Showing posts with label PTSD in the News: Weekly Roundup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PTSD in the News: Weekly Roundup. Show all posts

Saturday, June 20, 2009

PTSD in the News: BIG NEWS DAY



Hello, Blog Friends!

PARASITES OF THE MIND no longer lives at this address.

WE'VE MOVED!


That's right, PARASITES OF THE MIND now has A NEW ADDRESS:

blog.healmyptsd.com

To keep up with us on a daily basis, please update your bookmark.

See you in the new hood!


(Photo: peglatz)

Saturday, June 13, 2009

PTSD in the News: Weekly Roundup



Back in the News saddle after a week of trauma conference coverage and other bumpy life things.

This afternoon I hosted a BTR show: ‘Bridging the Gap Between PTSD and The People Who Love Us’ — fabulous interview with my mom and Deb Vaughan, two people who have gone to great lengths to support survivors in recovery. For tips about how to facilitate communication and proactive healing, listen to the archived show here.

In the PTSD spotlight lately:


Civilian PTSD

Study: Female Police Officers May Hold the Key to Understanding Gender Differences in PTSD - Gender differences in the intensity and frequency of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) may not relate to biology as much as psychology, according to a new study of nearly 300 females - civilians and police officers.

AIG Balks at Claims from US Airways Jet Ditched in the Hudson River - Ms. Sosa said Sophia “remembers everything. I just want her to walk away from this knowing that we did everything we could to make it make sense.” A.I.G. agents have told her that for therapy she should use her own health insurance, but it has a $3,000 deductible for mental health care.

EMDR Helps Jewish Family and Children’s Services - ‘EMDR doesn’t erase the memory,’ says Barbra Quade, director of child and adolescent traumatic stress services at JFCS. ‘What it does is help people deal with their trauma so that it isn’t so troubling to think about.’

Childbirth Can Trigger PTSD - When you think of post-traumatic stress disorder, chances are you think of soldiers returning from Iraq or victims of sexual abuse. However, few people realize it can also be triggered by a long, complicated childbirth. Now, moms and medical experts want to spread the word.

Lifespan Integration Therapy - “Lifespan Integration is a new therapy that facilitates rapid healing in adults who suffered abuse and/or neglect while growing up. LI connects a current problem to a past memory and uses imagery to re-visit that past memory and resolve what happened.” Familton says. “One of the best aspects about LI is that clients do not have to talk about or sit in the difficult memories or emotions of past trauma.”

Emotional Freedom Technique: Forgive, Release, Let Go, Move On! - Although Rich had a difficult time believing that these rather strange procedures would work for him, he was open to giving them a try. After practicing EFT for 15 minutes, his height phobia went away. Then, after applying EFT to a few of his intense war memories, in about one hour they were neutralized.

Heroes & Healthcare - Reggie took her kids and moved to Oklahoma City in September of 2002. Because of the OKC bombing in 1995, Reggie believed doctors there knew enough to treat her children who were also suffering, along with their mom, from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).

Black Women Bear the Burden of Domestic Violence - Poor health ratings are far greater among African American battered women than for non-Hispanic white women or that of the general female population; post traumatic stress disorder is considerably higher.

Combat PTSD

Purple Heart Veterans Help New Generataion of Wounded - Older vets encouraging new veterans to seek treatment for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

Why Army Suicides Continued to Rise in May, And What We Can Do - The news gets more and more troubling when it comes to Army suicides, which continue on a record pace, according to the latest report. March and April saw 13 suicides each. May saw 17 suicides. The Army is taking the issue much more seriously, trying to stop the trend.

Battlefield Accupuncture - It was recently announced that the U.S. Air Force will begin training physicians being deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan in battlefield acupuncture.

U.S. Military Uses Alternative Medicine - The U.S. military is known for using super secret codes to identify sensitive projects. The key word here is sensitive. Who would have thought that the US military has a softer side? Project code name: iRest, short for Integrative Restoration, a code name for yoga nidra.

