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Journal Article

Citation

Rauch SA, Grunfeld TE, Yadin E, Cahill SP, Hembree E, Foa EB. Depress. Anxiety 2009; 26(8): 732-738.

Affiliation

Veterans Administration Ann Arbor Healthcare System, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105, USA. sherauch@med.umich.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/da.20518

PMID

18781660

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is associated with significant health risk, illness, and functional impairment, e.g., Green and Kimerling [2004: Physical Health Consequences of Exposure to Extreme Stress. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association] Kimerling et al. [2000: Trauma and Health: J Trauma Stress 13:115-128]. METHODS: These analyses examined whether negative health perceptions and general social functioning change with treatment of chronic PTSD among women from a randomized controlled study comparing prolonged exposure (PE; n=48) or PE combined with cognitive restructuring (PE/CR; n=40) to waitlist (n=19; Foa et al., 2005: J Consult Clin Psychol 73:953-964]. RESULTS: Self- reported physical health difficulties were significantly reduced in the PE and PE/CR conditions compared to the waitlist condition. These reductions did not demonstrate significant change during the 12 month follow-up period. Self-reported discomfort associated with physical health difficulties did not demonstrate significant change over treatment. No difference was detected between the active treatment and waitlist conditions. Both the PE and PE/CR groups reported improved social functioning at post treatment compared to the waitlist. Additional improvement in general social functioning was found between 3 and 12 month follow-up assessments. Changes in PTSD and depressive symptoms over treatment accounted for 29% of the variance in reduction of reported health problems and 30% of the variance in improvement of general social functioning. Importantly, only changes in PTSD symptoms significantly contribute to the model predicting change in physical health problems with depression associated only at a trend level. However, collinearity between PTSD and depression makes interpretation difficult. CONCLUSIONS: Negative health perceptions and general social function improve with PE. Changes in depression and PTSD with treatment are related to these changes.


Language: en

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