9 research outputs found
Efficacy of ego state therapy for PTSD
Together with a study by Barabasz, Barabasz, Christensen and Watkins (in submission) this is the first experimentally controlled study meeting evidence based standards to test the effectiveness of Ego State Therapy on PTSD. The results showed remarkable positive effects
The theory of single-session manualized abreactive ego state therapy for combat stress injury PTSD and ASD
Ego State Therapy (EST) had emerged from a psychodynamic understanding of personality as a product of an individual's multiplicities (ego States), to a conceptualization of how ego-energized and object-energized elements are bound together to cope with a traumatic event. Neurobiological studies now substantiate Watkins' 1949 war neuroses conceptualizations. Because of their severity, trauma memories are encoded in the subcortical (subconscious) brain regions which are accessed by our single session manualized EST procedure. The imprint of the trauma is not accessible nor resolvable by top-down cognitive reframing therapies. Manualized EST is bottom up. Abreactive hypnosis facilitates ego state expression at physiologically and psychologically intense levels sufficient to activate subcortical process. Thus, affect is released in the presence of supportive therapist who adds ego strength to the patient. This is followed by interpretation and reintegration. The result is a reconstructed personality which is adaptive, strong and resilient to retraumatization
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Efficacy of hypnosis in the treatment of human papillomavirus (HPV) in women: rural and urban samples
The genital infection caused by human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most common sexually transmitted disease. Genital warts in women can lead to cervical cancer. Treatment is aimed at clearing the warts to decrease contagiousness. Current medical treatments include repeated painful applications of acid-like agents to the warts, freezing, and surgery. Unfortunately, even with surgery, long term clearance rates are only 30 to 70%. Three quarters of the women who have experienced medical treatments express dissatisfaction. Psychological hypnosis is a psychophysiological state involving attention and concentration. Rather than assaulting tissue, hypnosis mobilizes the body’s immune reactions offering potential permanent results, greater acceptance, and treatment compliance. Our research contrasted hypnosis to medical therapies in both a major urban hospital and a rural university community. Gynecologists measured, diagrammed and photographed the warts showing the size, number and locations before and after treatment and at follow-up. Both hypnosis and the medical therapies significantly reduced the areas infected and the number of warts. However, at follow-up, nearly half of the hypnosis treated patients showed 100% clearance while only one of the medically treated patients did so. Hypnosis appeared to be at least as effective as medical interventions and was more acceptable to patients. Future research should include long-term follow-ups and the use of hypnosis combined with medical treatments