapies – Life Review – Building Self-Esteem
– Resolving Anger – Prolonged Exposure – Complementary Approaches –
Moving On – Transitioning – Intimacy and Sexuality – Meaning and Purpose
– Spiritual and Religious Growth – Happiness, Pleasure, and Humor –
Relapse Prevention – Summing Up – The History of PTSD – Assessing Abuse –
The Brain and Memory – Psychiatric Disorders – 72-Hour Emergency
Preparedness – Time Management – Rape and Sexual Assault Facts and Myths
– Medication Facts and Guidelines – Victim, Survivor, Thriver – Resources – Glossary – Endnotes – Bibliography
NOTE: From the publisher: “A guide for both survivors and their loved
ones, helping them to see that on the other side of their pain is
recovery and growth. (It) explains the psychic defenses that can go into
effect to protect a victim from further emotional harm, provides
information on triggers and the debilitating effects of post-traumatic
stress disorder, and addresses how the healing process can begin and how
fear diminishes through a variety of medic and non-medicinal treatment
methods.”
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Williams, Mary Beth and Soili Poijula (2002) The PTSD workbook: Simple, effective techniques for overcoming traumatic stress symptoms. New Harbinger Publications, Oakland, CA.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Before Doing the Work: Safety, Security, and
Intention – Identifying and Writing about What Has Happened to You – My
Traumatic Experiences – Coping with Trauma with Less Avoidance and
Denial – Dealing with Associated Symptoms of PTSD: Guilt, Survivor
Guilt, Shame, and Loss – Difficulty Regulating Emotion – Alterations in
Attention or Consciousness: Dealing with Dissociation and Traumatic
Amnesia – How Trauma Impacts the Way You View Yourself – Dealing with
Your Perpetrators – Finding Meaning
NOTE: From the authors: “In
this workbook, you will have the opportunity to complete numerous
exercises that will give you insight into your symptoms, your beliefs,
your behaviors, and your feelings about the trauma or traumas you
endured. Many of these exercises can be completed in the book itself, so
that the book becomes a record of your recovery from trauma as well as
a resource for you to turn to again and again throughout that
recovery. Other exercises can be completed in a separate notebook or
journal, which can also be used to expand upon the exercises you
complete in the book or to record your other thoughts and feelings
along your journey to healing. We hope that this book will help you on
that
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Vermilyea, Elizabeth G. (2000) Growing beyond survival: A self-help toolkit for managing traumatic stress. Sidran Foundation, Baltimore, MD.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Crash Course in Child Development – Crash Course in
the Frustrated Fight or Flight Response – Traumatic Stress Inventory –
The Toolbox – Tools of the Trade – The Idea of Self-Regulation- Cycle
of Traumatic Stress Responses – Tool: Grounding – Tool: Reality Checks –
Tool: Imagery – Tool: Gauge – Tool: Regulator – Tool: Container -Tool:
Journal Writing – Tool: Safety – Tool: Relaxation – Tool: Sleep
Strategies – What Does It All Mean? The Meaning of Awareness – Tool:
Self-Awareness – Tool: Boundaries – Shame – Anger – Tools for Regulation
of Thoughts – Regulation of Feelings – Regulation of Impulses –
Regulation of Sensory Experiences – Peer Support Networks – Conclusion –
Resources – Reading List
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For Partners
Barshinger, Clark E., LaRowe, Lojan and Tapia, Andres. (1995) Haunted marriage: Overcoming the ghosts of your spouse’s childhood abuse. InterVarsity Press, Downers Grove. IL.
NOTE: Christian point of view.
Davis, Laura. (1992) Allies in healing: When the person you love was sexually abused as a child. Harper Collins, NY, NY.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Part 1: Partner’s questions: The basics: Allies in
healing: My needs and feelings: Dealing with Crises: More about sexual
abuse: Intimacy and communication: Sex: Family issues: Final thoughts.
Part 2: Partner’s Stories: Introduction: Jack’s Story “Recovering
together:” Marise’s Story “She works really hard and so do I:” Noah’s
story “Crisis and cult abuse:” Eric’s story “The support of others:”
Lorraine’s story “Breaking up:” Richard’s story “A year at a time:”
Scott’s story “Building trust over time:” Virginia’s story “Forging a
commitment:” Healing books and other resources: Index.
NOTE: Written in the format of The courage to heal, this
book covers topics such as communication, sex, emergencies, and
interacting with the survivor’s family. Girlfriends, boyfriends,
spouses, and lovers are all included.
