Treatment of Complex Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Herman (1992) divides recovery from CPTSD into three stages: establishing safety, remembrance and mourning for what was lost, and reconnecting to society. Before this work can begin, a healing relationship must be established; Herman believes recovery can come only within a relationship and only if the survivor is empowered.

Establishing safety

This stage is further subdivided into a series of tasks that must be accomplished in order for the client to feel safe in therapy. First, the therapist and client must name the problem. This involves not so much making a formal diagnosis as acknowledging the trauma and its past and present effects, both mental and physical. Next, one must restore a sense of control to the client. This begins with control of the body: controlling physical symptoms by balancing diet, exercise, and sleep and by getting the client appropriate medical care, including medication where it is indicated. Finally, control moves outward to establishing a safe environment: setting up support networks of caring people, helping the client to protect him/herself from any physical danger they may face (particularly from an abuser), and developing a plan for dealing with for future protection, one that takes into account any self-destructive behaviors the client engages in. This includes such things as setting up no-harm contracts (or procedures in case of harm), establishing sobriety, etc.

Herman cautions that there's not easy way to tell when this (or any) stage of recovery is complete. The first stage in particular is demanding; therapists and clients must be careful not to push on until safety is well established. Herman states that when the client has regained some trust in herself and her environment, when the therapeutic alliance is good, and when the most disturbing symptoms are controlled and the client knows which people can be relied on in times of crisis, it is reasonably safe to proceed.

Remembrance and mourning

The second stage is also divided into sub-stages. First, the client must reconstruct the story of the trauma. Many times, traumatized person have never been able to put it all together and make it into a narrative. During this stage, a sense of continuity with the past is reestablished. Herman stresses the importance of, in this stage, retrieving both the memories and the emotions attached to them; this corresponds to the view of some practitioners that free-floating anxiety can be "emotional memories" that have somehow gotten unstuck from the memories of the events during which they were experienced.

When the narrative reconstruction is complete, Herman says, the traumatic memories must be transformed using flooding/exposure (as in cognitive therapy) or testimony techniques. Finally, the losses that resulted from the trauma must be mourned fully. Only when all of this is accomplished is the second stage complete.

Reconnection

The final task for a trauma survivor in Herman's model is to "reclaim her world." The client must create a future by re-learning how to live. The first step is learning to defend him/herself, learning to fight for what is important and to protect her/himself. Reconciliation with the self, identifying and appreciating what is positive about oneself while recognizing and accepting the negatives, follows. Then comes reconnecting with others -- becoming part of a community. Herman also recommends finding a survivor mission -- some work to add meaning to life.

Herman notes that even after these steps are complete, the trauma may never be fully resolved; she considers recovery to be a lifelong process. However, at this point, it becomes on of many factors in a client's life and not the dominant one.

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