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NET - primary care: Caring for patients with traumatic stress sequelae following intensive medical care

Subject Area Public Health, Healthcare Research, Social and Occupational Medicine
Term from 2016 to 2023
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 286618218
 
In Germany, two million treatment cases are treated at Intensive Care Units (ICUs) every year. More than half of them suffer from long-term functional, psychological or medical sequelae as a result. Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a frequent sequela and symptoms may remain for years after ICU discharge. While waiting for specialist psychiatric/psychotherapeutic services, the General Practitioner (GP) is the main health professional attending to the patient. The trauma-related symptoms arise from a failure to construct adequate memories of the traumatic experiences: In PTSD, sensory, cognitive, and affective representations have lost association with the contextual and episodic memory system. The goal of trauma-related therapy is to reconnect the memory fragments. In "Narrative Exposure Therapy" (NET), the patient builds a narrative that focuses on the contextualization of traumatic experiences. Counsellor and patient together design a "lifeline", consisting of relevant biographical events. This specifically relies on the GP's skill at taking comprehensive medical and psycho-social histories. Subsequently, the patient recounts the stressful situations to recover contextual details of the traumatic event ¿ rather than intrusive memories. We apply for a cluster-randomized controlled trial (N=340) to evaluate whether a brief NET primary care-intervention for post-ICU-patients with posttraumatic symptoms effectively improves clinical outcomes as assessed using the Posttraumatic Stress Diagnostic Scale (PDS) 6 months after baseline.
DFG Programme Clinical Trials
Co-Investigator Professor Dr. Thomas Elbert
 
 

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