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For Therapists
Briere, John. (1992) Child abuse trauma: Theory and treatment of the lasting effects. Sage Publications, Newbury Park, CA.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: (partial) Incidence – Types and Forms of Child
Maltreatment – Long-Term Impacts of Child Abuse – Cognitive Distortions –
Altered Emotionality – Dissociation – Disturbed Relationships –
Process Issues – Intervention Approaches – Special Issues in
Abuse-Focused Therapy – Summary – References
\NOTE: From the
publisher: “This volume considers the unique and overlapping long-term
effects of all major forms of child maltreatment. The author integrates
information on seven types of child abuse and neglect – ranging from
sexual and physical abuse to mistreatment by alcoholic or drug-addicted
parents – and outlines the complex ways in which abuse impacts on
later psychosocial functioning. Briere reframes traditional notions of
psychopathology and describes treatment approaches to abuse-related
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, interpersonal dysfunction,
self-destructive behaviour, impaired self-reference and borderline
personality disorder.”
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Chu, James A. (2011) Rebuilding shattered lives: Treating complex PTSD and dissociative disorders. John Wiley, Hoboken, NJ.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: (partial) 30 Years of Study – Complex PTSD: The
Effects of Chronic Trauma and Victimization – Dissociation and the
Dissociative Disorders – Childhood Trauma Attachment and the Development
of the Self – The Nature of Traumatic Memories of Childhood Abuse –
Phase-Oriented Treatment for Complex PTSD – The Paradox of Self Care –
Controlling Posttraumatic and Dissociative Symptoms – Relational
Dilemmas in Treating Complex PTSD – Chronic Disempowerment – Maintaining
the Treatment Frame – Special Topics in Treatment of Complex
Trauma-Related Disorders – Managing Crisis: Acute Care and
Hospitalization – Psychopharmacology for Trauma-Related Disorders –
Controversies and Future Directions in the Field – Afterword: Why We Do
This Work – Appendices – References
NOTE: “From the publisher: “A
fully revised, proven approach to the assessment and treatment of
post-traumatic and dissociative disorders—reflecting treatment advances
since 1998…The new edition includes: developments in the treatment of
complex PTSD; more on neurobiology, crisis management, and
psychopharmacology for trauma-related disorders; examination of early
attachment relationships and their impact on overall development; the
impact of disorganized attachment on a child’s vulnerability to various
forms of victimization; and an update on the management of special
issues.”
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Figley, Charles R., Ed (1985) Trauma and its wake: The study and treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder. Brunner/Mazel, NY, NY.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Introduction and Conceptualization – 4 chapters,
including: -Rebuilding Shattered Assumptions – Developmental Perspective
on Psychic Trauma in Childhood – Recent Research Findings – 5
chapters, including: The Emotional Aftermath of Crime and Violence
-Factors Predicting Psychological Distress Among Rape Victims – A
Comparative Analysis of PTSD Among Various Survivor Groups – Recent
Treatment Innovations – 7 chapters, including: Ethnicity and Traumatic
Stress – Diagnosis and Treatment of Traumatic Stress Among Women after
Childhood Incest – Use of the Environment and the Legal Impact of
Resulting Emotional Harm – Social Responsibility in the Wake of
Catastrophe – Appendices: Patient Information Form A – Structured
Interview for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
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Herman, Judith Lewis. (1997) Trauma and recovery. Basic Books, NY, NY.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Introduction – Part I: Traumatic Disorders – Chapter
1: A Forgotten History – Chapter 2: Terror – Chapter 3: Disconnection –
Chapter 4: Captivity – Chapter 5: Child Abuse – Chapter 6: A New
Diagnosis – Part II: Stages of Recovery – Chapter 7: A Healing
Relationship – Chapter 8: Safety – Chapter 9: Remembrance and Mourning –
Chapter 10: Reconnection – Chapter 11: Commonality – Afterword: The
Dialectic of Trauma Continues
NOTE: From the publisher: “When Trauma
and Recovery was first published in 1992, it was hailed as a
groundbreaking work. In the intervening years, Herman’s volume has
changed the way we think about and treat traumatic events and trauma
victims. In a new afterword, Herman chronicles the incredible response
the book has elicited and explains how the issues surrounding the topic
have shifted within the clinical community and the culture at large.
Trauma and Recovery brings a new level of understanding to a set of
problems usually considered individually. Herman draws on her own
cutting-edge research in domestic violence as well as on the vast
literature of combat veterans and victims of political terror, to show
the parallels between private terrors such as rape and public traumas
such as terrorism. The book puts individual experience in a broader
political frame, arguing that psychological trauma can be understood
only in a social context. Meticulously documented and frequently using
the victims’ own words as well as those from classic literary works and
prison diaries, Trauma and Recovery is a powerful work that will
continue to profoundly impact our thinking.”