Education Key To PTSD Related Issues - ”Ignorance always feeds the fear of mental health injuries, and if you empower the people with the knowledge, it will definitely work in your favour to reduce the stigma,” Doucette said Wednesday.

Awareness is Key As Soldiers Return Home - Of the 1.5 million soldiers deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq since 2001, an estimated 5 to 10 percent have mild traumatic brain injury, and up to 60 percent of those also have post-traumatic stress disorder.

Homeless Vets Does Not = PTSD - Combat-related post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), has been found not to have a direct relationship with homelessness. Further, it has also been found that homeless combat veterans were no more likely to be diagnosed with PTSD than combat veterans who were not homeless.

Wounded Warrior Program Offers Massage & Facial Therapies - Massage, facial and related treatments are part of the recovery regimen at the Wounded Warrior Transition unit at Ft. Belvoir.

Pentagon Investigate Pill-Popping PTSD Prevention
- The Pentagon’s advanced research arm is hoping that a combination of neuroscience, psychology, and creative pill-popping can stop battlefield stress before it even starts. Darpa is hosting a one-day information session to solicit proposals for “Enabling Stress Resistance” among troops. They’re hoping to harness advances in molecular biology (the science of cell-to-cell interaction) and neuroscience that would short-circuit the brain’s stress response.

Understanding Post-Traumatic Stress - As well as PTSD being far less common than many believe, the former lieutenant colonel, who served in the Balkans and Rwanda during his 25-year Army career, emphasised that sufferers could nearly always be returned to full health: “The worse the traumatic event, the greater the possibility of troublesome symptoms but the overwhelming majority of PTSD cases respond well to treatment,” he said. “It is simply not the case that it is incurable.”
(Photo: birdfarm)

Saturday, May 30, 2009

PTSD in the News: Weekly Roundup


I'm trying out a new format for the news today: short synopses rather than just a linked title. Like? Dislike? Don't care?
Let me know what you prefer....

Also, a short note before the news: For those of you chiming in and/or following the 'Forgiveness' thread going on here with Nancy Richard's post and then mine, I think you'll find Jaliya's latest installment a really interesting way to further the ideas being bandied about.

Civilian PTSD

PTSD Can Surface for Years After Initial Trauma, 9/11 Study Shows A new study that assessed New Yorkers exposed to the events of September 11, 2001 provides additional evidence that posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can surface up to 2 years after the event in individuals with preexisting emotional or social problems

Protocol for investigating genetic determinants of posttraumatic stress disorder in women We posit inherited vulnerability to PTSD is mediated by genetic variation in three specific neurobiological systems whose alterations are implicated in PTSD etiology: the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, the locus coeruleus/noradrenergic system, and the limbic-frontal neuro-circuitry of fear. The secondary, exploratory aim of this study is to dissect genetic influences on PTSD in the broader genetic and environmental context for the candidate genes that show significant association with PTSD in detection analyses.

Bitterness as mental illness? Embittered people are typically good people who have worked hard at something important, such as a job, relationship or activity, Linden says. When something unexpectedly awful happens -- they don't get the promotion, their spouse files for divorce or they fail to make the Olympic team -- a profound sense of injustice overtakes them. -- Still wondering how anyone can call this a disorder of the PTSD variety.

Bitterness: The Next Mental Disorder? In its discussion of post-traumatic embitterment disorder, the APA may have correctly gauged the mood of the country, but as usual it has ignored or shunted aside most of the explanatory context, to pathologize the individual in all of her or his frustrated grievance. -- I'm, um, beginning to feel a little bitter about these stories.

Tornado survivor finally finds relief. Getting help (in the form of EMDR) was key.


Combat PTSD

TEAGUE'S PTSD MEASURE LOOKS TO AID TROOPS Rep. Harry Teague, D-N.M., said Wednesday he will introduce next week a bill aimed at bolstering services to address post-traumatic stress disorder, a condition affecting a growing number of troops who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan. The legislation, titled the Kyle Barthel Veterans and Service Members Mental Health Screening Act, would mandate mental health screening for personnel upon induction into the military, before and after deployment to a combat zone, and before discharge.

