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This episode, "Are we wasting our clients' time?" is a discussion with Professors Ad de Jongh and Suzy Mattijssen (part 1 of 2), pioneers in the intensive, brief, research-validated treatment of PTSD, including cases with severe comorbidities like MDD or BPD. Iconoclastic and exuberant, Ad and Suzy are accomplished academics and clinicians, and their CV's are so long as to require hyperlinks below this paragraph! The host presents common objections to their methods from therapeutic community--these generally focus on the way in which dissociative symptoms should be addressed in treatment.
Ad de Jongh's CV:
-The largely American cultural phenomenon of treating dissociative symptoms as separate from PTSD symptoms
-Ad and Suzy's claim that there is an irrational fear of dissociative symptoms among some clinicians (especially in the EMDR world), which is not seen in the CBT world
-Highly dissociated childhood memories accessed and resolved by associations naturally made during intensive treatment of recent trauma, rather than years of therapy
-The lack of research validation for the Theory of Structural Dissociation of the Personality, and similar conceptualizations of dissociation as "parts."
-Repression of uncomfortable memories and dissociation of troubling affect as a universal phenomenon, not related directly to trauma
-Therapists increasing the phobia of memories with "safe states," coping skills, and "resourcing."
-The PSYTREC facility, and the role of Working Memory Taxation in overcoming hypervigilance and resolving trauma
By Various hosts and guestsThis episode, "Are we wasting our clients' time?" is a discussion with Professors Ad de Jongh and Suzy Mattijssen (part 1 of 2), pioneers in the intensive, brief, research-validated treatment of PTSD, including cases with severe comorbidities like MDD or BPD. Iconoclastic and exuberant, Ad and Suzy are accomplished academics and clinicians, and their CV's are so long as to require hyperlinks below this paragraph! The host presents common objections to their methods from therapeutic community--these generally focus on the way in which dissociative symptoms should be addressed in treatment.
Ad de Jongh's CV:
-The largely American cultural phenomenon of treating dissociative symptoms as separate from PTSD symptoms
-Ad and Suzy's claim that there is an irrational fear of dissociative symptoms among some clinicians (especially in the EMDR world), which is not seen in the CBT world
-Highly dissociated childhood memories accessed and resolved by associations naturally made during intensive treatment of recent trauma, rather than years of therapy
-The lack of research validation for the Theory of Structural Dissociation of the Personality, and similar conceptualizations of dissociation as "parts."
-Repression of uncomfortable memories and dissociation of troubling affect as a universal phenomenon, not related directly to trauma
-Therapists increasing the phobia of memories with "safe states," coping skills, and "resourcing."
-The PSYTREC facility, and the role of Working Memory Taxation in overcoming hypervigilance and resolving trauma