Moving forward with the loss of a loved one: treating PTSD following traumatic bereavement with cognitive therapy

<p>Traumatic loss is associated with high rates of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and appears to inhibit the natural process of grieving, meaning that patients who develop PTSD after loss trauma are also at risk of experiencing enduring grief. Here we present how to treat PTSD arising f...

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Main Authors: Wild, J, Duffy, M, Ehlers, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2023
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author Wild, J
Duffy, M
Ehlers, A
author_facet Wild, J
Duffy, M
Ehlers, A
author_sort Wild, J
collection OXFORD
description <p>Traumatic loss is associated with high rates of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and appears to inhibit the natural process of grieving, meaning that patients who develop PTSD after loss trauma are also at risk of experiencing enduring grief. Here we present how to treat PTSD arising from traumatic bereavement with cognitive therapy (CT-PTSD; Ehlers <i>et al.</i>, 2005). The paper describes the core components of CT-PTSD for bereavement trauma with illustrative examples, and clarifies how the therapy differs from treating PTSD associated with trauma where there is no loss of a significant other. A core aim of the treatment is to help the patient to shift their focus from loss to what has not been lost, from a focus on their loved one being gone to considering how they may take their loved one forward in an abstract, meaningful way to achieve a sense of continuity in the present with what has been lost in the past. This is often achieved with imagery transformation, a significant component of the memory updating procedure in CT-PTSD for bereavement trauma. We also consider how to approach complexities, such as suicide trauma, loss of a loved one in a conflicted relationship, pregnancy loss and loss of life caused by the patient.</p> <br> <p><strong>Key learning aims</strong></p><br> <p>(1) To be able to apply Ehlers and Clark’s (2000) cognitive model to PTSD arising from bereavement trauma.</p> <p>(2) To recognise how the core treatment components differ for PTSD associated with traumatic bereavement than for PTSD linked to trauma where there is no loss of life.</p> <p>(3) To discover how to conduct imagery transformation for the memory updating procedure in CT-PTSD for loss trauma.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:d321e459-4196-48ce-905b-01d0d52474b52023-09-14T09:30:52ZMoving forward with the loss of a loved one: treating PTSD following traumatic bereavement with cognitive therapyJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:d321e459-4196-48ce-905b-01d0d52474b5EnglishSymplectic ElementsCambridge University Press 2023Wild, JDuffy, MEhlers, A<p>Traumatic loss is associated with high rates of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and appears to inhibit the natural process of grieving, meaning that patients who develop PTSD after loss trauma are also at risk of experiencing enduring grief. Here we present how to treat PTSD arising from traumatic bereavement with cognitive therapy (CT-PTSD; Ehlers <i>et al.</i>, 2005). The paper describes the core components of CT-PTSD for bereavement trauma with illustrative examples, and clarifies how the therapy differs from treating PTSD associated with trauma where there is no loss of a significant other. A core aim of the treatment is to help the patient to shift their focus from loss to what has not been lost, from a focus on their loved one being gone to considering how they may take their loved one forward in an abstract, meaningful way to achieve a sense of continuity in the present with what has been lost in the past. This is often achieved with imagery transformation, a significant component of the memory updating procedure in CT-PTSD for bereavement trauma. We also consider how to approach complexities, such as suicide trauma, loss of a loved one in a conflicted relationship, pregnancy loss and loss of life caused by the patient.</p> <br> <p><strong>Key learning aims</strong></p><br> <p>(1) To be able to apply Ehlers and Clark’s (2000) cognitive model to PTSD arising from bereavement trauma.</p> <p>(2) To recognise how the core treatment components differ for PTSD associated with traumatic bereavement than for PTSD linked to trauma where there is no loss of life.</p> <p>(3) To discover how to conduct imagery transformation for the memory updating procedure in CT-PTSD for loss trauma.</p>
spellingShingle Wild, J
Duffy, M
Ehlers, A
Moving forward with the loss of a loved one: treating PTSD following traumatic bereavement with cognitive therapy
title Moving forward with the loss of a loved one: treating PTSD following traumatic bereavement with cognitive therapy
title_full Moving forward with the loss of a loved one: treating PTSD following traumatic bereavement with cognitive therapy
title_fullStr Moving forward with the loss of a loved one: treating PTSD following traumatic bereavement with cognitive therapy
title_full_unstemmed Moving forward with the loss of a loved one: treating PTSD following traumatic bereavement with cognitive therapy
title_short Moving forward with the loss of a loved one: treating PTSD following traumatic bereavement with cognitive therapy
title_sort moving forward with the loss of a loved one treating ptsd following traumatic bereavement with cognitive therapy
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