Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD): What Is It
When working with cops, firefighters, abuse victims and
children of addicts, we’ve learned that there are many causes for PTSD. PTSD is
real and harmful, not only to those who have it, but also to those around them.
It impacts the way we act, react, our motivation and our capacity to feel.
Terrifying experiences that shatter people's sense of
predictability and invulnerability can profoundly alter their coping skills,
relationships and the way they perceive and interact with the world. The
criteria for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) are 1) exposure to a
traumatic event(s) in which the person witnessed or experienced or were confronted
with an event or events that involved actual or threatened death or serious
injury, or a threat to the physical integrity of self or others, and 2) the
person’s response involved intense fear, helplessness or horror. Gradual Onset Traumatic Stress Disorder can
be caused by repeated exposure to “sub-critical incidents” such as child abuse,
traffic fatalities, rapes and personal assaults.
Nevertheless, not all people exposed to trauma are
“traumatized.” Why? In 1998, Pynoos and Nader
proposed a theory to assist in explaining why people have different reactions
to the same event. They asserted that people are at greater risk of being
negatively impacted by traumatic events if any of the following are present: 1)
they have experienced other traumatic events within the preceding 6 months, 2)
they were already stressed out or depressed at the time of the event, 3) the
situation occurred close to their home or somewhere they considered safe, 4)
the victims bear a similarity to a family member or friend and 5) they have
little social support.
It has been argued that officers, emergency service
personnel, children of addicts and abuse victims experience traumatic events or
threats to their safety on an almost daily basis. Being abused, not knowing
when or if your parents will come home, repeatedly seeing children murdered, people burned in car fires and devastated victims starts to
take its toll. People, like idealistic
officers, who joined the force to change the world and protect the innocent
begin to feel like nothing they do makes a difference, they cannot even keep
their zone safe. This is especially problematic for officers who live in or
near their work zone and often leads to frustration and burnout. Children start
to feel that the whole world is uncontrollable and unsafe.
It is still not totally accepted within the law
enforcement community for officers to discuss the impact of situations on them.
Anger, humor and sarcasm are but a brief outlet for what many officers dream
about at night. As their condition worsens, many officers withdraw, because
they are fearful of seeking help or support for fear it is a one way ticket to
a fitness for duty evaluation or will get out and be an obstacle for future
promotions. Several studies in recent years have shown that Post Traumatic
Stress Disorder (PTSD) is among the most common of psychiatric disorders.
Another thing that distinguishes people who develop
PTSD from those who are just temporarily overwhelmed is that people
who develop PTSD become "stuck" on the trauma, keep re-living it in
thoughts, feelings, or images. It is this intrusive reliving, rather than the
trauma itself that many believe is responsible for what we call PTSD. For
example, I have worked with officers who have responded to child abuse calls
and had a child of their own who was a similar age (criteria 4). In the course
of daily life children get hurt and have bad dreams. As parents they have seen
looks of pain and fright on their kids faces. This
makes it just that much easier to envision the looks of terror and agony on the
face of the child as their parent beat them. Sometimes this visualization gets
corrupted and officers suddenly they start to see their child in their mental
re-enactment of the trauma, obviously a much more powerful memory. These officers
are much more likely to be “traumatized” by the incident and potentially get
“stuck.”
Traumatized individuals begin organizing their lives
around avoiding the trauma. Avoidance may take many different forms: keeping
away from reminders, calling in sick to work, or ingesting drugs or alcohol
that numb awareness of distress. The sense of futility, hyperarousal,
and other trauma-related changes may permanently change how people deal with
stress, alter thier self-concept and interfere with
their view of the world as a basically safe and predictable place. In the
example above, these people often became even more overprotective of their
children, suspicious of others, and had difficulty sleeping, because every time
they close their eyes they see the child.
One of the core issues in trauma is the fact that
memories of what has happened cannot be integrated into one's general
experience. The lack of people’s ability to make this “fit” into their
expectations or the way they think about the world in a way that makes sense
keeps the experience stored in the mind on a sensory level. When people
encounter smells, sounds or other sensory stimuli that remind them of the
event, it may trigger a similar response to what the person originally had:
physical sensations (such as panic attacks), visual images (such as flashbacks
and nightmares), obsessive ruminations, or behavioral reenactments of elements
of the trauma. In the example above, sensory triggers that triggered some of
the officers memories were certain cries, hearing or seeing a parent spank
their child, returning to the same neighborhood for other calls and, of course,
television shows or news reports that involved descriptions of abuse.
The goal of treatment is to find a way in which people
can acknowledge the reality of what has happened and somehow integrate it into
their understanding of the world without having to re-experience the trauma all
over again.
