Zielinski Melissa J, Karlsson Marie E, Bridges Ana J
Psychiatric Research Institute, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, 4301 W. Markham Street Little Rock, Little Rock, AR, 72205, USA.
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Arkansas, AR, Fayetteville, USA.
Health Justice. 2021 Sep 30;9(1):25. doi: 10.1186/s40352-021-00148-4.
Although it is clear that incarcerated women need access to effective therapies for trauma sequelae, some have argued that one of the most effective treatments - exposure therapy - should not be provided in carceral settings due to the presumed lack of safety and stability making such an intervention inappropriate. Group therapy, the typical mode of intervention in prisons, has also been presumed to be unacceptable for exposure-based processing due to assumptions that hearing others' trauma narratives would be traumatizing and unhelpful to listeners. However, there is a lack of data to support either of the aforementioned assumptions. This study examined the acceptability of an exposure-based group therapy for women survivors of sexual violence who were currently incarcerated (N = 61) by asking women themselves about their experiences completing an exposure-based group therapy protocol (SHARE; Survivors Healing from Abuse: Recovery through Exposure) while incarcerated. We assessed women's reasons for enrolling in the group, satisfaction with various therapy components (e.g., exposure, skill-building) and the treatment overall, and experiences of both sharing and listening to trauma narratives using a feedback survey that included a mix of multiple-choice and open-ended questions. Treatment dropout was examined as an additional index of acceptability.
Treatment completion was very high (88.8%). Nearly all women who completed the group reported that they would recommend it to other incarcerated women (96.7%, with the remaining 3.3% reporting "it depends"). Qualitative results revealed overwhelmingly positive feedback about the effect of the group and indicated that sharing and listening to trauma narratives in a group setting serve discrete but dually important functions. Specifically, women almost universally experienced listening to others' trauma narratives (i.e., exposures) in the SHARE group context as helpful-making them feel less alone and normalizing their experiences. Sharing one's own story primarily provided an emotional release and/or transformation (i.e., an intrapersonal rather than interpersonal function).
Our findings challenge common concerns about the appropriateness of 1) prison as a context for trauma-focused treatments, including exposure and 2) sharing trauma narratives in a group setting. Unless empirical evidence demonstrating harm is uncovered, best practices for PTSD and other trauma-related sequelae-those recommended in reputable treatment guidelines and interventions like SHARE that incorporate components shown to be effective (e.g., cognitive challenging, exposure)-should be offered to incarcerated women as part of standard of care.
虽然很明显,被监禁的女性需要获得针对创伤后遗症的有效治疗,但一些人认为,最有效的治疗方法之一——暴露疗法——不应在监禁环境中提供,因为假定缺乏安全性和稳定性,使得这种干预不合适。团体治疗是监狱中典型的干预方式,由于假定听到他人的创伤叙述会造成创伤且对听众没有帮助,也被认为不适用于基于暴露的治疗。然而,缺乏数据支持上述任何一个假设。本研究通过询问目前被监禁的性暴力女性幸存者(N = 61)她们自己完成基于暴露的团体治疗方案(SHARE;从虐待中康复的幸存者:通过暴露实现康复)的经历,来考察这种基于暴露的团体治疗对她们的可接受性。我们使用一份包含多项选择题和开放式问题的反馈调查问卷,评估了女性参加该团体的原因、对各种治疗组成部分(如暴露、技能培养)以及总体治疗的满意度,以及分享和聆听创伤叙述的经历。将治疗退出情况作为可接受性的一个额外指标进行了考察。
治疗完成率非常高(88.8%)。几乎所有完成该团体治疗的女性都表示她们会向其他被监禁的女性推荐(96.7%,其余3.3%表示“视情况而定”)。定性结果显示,对该团体治疗效果的反馈绝大多数是积极的,并表明在团体环境中分享和聆听创伤叙述具有不同但同样重要的功能。具体而言,女性几乎普遍认为在SHARE团体环境中聆听他人的创伤叙述(即暴露)是有帮助的——这让她们感觉不那么孤单,并使她们的经历正常化。分享自己的故事主要带来了情绪释放和/或转变(即一种个人内部而非人际间的功能)。
我们的研究结果挑战了人们对以下两点适宜性的常见担忧:1)监狱作为聚焦创伤治疗(包括暴露疗法)的环境;2)在团体环境中分享创伤叙述。除非发现有实证证据表明存在危害,否则对于创伤后应激障碍和其他与创伤相关后遗症的最佳实践——那些在著名治疗指南以及像SHARE这样纳入了已证明有效的组成部分(如认知挑战、暴露)的干预措施中所推荐的方法——应作为标准护理的一部分提供给被监禁的女性。