Assessing and Treating PTSD in Veterans: Considerations for Professionals, Families, and Patients
CT requirements for veterans and family mental health issues
Assessing and treating PTSD in veterans provides distinct challenges for professionals. Multiple complexities need to be considered when conceptualizing and implementing treatment plans. Factors such as race, ethnicity, sex, personal history, and both military and family dynamics must be attended to.
This beginner/intermediate level course is designed to assist clinicians in understanding and addressing many of the nuances unique to the veteran population. All content is presented in both audio and text formats. The first section provides best practices as defined by the VA and Department of Defense guidelines. The second section contains a number of short articles articulating how PTSD impacts people of color, ethnic minorities, women, older adults, and families.
In the final section, Dr. Glenn Marks, a former military and VA psychologist, provides perspectives based on empirical data, anecdotal reports, and personal observations. He begins with a brief discussion of the military and VA systems, then segues into discussions of the various aspects of PTSD that should guide treatment decisions. He addresses factors such as moral injuries, hyperarousal, and comorbid conditions, and provides an introduction to non-traditional approaches to treatment that are gaining attention. He ends by mentioning topics seldomly discussed in either the literature or by patients that can help clinicians better understand some veteran’s experiences.
Educational Objectives
This course will teach the participant to
- Discuss the VA/DOD guidelines for assessment and treatment of PTSD
- Discuss disparities in accessing care experienced by persons of diverse ethnic and racial backgrounds
- Identify how sexual trauma impacts the careers of women in the military
- Identify the impact of PTSD on families
- Conceptualize and develop treatment plans for treating PTSD
Syllabus
- VA/DOD guidelines for management of PTSD
- PTSD in specific populations
- PTSD and racial trauma
- Addressing patient reactions to race-based violence during PTSD treatment
- Native Americans
- PTSD in Older Adults
- Co-occurring conditions
- Late onset
- Research on women, trauma, and PTSD
- Military sexual trauma
- Understanding the military and VA systems
- War experiences
- Who develops PTSD
- Incentives for both the over and underreporting of symptoms
- Treatment planning conceptualization
- Factors to consider
- Treating chronic hypervigilance
- Comorbid conditions
- Mechanisms of change
- Non-conventional treatment approaches
- Ketamine and hallucinogens
- Seldomly discussed war experiences
- The thrill of combat
- Sexual arousal