Post traumatic stress, suicidal soldiers and the nightmare. The consensus amongst physiatrists and psychologists alike is that suicide can be attributed to brain injuries and severe stress or Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Because there is a stigma among Western society and certainly in the military concerning mental illness, soldiers are hesitant to seek help and treatment. New programs are being implemented to educate service men and women to identify symptoms and to encourage them to seek help for PTSD.

Army Launching Program To Train Soldiers To Combat Post-Traumatic Stress. Faced with a growing number of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder cases in the armed forces, the U.S. Army will begin a program this summer to proactively address the problem by focusing on building the mental resilience of its personnel.

Rowing for Veterans. Cook's trip is sponsored by Rivers of Recovery, a non-profit program that helps raise awareness for veterans with disabilities. As executive director of the program, Cook is stopping at major metropolitan areas along the Missouri River and visiting veterans' hospitals to get the word out about the physiological benefits of recreational activity.

Paula Schnurr is a leading expert on post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD - at the Department of Veterans Affairs. She told EarthSky that 15% of those serving in Iraq might suffer from this disorder.

Veterans Affairs Money Flows To Rural Oregon Programs. The Portland Veterans Affairs Medical Center found out Thursday it will receive almost $2 million for rural mental health care in Oregon.

McCormick Foundation, Major League Baseball Announce $2.6 Million in Additional Grants for "Welcome Back Veterans". The McCormick Foundation's Board of Directors has approved $2.6 million in 2009 grants as part of Welcome Back Veterans, a national public awareness and fundraising initiative to address the mental health and employment needs of America's veterans and their families.

New weapons available to fight military stress. Wounded soldiers back from the battlegrounds rehabilitate at places like Bethesda Naval Hospital and Walter Reed. Now the military is taking steps to improve their care once they leave.

"A Wound in the Mind", a short novel of combat-related stress disorder penned by Francis J. Partel Jr. Mr. Partel was a young naval officer who served in the Southeast Asian naval theater in which his book takes place.

VA reaches out to veterans. Years of free health care are available to those who served in 2 battle zones.

Horse therapy helping Ft. Huachuca soldiers cope with war stress. The Warriors in Transition Unit helps soldiers adjust their feelings of isolation, anger and grief. One way to help is with horses.

Online Network Available to Veterans. California has a sophisticated new web site this Memorial Day weekend, linking veterans to thousands of different services. Network of Care directs war veterans and others to programs designed to mend wounds both visible and invisible.


(Photo: Claudiaveja)

Saturday, May 23, 2009

PTSD in the News: Weekly Roundup


A sort of light newsweek, but still some interesting topics.....

First, how do we feel about this:

The psychiatric community recently discussed at a conference the idea of Post-Traumatic Embitterment Disorder. Modeled after PTSD this is a ‘mental illness’ of people who are wronged and then seethe with the need for revenge.

Are we feeling generous enough to let them co-opt our lingo? Does feeling embittered qualify on the same level as feeling life-threatened? Or, are you really just sore and a little more OCD than PTSD?

General PTSD

Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common PTSD symptom – here, A Holistic Approach to Healing IBS

As far away as Thailand People Tap to Heal


Combat PTSD

Auburn, WA – Restoring the Earth Helps Vets Heal – Green education and employment opportunities help vets re-enter civilian life with purpose

Dr. Sanjay Gupta Talks PTSD

Greenbrae, CA – Marin Services for Women to Help Female Vets

Washington – ‘Real Warriors’ Campaign Takes Aim At Mental Health Stigma

(Photo: Darco Drincic)

Saturday, May 16, 2009

PTSD in the News: Weekly Roundup


Before we get to the news, just a reminder that the PTSD community is joining together to help me build the most survivor-friendly and PTSD resource oriented web site on the net. If you haven’t already read about this project, read this post and leave a comment or shoot me an email with your thoughts.