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Krill, William E., McKinnon, Marjorie and Volkman, Marian K. (2009. 2011) Gentling: A practical guide to treating PTSD in abused children. Loving Healing Press, Ann Arbor, MI.
NOTE: From the publisher: “ With this book, you will: Learn
child-specific signs of PTSD in abused children; Learn how to manage the
often intense reactivity seen in stress episodes; Gain the practical,
gentle, and effective treatment tools that really help these children;
Use the Child Stress Profile (CSP) to guide treatment and measure
outcomes; Deploy handy ‘Quick Teach Sheets’ that can be copied and
handed to foster parents, teachers, and social workers.”
McCann, Lisa. (1990) Psychological trauma and the adult survivor. Brunner/Mazel, NY, NY.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: (partial) Constructivist Self Development Theory –
Trauma and Victimization: Review of the Literature – The Disruption of
Psychological Needs and Related Cognitive Schema – Clinical assessment
and Intervention – Assessing Personal History, Traumatic Events, the
Social and Cultural Context, and Social Support – Assessing and
Strengthening Ego Resources – Assessing Disrupted Psychological Needs –
Resolving Disturbed Schemas – Resolving Traumatic Memories –
Understanding and Resolving Transference Reactions – Applying the Theory
to Special Clinical Issues – Applying the Theory to Special
Populations – Integrating the Theory in Four Case Studies
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Meiselman, Karin C. (1990) Resolving the trauma of incest: Reintegration therapy with survivors. Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, CA.
NOTE: From the publisher: “Karin C. Meiselman presents a new
therapeutic approach that enables therapists to recognize, understand,
and treat the special needs and problems of incest survivors, ranging
from panic attacks and sexual difficulties to chronic depression and
destructive relationships. The author explains why effective therapy
with incest survivors requires a nurturing therapeutic relationship–and
she shows how to develop that relationship and give the ongoing
reassurance that victims need in dealing with trauma, overcoming loss
and grief, and in taking control of their lives.”
Ochberg, Frank M., Ed. (1988) Post-traumatic therapy and victims of violence. Brunner/Mazel, NY, NY.<
TABLE OF CONTENTS: (partial) Post-Traumatic Therapy and Victims of
Violence – The Biological Response to Psychic Trauma – The Role of
Medication in Pos-Traumatic Therapy – Healing of the Whole Person –
Post-Traumatic Family Therapy – Personal Power and Institutional
Victimization: treating the Dual Trauma of Woman Battering – Rape Trauma
and Treatment of the Victim – Father-Daughter Incest – Post Traumatic
Therapy for Children Who Are Victims of Violence – The Homicide of a
Child – Treating the Vietnam Veteran – Treating Survivors and Children
of Survivors of the Nazi Holocaust – The Psychiatric Care of Refugee
Survivors of Violence and Torture – Support Services for Victims –
Editorial Postscript by Charles R. Figley
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Peterson, Kirtland C. et al (1991) Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: A clinician’s guide. Plenum Press, NY, NY.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: (partial) History – Primary Symptoms – Persistent
Avoidance and Numbing of Responsiveness to the External World – Survivor
Guilt and Other Forms of Guilt – Secondary Symptoms – Changes in Ego
Functioning – Subtypes and Course of the Disorder – Victims of Military
Combat – Rape/Assault Victims – Victims – of Accidental Man-Made
Disasters – Hiroshima Survivors – residents of Three Mile Island – PTSD
in Children – Occurence – Symptoms – Parental Responses – Theoretical
Perspectives – Problems in Assessment and Diagnosis – Ego-Supportive
Interventions – Procedures – General Stratagem of Treatment – Implosive
Therapy/Imaginal Flooding – Hypnotherapy and Narcosynthesis – A
Behavioral Learning Theory Formulation – A Psychodynamic Classical
Formulation – An Object Relations Theory Formulation – An Ecosystemic
Model – Assessment – Differential Diagnosis – Functional Evaluation of
the Individual – Guidelines – Psychodynamically Oriented Group
Psychotherapy – Treatment Strategies/Goals – Treatment of Autonomic
Arousal and Anxiety
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Rothschild, Babette. (2000) The body remembers: The psychophysiology of trauma and trauma treatment. W.W. Norton, NY, NY.
