Post Traumatic Stress: A Systemic Disorder
Most people have heard of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and often relate its occurrence to soldiers. The truth is, PTSD can affect anyone – victims of car accidents or natural disasters, intimate partner violence, physical/sexual assaults, child abuse, and more. Some people are at increased risk for PTSD. Victim-specific risk factors include, being female, experiencing trauma at a younger age, race (African Americans, First Nations, and Hispanics are at higher risk), those experiencing poverty and low socio-economic status, family dysfunction, less functional coping styles, previous history of trauma exposure, peritraumatic dissociation, and genetic predisposition/epigenetics (for more on the latter see: https://blacksheepcounselling.com/2017/04/behavioural-epigenetics/).
Common symptoms of PTSD include depression, anxiety, hypervigilance, panic attacks, grief, suicidality, avoidance, flashbacks, dissociating, substance misuse (and other self-harming behaviours), trust issues, and internalized shame/low self-worth. Newer research has determined that PTSD should be viewed as a “systemic disorder”, rather than a mental health disorder as mind and body are intimately linked in health and disease. PTSD creates extensive psychophysiological and somatic comorbidities ranging from diminished immune systems, headaches, stomach aches, metabolic syndrome, and related cardiovascular conditions, autoimmune diseases (such as rheumatoid arthritis and fibromyalgia), as well as a dysregulated nervous system. In a recent Australian study on veterans with and without PTSD, morbidity was found to be higher in the PTSD group for conditions of the gastrointestinal, hepatic, cardiovascular, and respiratory systems, sleep disorders, and laboratory pathology measures.
Former retired vice chief of staff of the U.S Army, General Peter Chiarelli alongside clinicians and veterans’ advocates are lobbying for changing the name of the diagnosis of PTSD to that of “PTSI”: post traumatic stress injury. The belief around this is that post traumatic stress is NOT a disorder, it is an injury, and calling it as such is less stigmatizing, and more accurately describes one’s experience. It also is more hopeful: one can heal from an injury, whereas a disorder tends to incite feelings of weakness and perpetual brokenness. Canada’s military and veteran agencies did change the titles of their clinics to “Operational Stress Injury”, and those seeking treatment increased. This suggests that amongst military populations, there exists increased stigma with the label of PTSD that inhibits victims of post traumatic stress from seeking support.
How to increase treatment success for Post Traumatic Stress
A holistic approach to treatment is really needed. Not only do victims of PTS need to therapeutically process their trauma with a trained therapist, but treatment success will increase with the inclusion of such things as Yoga* (heaps of evidence-based data on this), acupuncture, engaging in mindfulness and physical activities, strong social supports, relaxation techniques, art therapy, prayer/meditation, minimizing the use of stimulants (caffeine/sugar/nicotine), physical touch (even hugging loved ones/petting animals), working with a nutritionist to determine what foods work best for optimal performance, and deriving a sense of meaning and purpose in life.
It is possible to experience “post-traumatic growth” – seeking help is the first step.
~Christine
References:
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