A comparison of narrative exposure therapy, supportive counseling, and psychoeducation for treating posttraumatic stress disorder in an african refugee settlement.
TL;DR: Results indicate that NET is a promising approach for the treatment of PTSD for refugees living in unsafe conditions.
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Abstract: Little is known about the usefulness of psychotherapeutic approaches for traumatized refugees who continue to live in dangerous conditions. Narrative exposure therapy (NET) is a short-term approach based on cognitive-behavioral therapy and testimony therapy. The efficacy of narrative exposure therapy was evaluated in a randomized controlled trial. Sudanese refugees living in a Ugandan refugee settlement (N = 43) who were diagnosed as suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) either received 4 sessions of NET, 4 sessions of supportive counseling (SC), or psychoeducation (PE) completed in 1 session. One year after treatment, only 29% of the NET participants but 79% of the SC group and 80% of the PE group still fulfilled PTSD criteria. These results indicate that NET is a promising approach for the treatment of PTSD for refugees living in unsafe conditions.
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Citations
Narrative Exposure Therapy (NET) : Reorganizing Memories of Traumatic Stress, Fear, and Violence
Thomas Elbert,Maggie Schauer,Frank Neuner +2 more
- 01 Jan 2015
TL;DR: In Narrative Exposure Therapy (NET), a client, with the assistance of the therapist, constructs a chronological narrative with a focus on the most stressful experiences, which is recorded by the therapist in written form and corrected and filled with details during moments of high emotional arousal as mentioned in this paper.
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Trauma Narratives: It's What You Say, Not How You Say It
TL;DR: Taken together, trauma narrative content rather than grammatical structure of the narrative may be more reflective of underlying emotional processing of the traumatic memory or lack thereof.
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TL;DR: In this article, a review of the relationship between war trauma and family violence is presented, showing that the experience of war violence is associated with an increased perpetration of violence within the family, in particular child maltreatment.
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Late Mental Health Changes in Tortured Refugees in Multidisciplinary Treatment
TL;DR: No clinically significant improvement was observed, but there is a need for further studies, in particular randomized trials evaluating the efficacy of various health-related and social interventions among severely traumatized refugees.
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