NOTE: From the publisher: “While reducing the chasm between scientific
theory and clinical practice and bridging the gap between talk therapy
and body therapy, Rothschild presents principles and non-touch
techniques for giving the body its due. With an eye to its relevance for
clinicians, she consolidates current knowledge about the psychobiology
of the stress response both in normally challenging situations and
during extreme and prolonged trauma. This gives clinicians from all
disciplines a foundation for speculating about the origins of their
clients’ symptoms and incorporating regard for the body into their
practice. The somatic techniques are chosen with an eye to making trauma
therapy safer while increasing mind-body integration.”
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Rothschild, Babette. (2003) The body remembers casebook: Unifying methods and models in the treatment of trauma and PTSD. W.W. Norton, NY, NY.
NOTE: Designed for therapists seeking to tailor trauma therapy to
particular clients. Advocates tailoring therapy to individual cases and
demonstrates the use of psychodynamic, cognitive, EMDR, SIBAM and other
therapies in trauma treatment.
Scott, Michael J. and Stradling, Stephen G. (1992) Counselling for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Sage, Newbury Park, London, UK.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Understanding How Trauma Leads to PTSD – A
Neo-Ericksonian Framework for Treating Trauma – The Tools Framework –
Tools for Safety, Ego Support, and Ego Growth – Tools for Transforming
Traumatic Memory – The Use of Thought Field Therapy in Treating Trauma –
Tools for the Holistic Self – If You Meet the “Tool” on the Road,
Leave It! Person-of-the-Therapist Issues – Beyond Tools and Trauma –
Epilogue: Tools for Transforming Terrorism
NOTE: From the publisher:
“Based upon a framework that integrates a wide range of therapeutic
theories of PTSD and techniques, including Ericksonian,
solution-oriented and hypnotherapeutic approaches, Tools for transforming trauma provides
clinicians with specific skills for treating traumatized individuals.
Detailed, how-to instructions and rationales for the implementation of
over 30 “tools” throughout the different phases of treatment make this
book an ideal resource for anyone working with trauma, abuse, and
dissociative disorders. In this unique integration of approaches, Dr.
Schwarz provides the reader with tools for transforming trauma in
diverse areas such as affect dysregulation, ego strengthening,
transforming negative memories, the false memory controversy, working
with beliefs, cultivating a positive life, energy work, spirituality,
and managing the therapeutic relationship during the process of
healing.”
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Williams, Mary Beth and Sommer, John F. Jr., Eds. (1994) Handbook of post-traumatic therapy. Greenwood Press. Westport, CT. Westport, CT London, England.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Preface – Part I: Theoretical, Diagnostic, and
Practical Approaches: 1: The Need for an Integrative Theory of
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder – 2: The Diagnosis and Assessment of
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder in Adults – 3: Integrating Structured and
Unstructured Approaches to Taking a Trauma History – Part II:
Treatment of Children and Families: 4: Long-Term Treatment for Children
with Severe Trauma History – 5: Intervention with Child Victims of
Trauma in the School Setting – 6: Dual, Triple, and Quadruple Trauma
Couples: Dynamics and Treatment Issues – 7: Treating Intimacy Issues of
Traumatized People – 8: Intergenerational Consequences of Trauma:
Reframing Traps in Treatment Theory–A Second- Generation Perspective –
Part III: Treatment of Survivors of Violence and Abuse:9: Clinical
Treatment of Survivors of Homicide Victims – 10: Post-Traumatic Therapy
with Domestic Violence Survivors – 11: Establishing Safety in Survivors
of Severe Sexual Abuse – Part IV: Treatment of Survivors of War: 12:
War-Related Trauma: An Integrative Experiential, Cognitive, and
Spiritual Approach – 13: War-Related Post-Traumatic Disorder: Chemical
Addiction, Non-chemical Habituating Behaviors – Part V: Treatment of
Victims of Ethnocultural and Political Problems:14: Post-Traumatic
Ethnotherapy (p-Tet): Processes in Assessment and Intervention in
Aspects of Global Psychic Trauma – 15: That Which Does Not Destroy Me:
Treating Survivors of Political Torture – 16: Treatment of
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder in the Arab American Community – Part VI:
Treatment of Disaster Victims:17: Immediate Post-Disaster Treatment of
Trauma – 18: Responding to Community Crisis – 19: Relocation:
Treatment of a Family Crisis – 20: The Association of Flight Attendants
Employee Assistance Program Responds to Workplace Trauma: A Dynamic
Model – 21: Treatment of Work-Related Trauma in Police Officers:
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Post-Traumatic Decline – Part VII:
Creative Therapeutic Approaches – 22: Art Therapy as a Visual Dialogue –
23: Creative Arts Therapies on a Sanctuary Voluntary Inpatient Unit
for Men and Women Who Have Experienced Abuse and Psychological Trauma