The Symptoms of PTSD
Regardless of the origin of the terror, the brain
reacts to overwhelming, threatening, and uncontrollable experiences with
conditioned emotional responses. For example, rape victims may respond to
conditioned stimuli, such as the approach by an unknown man, as if they were
about to be raped again, and experience panic. Remembrance and intrusion of the
trauma is expressed on many different levels, ranging from flashbacks,
feelings, physical sensations, nightmares, and interpersonal re-enactments.
Interpersonal re-enactments can be especially problematic for the officer
leading to over-reaction in situations that remind the officer of previous
experiences in which she or he has felt helpless. For example, in the child
abuse example above, officers may be much more physically and verbally
aggressive toward alleged perpetrators and their reports tend to be much more
negative and subjective.
Hyperarousal: While people with PTSD
tend to deal with their environment by reducing their range of emotions or
numbing, their bodies continue to react to certain physical and emotional
stimuli as if there were a continuing threat. This arousal is supposed to alert
the person to potential danger, but seems to loose
that function in traumatized people. This is sort of like when rookie officers
start and a hot call is toned out, they usually have an adrenaline rush. After
two or three years, the tones hardly have any impact on them. Since traumatized
people are always “keyed up” they often do not pay any attention to that
feeling which is supposed to warn them of impending danger.
Numbing of responsiveness: Aware of their difficulties
in controlling their emotions, traumatized people seem to spend their energies
on avoiding distress. In addition, they lose pleasure in things that previously
gave them a sense of satisfaction. They may feel "dead to the world".
This emotional numbing may be expressed as depression, and lack of motivation,
or as physical reactions. After being traumatized, many
people stop feeling pleasure from involvement in activities, and they feel that
they just "go through the motions" of everyday living.
Emotional numbness also gets in the way of resolving the trauma in therapy.
Intense emotional reactions and sleep problems.
Traumatized people go immediately from incident to reaction without being able
to first figure out what makes them so upset. They tend to experience intense
fear, anxiety, anger and panic in response to even minor stimuli. This makes
them either overreact and intimidate others, or to shut down and freeze. Both
adults and children with such hyperarousal will
experience sleep problems, because they are unable to settle down enough to go
to sleep, and because they are afraid of having nightmares. Many traumatized
people report dream-interruption insomnia: they wake themselves up as soon as
they start having a dream, for fear that this dream will turn into a
trauma-related nightmare. They also are liable to exhibit hypervigilance,
exaggerated startle response and restlessness.
Learning difficulties: Being “keyed-up”
interferes with the capacity to concentrate and to learn from experience.
Traumatized people often have trouble remembering ordinary events. It is
helpful to always write things down for them. Often “keyed-up” and having
difficulty paying attention, they may display symptoms of attention deficit
disorder.
After a trauma, people often regress to earlier modes
of coping with stress. In adults, it is expressed in excessive dependence and
in a loss of capacity to make thoughtful, independent decisions. In officers,
this is often noticed because they suddenly begin making a lot of poor
decisions, their reports lose quality and detail and they are unable to focus.
In children they may begin wetting their bed, having fears of monsters or
having temper tantrums.
Aggression against self and others:
Both adults and children who have been traumatized are likely to turn their
aggression against others or themselves. Due to their persistent anxiety,
traumatized people are almost always “stressed out,” so it does not take much
to them set off. This aggression may take many forms ranging from fighting to
excessive exercise or obsession about something---anything to keep them from
thinking about the trauma.
Psychosomatic reactions: Chronic anxiety and
emotional numbing also get in the way of learning to identify and discuss
internal states and wishes. May traumatized people report a high frequency of
headaches, back and neck aches, gastro-intestinal problems etceteras. Since the
stress is being held inside, the body begins to become distressed.
Summary
After a trauma, people realize the limited scope of
their safety, power and control in the world, and life can never be exactly the
same. The traumatic experience becomes part of a person's life. Sorting out
exactly what happened and sharing one’s reactions with others can make a great
deal of difference a person’s recovery. Putting the reactions and thoughts
related to the trauma into words is essential in the resolution of post
traumatic reactions. This should, however, be done with a professional
specializing in PTSD due to the wide range of reactions people have when they
start confronting and integrating the memories of the trauma.
Failure to approach trauma related material gradually
is likely to make things worse. Often, talking about the trauma is not enough:
trauma survivors need to take some action that symbolizes triumph over
helplessness and despair. The Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem and the Vietnam
Memorial in Washington, DC, are good examples of symbols for survivors to mourn
the dead and establish the historical and cultural meaning of the traumatic
events. There are several events for survivors of traumas that officers can
also take part in. These events remind survivors of the fact that there are
others who have shared similar experiences. Other symbolic actions may take the
form of writing a book, taking political action or helping other victims.
PTSD is real, and can be resolved with time, patience
and compassion.
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