Trauma & PTSD: Prof Derrick Silove, MD Franzcp Prof Zachary Steel, PHD, M.Clin - Psych School of Psychiatry Unsw
Trauma & PTSD: Prof Derrick Silove, MD Franzcp Prof Zachary Steel, PHD, M.Clin - Psych School of Psychiatry Unsw
Trauma & PTSD: Prof Derrick Silove, MD Franzcp Prof Zachary Steel, PHD, M.Clin - Psych School of Psychiatry Unsw
& PTSD
Prof Derrick Silove, MD FRANZCP
Prof Zachary Steel, PhD, M.Clin.Psych
School of Psychiatry UNSW
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder -
Origins
American Civil War ‘Da-Costa’s Syndrome”
Soldiers Heart,
UK description of Railway Spine
events
Major categories of trauma
(Potentially Traumatic Events)
Cognitions
Ecosocial signals
medial
prefrontal
cortex
Hippocampus Dynamic
(Context)
Balance
Amygdala
Hypothesised neural circuitry of PTSD
Thalamus (the gateway for sensory input),
Hippocampus (active in short-term memory
processing and fear-related associative learning)
Amygdala (centrally involved in conditioned fear
responses)
Posterior cingulate, parietal and motor cortex
(which appear to be involved in visual processing
and assessment of threat)
Medial prefrontal cortex, including the anterior
cingulate, orbitofrontal, and sub-callosal gyrus
(which are hypothesised to play a critical role in
extinguishing primitive subcortical responses)
Hypothesised neural circuitry of PTSD
International policies of
deterrence
Those living in community
restricted in access and
activities
Those in detention: until
recently, prolonged period
of confinement
Figure 1: Prevalence (95% Confidence Interval) of Depression & PTSD:
Permanent Residents (n=101) and Temporary Protection Visa Hoilders (n=140)
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
Past
Immigration TPV Status
detention
+ ve
Other influences
- ve
Family Integrity + ve
Pre-migration - ve
trauma / abuse
Hence need a wider, ecosocial framework for understanding
trauma in these populations: Adaptation and Development
After Persecution and Trauma (ADAPT) Model
Safety: Social: restoring peace, ensuring stability, end to
violence, secure housing, etc. Clinical: treatment for PTSD
Attachment: Social: Tracing, keeping families together,
reuniting, returning, consolidating communities, cultural
grieving rituals, remembrance; Clinical: treat complicated
grief
Identity Role: Social:Jobs, new roles, re-establishing
new identities, national aspirations, etc; Clinical: deal with
alienation, loss of direction
Justice: TRC, fair laws, tribunals; Clinical: deal with
anger
Meaning and Faith: religion, spirituality, political and
communal action; Clinical: deal with existential challenges
Mental Health in postconflict/resource
constrained environments eg East Timor
Combination of underdevelopment (artificial), mass
violence, displacement and persecution
Multiple unmet health needs: tropical, malnutrition,
physical trauma, neglect, maternal and child, etc.
No or poorly developed mental health services, “old”
institutional models, few or no MH professionals, poor
health infrastructure, doubts and stigma assoc. with MH
Debate whether to focus on: psychosocial programs that
build resilliency in population as a whole, on those with
trauma and grief reactions, or on the severely mentally ill
Situations of chaos: those who are bizarre or
incapable are at risk of exploitation, violence, head
injury, misadventure, malnutrition, disease, coercive
constraint
EAST TIMOR
35 y.o. man, chained to wall of house for 15 years,
psychotic, beaten almost to death by militia, released
and able to work in rice fields with family after 2
months treatment by PRADET.
18 y.o woman raped repeatedly in Emergency, locked in
burnt out “room”, mother caring for babyin open, no
food, Mo built high fences around ruins to safeguard
daughter: manic depression and PTSD
Tripartite Perspective
Severe
M.I
Psychosocial Trauma
Recovery
Comparison of Average Number of
Consultations by Disorder in Kakuma Camp,
1997-1999
16.0
Number of Consultations
14.0
12.0
10.0 1997
8.0 1998
6.0 1999
4.0
2.0
0.0
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Disorder
Principles of Intervention
Early post-emergency phase: Advise about importance of
restoring psychosocial stability based on ADAPT
principles: “the best therapist”
Emergency, community-based mental health service
working closely with primary care: based on urgency of
social need rather than diagnostic groupings:
PTSD: not too early and not too late: minority at social risk
tend to be selectively referred
Commence training and policy development, promote
community consultation and indigenous leadership
Reconstruction and Development
Phase
Establish community-wide network of mental
health services: equity, access, culturally-
appropriate, non-institutional, family-based
Incorporate indigenous and international concepts
and interventions
Ensure that special groups are attended to
including those with chronic traumatic/grief
syndromes who often are hidden from view
Promote mental health within the general health
agenda!