in Childhood – 24: The Use of Writing in the Treatment of
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders – 25: Action-Based Therapy for PTSD –
26: Hypnotic Approaches in Treating PTSD: An Ericksonian Framework –
Part VIII: Special Group Interventions for Trauma Survivors:27: A
Twelve-Theme Psychoeducational Program for Victims and Survivors – 28:
Group Therapy and Self-Help Groups for Adult Survivors of Childhood
Incest29: The Development of Groups for Partners of Survivors of Child
Sexual Abuse – 30: Developing an Inpatient Dissociative Disorders Unit –
31: The Sanctuary Model: Developing Generic Inpatient Programs for the
Treatment of Psychological Trauma – Part IX: New Trends and
Developments: 32: Biological and Pharmacological Aspects of the
Treatment of PTSD – 33: Traumatology: Implications for Training,
Education, and Development Programs – 34: Ethical Considerations in
Trauma Treatment, Research, Publication, and Training – 35:
Countertransference and Trauma: Self-Healing and Training Issues – 36:
Toward the Development of a Generic Model of PTSD Treatment
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Wilson, John P., Friedman, Matthew J. and Lindy, Jacob D. Eds. (2001) Treating trauma and PTSD. Guilford Press, NY, NY.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Treatment Goals for PTSD – A Holistic Organismic
Approach to Healing Trauma and PTSD – An Overview of Clinical
Considerations and Principles in the Treatment of PTSD – Allostatic
versus Empirical Perspectives on Pharmacotherapy for PTSD – An
Allostatic Approach to the Psychodynamic Understanding of PTSD – Acute
Posttraumatic Interventions – Cognitive-Behavioral Approaches to PTSD –
Group Psychotherapy for PTSD – Treatment of Persons with Complex PTSD –
Trauma-Related Disruptions of the Self – Dual Diagnosis and Treatment
of PTSD – Treatment Methods for Childhood Trauma – Treatment of PTSD in
Families and Couples – Treatment of PTSD in Persons with Severe Mental
Illness – Case History Analysis of the Treatments for PTSD: Lessons
Learned – Practical Considerations in the Treatment of PTSD: Guidelines
for Practitioners – Respecting the Trauma Membrane: Above All Do No
Harm
NOTE: From the publisher: “This volume presents an innovative
psychobiological framework for understanding and treating PTSD. A major
emphasis is the need to reformulate diagnostic criteria and treatment
goals to reflect emerging knowledge about the complex pathways by which
trauma disrupts people’s lives. Within a holistic, organismic
framework, the editors identify 65 PTSD symptoms contained within five
(rather than the traditional three) symptom clusters, and spell out 80
target objectives for treatment. Expert contributors then provide
detailed presentations of core therapeutic approaches, including acute
posttraumatic interventions, cognitive-behavioral approaches,
pharmacotherapy, group psychotherapy, and psychodynamic techniques, as
well as approaches to working with specific populations, including
children, refugees, and the dually diagnosed. The concluding section
reviews and synthesizes all case material presented, examining which
symptoms are addressed by each of the core approaches, which treatment
goals are met, and which clients can most effectively be helped.”
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Wolf, Marion E. and Mosnaim, Aron D., Eds. (1990) Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Etiology, phenomenology, and treatment. American Psychiatric Press, Washington, DC.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Vulnerability to Posttraumatic Stress Disorder –
Dissociative Mechanisms in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder – The
Resilience Hypothesis and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder – Diagnostic
Validity of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder – Personality Disorders and
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder – Are All Vietnam Veterans Like John
Rambo? Psychosomatic Manifestations of Chronic Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder – Analgesia A New Dependent Variable for the Biological Study
of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder – Platelet Adenylate Cyclase Activity
as a Possible Biologic Marker for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder –
Psychoendocrinology of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder – Antidepressants
in the Treatment of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder – Carbamazepine in the
Treatment of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Implications for the
Kindling Hypothesis – Interrelationships Between Biological Mechanisms
and Pharmacotherapy of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder – Psychotherapeutic
Interventions in Chronic Posttraumatic Stress Disorder – Headache and
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder – Back to the Front: Recurrent Exposure
to Combat Stress and Reactivation of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder –
Individual and Community Responses to an Aircraft Disaster – Legal
Aspects of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Uses and Abuses
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