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A SINGLE TREATMENT FOR PTSD? -- Larry Scott, founder of VA
Watchdog dot Org, contends that the IOM report
furthers the
VA's real intention: to curtail spiraling
disability benefits
by narrowing the diagnosis and treatment of PTSD.

To take a look at the "one therapy" model, go to
this page...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/nf08/nfMAR08/nf032408-10.htm
For more about veterans and PTSD, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=ptsd&op=and
For the Institute of Medicine (IOM) report
mentioned in the article below, click here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/07/nf07/nfOCT07/nf101907-1.htm
Story here...
http://www.psychotherapynetworker.org/in
dex.php?category=magazine&sub_cat=articles&type=arti
cle&id=Clinicians%20Digest%20Mar/Apr%202008&page=2
Story below:
-------------------------
A Single Treatment for PTSD?
When the Department of Defense asked the prestigious Institute of Medicine
(IOM), an arm of the National Academy of Sciences, to determine the most
effective treatments for post-traumatic stress disorder, the hope was that
this would put treatment decisions for thousands of veterans suffering
from PTSD on a solid empirical foundation. But after reviewing 90 clinical
trials of different medications and therapies, the IOM report concluded
that only exposure therapy was effective, a finding which has created more
controversy than consensus.
According to the report, studies on every other medication and therapy
frequently used to treat PTSD—including EMDR, cognitive restructuring,
coping skills training, and psychodynamic and group therapy—were too
compromised by methodological limitations or didn't have enough positive
results to demonstrate their efficacy.
Article continues below:
(use left/right arrows in screen to view more videos)
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Proponents of treatments that didn't make the
grade have strongly challenged IOM's conclusions. Some researchers,
including John Carlson, former editor of the International Journal of
Stress Management and author of an EMDR study which the IOM report found
lacking, wrote the IOM committee that they'd ignored or misstated
information in several studies. Critics also complained that a number of
treatments IOM failed to find effective are recommended by prestigious
mental health and governmental organizations around the world. For
example, Britain's Cochrane Report of April 20, 2005, prepared by a group
of international health care reviewers, endorses stress management and
EMDR as PTSD treatments, with EMDR's efficacy matching that of exposure
therapy.
Even supporters of the IOM report, like PTSD expert Richard McNally,
director of clinical training at Harvard University, agree that the IOM
used unusually rigorous standards, raising methodological issues often
overlooked by reviewers. For example, the IOM was dissatisfied with the
way many studies handled treatment dropouts. It criticized studies run by
people with a "financial or intellectual interest" in the outcome,
although other organizations believe that the risk of researcher bias is
outweighed by the fact that familiarity with a treatment helps ensure it's
conducted correctly. Some approaches that have proven to be effective with
PTSD were discounted because of the restricted populations they examined.
The IOM felt, for example, that what works for a rape victim with PTSD may
not work for a soldier. While McNally sees in this a move by the IOM to
improve research guidelines, critics like Carlson accuse the report of
selectively moving the goalposts to favor exposure therapy.
Although the IOM stresses that its report isn't saying that other
treatments are ineffective—it's merely calling for more research on
them—the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has announced that it's
ramping up efforts to train its staff in exposure therapy. Larry Scott,
founder of VA Watchdog, a veterans' advocacy group, contends that the IOM
report furthers the VA's real intention: to curtail spiraling disability
benefits by narrowing the diagnosis and treatment of PTSD.
Critics have long claimed that efficiency in the health care system is too
often achieved by narrowing the definition of a disorder and limiting
treatment objectives, leaving many prospective clients without access to
any care and forcing others to settle for abbreviated treatments. Scott
fears that the long-term effect of the IOM report will be that veterans
are called upon to make yet one more sacrifice—this time, in the name of
treatment "efficiency."
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
Don't forget to read all of today's VA
News Flashes (click here)
Click here to make VA Watchdog dot Org your homepage
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