News for both civilian and combat PTSD: An Adventure In Grief – memoir about a woman dealing with grief over the suicide of her Vietnam Vet husband. The book is interesting in that it looks at both sides; the PTSDer and the family member, both on their own personal journey.

Civilian PTSD

Television Show ‘Healthy Minds’ goes national, including PTSD episode

Treating Children Traumatized by War & Tsunami

Help for Depression and Other Mental Illnesses

Women At Greater Risk for Depression and Anxiety

Controlling the Brain’s Perceptions of Emotional Events

Energy Psychology Book Wins National Award

Police and PTSD


Combat PTSD

Yoga Center Has Answer to Military Stress Crisis
Following the news of the stress-related shootings at Camp Liberty in Baghdad, Yoga For You, a privately-owned yoga center in eastern North Carolina, today released plans for a special restorative program aimed specifically to relieve symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). For more info

For Veterans Back From War, Writing Proves to Be A Balm

John Wayne Attitude Cited in Military Mental Health Issues

House passes HR 2346, the supplemental appropriations bill that covers necessary costs to fund our troops and support their families

Kansas National Guard on Oprah re: Healing PTSD

Vietnam Vet with PTSD turns to fiction

Your Military Life: Combat related PTSD; radio show with Bob Page, Marine turned Navy senior chief talking about his own PTSD healing.

Why PTSD Rates Keep Climbing

Did Doctor’s Deny Iraq Shooter’s Stress

Can Lessons On Vietnam Help Iraq’s Vets?

Local Veterans Affairs Boosts Treatment for PTSD Patients

Mental Health Military Style

Veteran Talks About PTSD in Hopes of Helping Others

Female Veteran Talks About PTSD

Soldiers on the Homefront: Adjusting to Life After War

Montana’s National Guard Tackles Stress, PTSD with community meetings

PTSD Vet Program in Las Vegas

Research Proves Vets Overcoming PTSD with EFT

Iowa Soldiers Watch for Signs of PTSD

Top 10 Veterans News

Review: The Secret Life of War

Often Ignored, PTSD Surfaces Slowly

(Photo: LittleImage)

Saturday, May 9, 2009

PTSD in the News: Weekly Roundup



The first bit of news has to do with the new poll on the sidebar:

Q: Who have you told about your PTSD diagnosis?

A: Friends, Family, Partner, Colleagues, No one.

Have you left your answer yet? I'm interested in getting a sense of how much we talk. I didn't tell anyone but my family for a long time. When I finally got comfortable with the idea of my diagnosis I told a few friends so they could understand my odd behavior whenever it somehow impacted them.

I did not, however, tell the man I was seeing at the time. Right, or wrong? Well, that relationship was doomed anyway.

In a PTSD forum I participate in a new conversation has cropped up about when to tell your partner about your past. Or, more pointedly, how that past affects your present. Something to think about as the BRIDGE THE GAP workshop topic for the month is how and when and who to tell about our PTSD diagnosis.

And now, for this week's hot topics in PTSDland:


***Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Study***

If you have been affected by a traumatic or life-threatening experience, you may qualify for this study of PTSD. The research site is in New York City. For more information please click here.


Civilian PTSD


Combat PTSD




Saturday, May 2, 2009

PTSD in the News: Weekly Roundup



First off today is our rather uninspired voting turnout to the question, ‘How Much Do you Know About PTSD’. The results:

26% = I know everything there is to know.
19% = I know what I experience.
46% = I’m learning but taking it slowly.
7% = I don’t want to know anything just make it go away.

What do you want to know about the thoughts and ideas of your fellow PTSDers? If you have polling questions you think would be interesting to and illuminating of the PTSD community and experience leave a comment or shoot me an email.

