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Psychologist says PTSD common and serious problem for accident victims

Published: October 31, 2002

By PATRICIA DONOVAN
Contributing Editor

It is most frequently associated with combat veterans, victims of violent crimes or those caught up in natural disasters, but Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome, or PTSD, actually is most prevalent among survivors of serious car accidents.

"PTSD occurs in about 28 percent of those who have experienced or witnessed a life-threatening event," says Gayle Beck, professor of psychology and director of the university's Motor Vehicle Accident Clinic.

"Serious car accidents are perhaps the most commonly experienced traumatic events in the United States," she says, "They injure 3 million Americans a year and kill 42,000."

PTSD is a condition marked by clear and significant psychological and physical changes. Its symptoms in accident victims, says Beck, can be just as serious and debilitating as they are in combat veterans.

"They have nightmares, flashbacks, sleep difficulties, feel jumpy and jittery, experience anxiety, fear of driving and social isolation," she says, "and if untreated, about 30 percent of those affected will develop a chronic form of the disorder that will persist throughout their lives."

After many years, Beck says the therapeutic community finally has recognized the frequency and seriousness of post-accident PTSD.

"More people are being diagnosed and treated," she says, "but as the incidence rates go up, more and more insurance companies balk at paying for conventional treatment.

"To date, the most common and successful treatment used for all kinds of PTSD is individual cognitive behavioral therapy conducted by a highly trained professional," Beck says.

"Insurance companies have been 'skinnying up' reimbursements to psychologists and psychiatrists for years, she notes, "and want to limit their enrollees with PTSD to group therapy conducted by other kinds of therapists because it's cheaper for the company.

"Out of concern for those who, as a result, might have to settle for ineffective or inadequate treatment," Beck says she has worked for years to develop a group therapy model that could be used successfully by counselors with far less experience in this field than clinical psychologists who treat trauma.

After years of clinical research, she and her team think they have developed an effective therapeutic model for applying cognitive therapies to PTSD patients in a group setting.

This model can be adapted for the group treatment of people traumatized by other events as well, but Beck says it works best when a therapy group is comprised of individuals traumatized by similar experiences; that is, all members of the group are sexual assault victims, were in bad accidents, or lived through another life-threatening event.

To assist therapists who may not be familiar with the treatment of such patients, the team also has nearly completed a treatment manual that will train them to apply these methods successfully.

"That's important," says Beck, "because we cannot simply pick up a successful model for individual therapy and impose it on a group. Nor can we expect untrained, inexperienced therapists to treat PTSD in group sessions without running into risks, such as aggravating the symptoms of some members of the group."

Beck's group training-and-treatment program now is undergoing empirical evaluation funded by a three-year, $500,000 grant from the National Institute of Mental Health.

Based on her previous experience, Beck says she expects her study to prove that patients whose therapists carefully apply the recommended cognitive behavioral therapies in a group setting will benefit greatly.

"I expect that at the end of group therapy, patients will show reductions in PTSD-related symptoms like anxiety and depression," she says. "They also will use health-care resources less often, and will report less distress and impairment from pain at the end of treatment.

"What we've learned from applying this treatment is that group therapy not only can work as well as individual therapy," says Beck, "but it can go even further in helping patients deal with their frightening and misunderstood symptoms.

"One of our patients, for instance, was on her way to a group session one day and was stuck in a traffic jam," she says.

"She told us later that while she was sitting there, afraid of missing the session, she realized how essential the other members of the group were to her feelings of being 'normal.'"

"The empathy and support expressed by other members of a therapy group are very helpful in the healing of trauma," Beck says. "The realization that there are other people like themselves alters their sense of being 'crazy' and speeds recovery."

Beck has extensive clinical experience in treating adult anxiety disorders and male and female sexual disorders. She is the past editor of the journal Behavior Therapy, a fellow of the American Psychological Association and a licensed psychologist in the State of New York.