JJPeters Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center and VISN2 South Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center, 130 West Kingsbridge Rd, Bronx, NY 10468 USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, 1 Gustave L. Levy Pl, New York, NY 10029 USA.
Mil Med Res. 2017 Jun 30;4:21. doi: 10.1186/s40779-017-0130-9. eCollection 2017.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a disabling, potentially chronic disorder that is characterized by re-experience and hyperarousal symptoms as well as the avoidance of trauma-related stimuli. The distress experienced by many veterans of the Vietnam War and their partners prompted a strong interest in developing conjoint interventions that could both alleviate the core symptoms of PTSD and strengthen family bonds. We review the evolution of and evidence base for conjoint PTSD treatments from the Vietnam era through the post-911 era. Our review is particularly focused on the use of treatment strategies that are designed to address the emotions that are generated by the core symptoms of the disorder to reduce their adverse impact on veterans, their partners and the relationship. We present a rationale and evidence to support the direct incorporation of emotion-regulation skills training into conjoint interventions for PTSD. We begin by reviewing emerging evidence suggesting that high levels of emotion dysregulation are characteristic of and predict the severity of both PTSD symptoms and the level of interpersonal/marital difficulties reported by veterans with PTSD and their family members. In doing so, we present a compelling rationale for the inclusion of formal skills training in emotional regulation in couple-/family-based PTSD treatments. We further argue that increased exposure to trauma-related memories and emotions in treatments based on learning theory requires veterans and their partners to learn to manage the uncomfortable emotions that they previously avoided. Conjoint treatments that were developed in the last 30 years all acknowledge the importance of emotions in PTSD but vary widely in their relative emphasis on helping participants to acquire strategies to modulate them compared to other therapeutic tasks such as learning about the disorder or disclosing the trauma to a loved one. We conclude our review by describing two recent innovative treatments for PTSD that incorporate a special emphasis on emotion-regulation skills training in the dyadic context: structured approach therapy (SAT) and multi-family group for military couples (MFG-MC). Although the incorporation of emotion-regulation skills into conjoint PTSD therapies appears promising, replication and comparison to cognitive-behavioral approaches is needed to refine our understanding of which symptoms and veterans might be more responsive to one approach versus others.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)是一种使人丧失能力的、潜在的慢性障碍,其特征是重新体验和过度警觉症状以及避免与创伤相关的刺激。许多越南战争退伍军人及其伴侣所经历的痛苦促使人们强烈关注开发联合干预措施,这些措施既能减轻 PTSD 的核心症状,又能加强家庭纽带。我们回顾了从越南战争时代到 911 时代后 PTSD 联合治疗的演变和证据基础。我们的审查特别侧重于使用旨在解决该疾病核心症状所产生的情绪的治疗策略,以减少这些情绪对退伍军人、他们的伴侣和关系的不利影响。我们提出了一个理由和证据,支持将情绪调节技能训练直接纳入 PTSD 的联合干预措施。我们首先回顾了新出现的证据,表明情绪调节障碍程度高是 PTSD 症状严重程度和 PTSD 退伍军人及其家庭成员报告的人际/婚姻困难程度的特征和预测因素。这样做,我们为在夫妻/家庭为基础的 PTSD 治疗中纳入正式的情绪调节技能训练提供了令人信服的理由。我们进一步认为,在基于学习理论的治疗中,增加对创伤相关记忆和情绪的暴露要求退伍军人及其伴侣学会管理他们以前回避的不适情绪。在过去 30 年中开发的联合治疗都承认情绪在 PTSD 中的重要性,但在帮助参与者获得调节情绪的策略方面的相对重视程度与其他治疗任务(如了解疾病或向亲人披露创伤)差异很大。我们在描述最近的两种创新 PTSD 治疗方法时结束了我们的审查,这些方法在二元背景下特别强调情绪调节技能培训:结构化方法治疗(SAT)和军事夫妇多家庭小组(MFG-MC)。尽管将情绪调节技能纳入联合 PTSD 治疗中似乎很有前景,但需要进行复制和与认知行为方法进行比较,以完善我们对哪些症状和退伍军人对一种方法比对其他方法更有反应的理解。