Next piece of business: Very exciting - I’m beginning to build the Heal My PTSD, LLC, web site! (For those of you who haven't heard, I’m launching a PTSD advocacy organization.) This will be a web site for the PTSD community, to heal the community, so I’d like to build it with the input of the community. That means YOU. Please take a moment or two to send your favorite PTSD, healing, treatment, resource, info sites and blogs so that I can house all of the best information in one place. You can email me at parasitesof.themind@ yahoo.com.

And now, on with our regularly scheduled programming: This week’s PTSD hot topics –

Civilian PTSD:

Bouncing Back from Bad Times; 9 Ways to Build Resilience

A source of PTSD you probably haven’t considered, which just serves to remind us that PTSD comes from all kinds of causes.

Exposure based CBT effective treatment in PTSD patients with schizophrenia

Children Exposed to Violence Have PTSD Symptoms

Many Holocaust Survivors Live with PTSD

Yoga Therapy Designed for PTSD


Combat PTSD:

A Vietnam Vet and his Art

Women, the military and PTSD

Chairman Hall Holds Hearing To Discuss the PTSD Act

Vets Back to War Zone

Local Veterans Talk About Experience with PTSD

Returning Soldiers Treated for brain injury & PTSD

Pentagon Using Virtual Reality to Treat PTSD

Northwest Congressman introduces legislation to screen for PTSD
Kerry, Patrick Kennedy Eye Drug Courts for Vets

Top 10 Veterans News From Around the Country

Veterans Backing Jones’ Bill

Virtual Reality Therapy

Robinson Offers Stats About VA

How Much Influence Brain Injuries Have On PTSD

VA Launches New Web Site for Veterans

An interesting little factoid this week:

“A United States study confirms … that 65% of combat victims with post-traumatic stress disorder have reported hearing voices.”

I haven't heard this before. Anyone have experience with this, or know more about how often it occurs and how it's treated?



(Photo: Jerry L.)

Saturday, April 11, 2009

PTSD in the News: Weekly Roundup



A quick overview of PTSD hot topics this week…


Civilian PTSD

Holistic Psychiatrists Discuss Using Herbs, Nutrients and Yoga for Enhancing Mental Health

(San Diego) Neurofeedback for PTSD Treatment

Yoga For Anxiety & Depression

Stress: Paying the Price of Fearing Fear Itself

PTSD in Post Rape

PTSD May Be Diagnosed with Brain Scan

No Direct Link Between Panic Attacks, PTSD

Witnessing Suicide Could Cause PTSD

How a Stroke Can Cause PTSD

Migraines Increase Risk of PTSD

The Messy Future Of Memory Editing Drugs

(Inspiring) Stories of Survival

Drug-Free Therapy Could Erase Memories


Combat PTSD

Tale of the Secret Army Tape

What Motive Does the Army Have to Misdiagnose PTSD?

PTSD and the Female Soldier

Wounded Warrior Grants for VA Vets

Wounded Warrior Project Concerned By Stigma of PTSD

Ceremony To Recognize Vets Not Eligible for Vietnam Wall Inclusion

Tracing A Patriot At Vimy (How to Trace Your Family’s World War I History)

Obama Announces Joint Virtual Electronic Record

Diagnostic Abuse of Veterans

(Michigan) Hippie Fest Supports the Troops

Support the Post Deployment Reassessment Act of 2009

Fact Sheet On Proposed Fiscal Year 2010 Defense Budget

White House Transcripts: Remarks By President Obama About Improving Veterans’ Healthcare

(North Haven, CT) Elliot Storm, author of These Scars Are Sacred, to speak on Combat PTSD

(Seattle, WA) The Warrior’s Journey: Workshop with Ed Tick (world-renowned vet psychotherapist)

Ohio Support Center Focuses on Returning Vets

Veterans Advocate Answers Questions

(Oregon) Missing in America Project Seeks Out Forgotten Vets

Puppies Behind Bars Program Places Service Dog with Iraq Vet

VetVoice: PTSD and the Current System

VA Hospital Using Exposure Therapy

(Texas) Bill Aids PTSD Sufferers

Utah Filmmaker Seeks to Help Veterans

The Battle After the Adrenaline Fades

Saturday, March 28, 2009

PTSD in the News: Weekly Roundup


Last night John and I went salsa dancing. When we came off the floor after a set a woman I’d never seen before reached out and touched my arm, Congratulations!, she said. I had no idea what she meant. On your dancing, she said in a Spanish accent. Your dancing: Beautiful! And with that she moved off into the crowd.

