Clinical Perspective on Today’s Issues – Interim exam 2 (UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM)
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Ehler and Clarke’s cognitive model of PTSD states that persistent PTSD only occurs if individuals process the traumatic event and/or consequences in a way which produces a sense of serious, current threat. People with persistent PTSD are unable to see the trauma as a time-limited event that does not have global implications for their future. There are two key processes that lead to this sense of threat:
The perception of current threat is accompanied by intrusions and other re-experiencing symptoms when activated. This motivates a series of behavioural and cognitive responses that are intended to reduce perceived threat and distress in the short-term but prevent cognitive change. This maintains the disorder.
There are several types of appraisal which can produce a sense of current threat:
The interpretation of one’s initial PTSD symptoms (1), other people’s reactions in the aftermath of the trauma (2) and the appraisal of the consequences of the trauma in other life domains (e.g. physical consequences) (3) are important and can produce a sense of current threat. Initial PTSD symptoms are normal after a traumatic event. If people appraise this as being an integral part of the self, then they may conclude that the trauma has permanently changed them.
These appraisals maintain PTSD by directly producing negative emotions and by encouraging individuals to engage in dysfunctional coping strategies. The nature of the emotional response in PTSD depends on the appraisal:
There are several characteristics of involuntary re-experiencing:
The cues for reexperiencing do not need to have a strong semantic relationship to the trauma (e.g. a similar smell may be enough). The pattern of retrieval and the intrusion characteristics may exist due to the way trauma is encoded in memory.
Autobiographical information can be retrieved by purposefully remembering (i.e. higher-order meaning-based retrieval strategies) or direct triggering of a stimulus (e.g. stimulus that is associated with the event). Autobiographical memories are often elaborated by theme and personal time period. It thus contains specific information about the event and general information of the time period and this is recollected simultaneously. The elaboration enhances purposeful recollection and inhibits direct triggering of a stimulus as a form of recollection. In persistent PTSD, the trauma memory may be poorly elaborated and inadequately integrated into its context in time.
The stimulus-stimulus (i.e. S-S) and the stimulus-response (i.e. S-R) associations are particularly strong for traumatic information in PTSD. These associations help individuals make predictions about what will happen next. However, these associations lead to the sense that the traumatic event is happening again while this is not the case. This is partially the case because there is strong perceptual priming for stimuli that were temporally associated with the traumatic event.
There is a reciprocal relationship between the nature of the trauma memory and the appraisal of the trauma. This means that when people recall the trauma this is biased by their appraisals and they selectively retrieve information consistent with these appraisals. A trauma can thus disorganize autobiographical memory. This makes cue-driven recollections of the trauma more likely.
The strategy a person uses to control the sense of threat and PTSD symptoms is linked to the appraisal of the trauma. Negative appraisals may lead to maladaptive strategies (e.g. thought suppression) to control the symptoms and sense of threat. This maintains PTSD in three ways:
Safety behaviours refer to actions individuals take to prevent or minimize anticipated further trauma (e.g. avoiding the highway). This prevents disconfirmation of the belief that another trauma will occur if one does not engage in these behaviours.
The appraisal of the trauma and the nature of the trauma memory is influenced by cognitive processing during the trauma. This depends on several factors:
The nature of the trauma memory depends on the quality of processing during encoding. A lack of conceptual processing during the trauma makes that the trauma is more difficult to intentionally retrieve. The strong perceptual priming leads to a poor discriminability of the trauma memory and other memories leading to more reexperiencing symptoms. This emphasizes the need for conceptual processing.
A mental defeat refers to the perceived loss of all psychological autonomy, accompanied by a sense of not being human anymore. This influences the appraisal.
The cognitive model of PTSD explains several features of PTSD:
There are several requirements for successful treatment of PTSD:
There are several procedures that may prove useful in the treatment of PTSD:
There are several specific patient groups who may require extensive verbal and imagery cognitive restructuring:
The effectiveness of reliving the trauma may be due to several aspects:
This bundle contains all the information needed for the second interim exam for the course "Clinical Perspective on Today's Issues" given at the University of Amsterdam. It contains lecture information, information from the relevant books and all the articles. The following
...This bundle contains all the information needed for the for the course "Clinical Perspective on Today's Issues" given at the University of Amsterdam. It contains lecture information, information from the relevant books and all the articles. The following is included:
...This bundle contains all the articles included in the course "Clinical Perspective on Today's Issues" given at the University of Amsterdam. The following is included:
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