If she had seen me two years ago she would have bet good odds that I’d never be able to salsa. I couldn’t find the beat, and if I could, I couldn’t stay on it. I couldn’t move my feet that fast or follow anything but the most basic lead. I went forward when I should have gone back. The first night John took me to a Latin club I was a disaster.

My dance evolution happened slowly and now that it’s done I don’t think about it. But that woman was right: congratulations are in order!

Sometimes it takes someone from without to help you recognize and appreciate the progress you’ve made within.

And then, there are times you need to stop looking within and look without, like, say, at what’s going on in the PTSD world outside your head:

Let’s start with one for everyone:

If you haven’t caught up with Grey’s Anatomy lately, check out the Combat PTSD storyline here.


Civilian PTSD:

What is Psychological Trauma?

Scientists On Track To Erase Your Worst Fears

Eye See You: Brainspotting, A Cureall for Psychological Trauma, or Parlor Trick?

How Do I Calm Down and Deal with Stress?

Volunteers Sought For PTSD, Chronic Pain Study




(Photo: Sionfullana)

Saturday, March 21, 2009

PTSD in the News: Weekly Roundup


It’s nice to travel, but…. Wow, it feels good to be home! I don’t know what it is about Miami; there’s just something too cheesy about it. I don’t get what everyone loves about South Beach, and I know why nobody loves North Beach. There’s something so right about Jupiter Beach, which is just a 10 minute drive from my house.

Here in my little beach town it’s gray and raining and the perfect day to catch up on some reading….

Before we get to the individual categories of civilian and military news topics, let's start with this nugget:

For everyone: This article raises an interesting point about how society's focus and perception on PTSD can increase its power. Don't look at this just from a military perspective; all of us can say there's a necessary transition after trauma. Do we agree or disagree with the hypothesis put forth in this piece?

Soldier’s Stress: What Doctors Get Wrong About PTSD

A growing number of experts insist that the concept of post-traumatic stress disorder is itself disordered and that soldiers are suffering as a result.

Question for vets: Do you agree or disagree? Please help me better understand the Combat-PTSD experience so I can learn how to better advocate in that area.


For civilians:

Stress So Bad It Hurts
Well, we all know this, but this great article gets into the details.

Time for Healing: Reclaiming Life After Trauma

Stress Makes the Brain ‘Log Out’
Evidence supporting the idea that PTSD affects the neural level of the brain.

Grateful Traveler: The Wright Way to Travel, Part 2
This is an awe-inspiring story of a woman who overcame the odds of survival and recovery, and a ppek into how she used the power of her mind to do it.

New Treatment Strategy for PTSD
I’m not a big proponent of medication in the therapy mix. But this is a different take on drug therapy for PTSD, one that doesn’t alter the mind but alters levels of cortisol, which of course, positively affects the mind in the case of PTSD.

Dating Website for Mentally Ill Launched in U.S.
Not sure how I feel about this…. What do you think??

The Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Sourcebook
Anyone read this? If you have, let us know what you think of it…

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: 60 Stories on Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
This might be a little much, but if you’re in need of a dose of ‘you’re-not-alone’ stories, this will do the trick!


Combat PTSD:

This week marks the sixth anniversary of the Iraq war, and the beginning of a rising swell of recognition of the PTSD toll on our vets and the need for them to receive better psychological care when they return from battle.

Army looks to increase treatment options for PTSD

Better Treatment for War Vets

Tempe Veteran Among Those Helped by VA

Helping Heroes: Southwest Florida Steps Up
OK, I’m usually the first to say that my home state is backward and behind the times, but this article about Operation Open Arms, a non-profit org that’s giving free vacations and mental health care to vets renews my faith in the Sunshine State!

Bill Would Ease Vets’ Access to Get Help For Stress
Of course, it’s my original home state of New York that’s breaking ground in proposing legislation to eliminate the burden of proof in vets’ PTSD diagnosis. Interesting facts here relating to PTSD stats, too.

Six Years Later
Taking a look at the stats.

Airforce Unveils Brain Injury Clinic in Alaska

Army Responds to Record Number of Suicides
A glimpse into suicide prevention.

Children Deal With PTSD, too

Healing Horses Help Military Personnel and Veterans With Disabilities

Soldier’s Battling PTSD in Texas

Mothering From the Frontlines
An insightful look from the UK at how women soldiering impacts families.

Vets Group True Blue to New Fight
OK, this week Florida is really surprising me with its proactive busyness.

Talking With Heroes Talk Show Launch


(Photo: Bryan Frank Photography)

Saturday, March 14, 2009

PTSD in the News: Weekly Roundup


First, let’s keep it local. In case you missed some things this week, a roundup of what was happening on Parasites of the Mind:

I’ve succumbed to the Twitter phenomenon; join me by clicking on the link to the left.

You’ll notice the new Heal My PTSD logo above the Twitter link. Yes, friends, bigger things are in the works and coming soon…

If you missed my PTSD healing radio interview with life coach and author, Rena Reese, check it out here. We had a great conversation and covered a lot of good stuff about the basics of healing PTSD.

And if you missed Michelle Payton’s FREE self-hypnosis teleseminar, you can access the MP3 download here for free until Monday. I listened to the call; it gives a great amount of info on self-hypnosis, plus introductory tips for an effective practice.

22nd Child Abuse Blog Carnival is going on over at My Cloud, My Storms and Multiple Personality Disorder

Finally, the most viewed and commented posts this week:

PTSD Healing: The 5Ws of Reaching Out

Meandering Michele’s Mind: 18 Tips for Coping with Flashbacks

Survivors Speak: Remembering Childhood Sexual Abuse





(Photo: lowpoly)

Saturday, March 7, 2009

PTSD in the News


A new weekly feature, Saturdays’ posts will contain links to PTSD articles that hit the web in the past week. The gist here is to key us all in to what’s going on with PTSD all over the world so that we might gain insight into our own experience or find new things that might be helpful.

New Orleans, LA: Free Mental Healthcare for St. Bernard Parish Residents experiencing PTSD when returning home after Katrina

New York, NY: ‘Bent On Yoga’ Program to Help Children with PTSD

Otago, New Zealand: The Brain is Adaptable and Resilient

New Orleans, LA: Study of Hyperbaric Treatment for PTSD

Baltimore, MD: Study Shows Why PTSD Ups Suicide Risk

Denver, CO: How PTSD Impacts A Person

United Kingdom: Manipulating Memory (research may impact PTSD healing)



Combat PTSD Topics:

Chicago, IL: New Art Project Hopes to Help Vets Talk

London: America’s Wounded Veteran’s Get First Class Care

London: The Scandal Of Our Traumatised Troops

Washington, DC: Injured Soldiers, Shelter Dogs Help Each Other

Navy Times: Mental Health Issues Most Common Condition

Beaumont, Texas: Veterans Find Help In Becoming Job-Holding Civilians In Workforce Program

Montgomery, AL: Meeting Helps Vet Groups Find Common Ground

Allentown, PA: PTSD Treatment Center To Help Vets Heal

Bakersfield, CA: Bakersfield Veterans to Get Much Needed Mental Health Services

Nationwide: Free Yoga for Vets

Shreveport, LA: Marine Veteran Gives Warning and Hope at Fort Polk


What do you think about this new feature? Does it hit the mark? Would you prefer to see something else? Leave a comment or shoot me an email.


(Photo: porgunnur porsdottir)