AI Article Synopsis

  • Victims of physical/sexual violence often feel guilt and shame due to their defense responses, which can hinder their recovery and the effectiveness of trauma-focused treatments.
  • A study called the BLAME-LESS study is investigating whether psychoeducation about these defense responses can alleviate feelings of shame and guilt, thus improving participants' reception to trauma-focused therapy.
  • The study involves adolescents aged 12-18 with a history of trauma, comparing outcomes of a brief online psychoeducation program against a waiting-list control, while measuring impacts on PTSD symptoms, anxiety, depression, and readiness to disclose traumatic memories.

Article Abstract

Victims of physical/sexual violence or sexual abuse commonly experience defense responses that result in feelings of guilt and shame. Although trauma-focused interventions are effective in treating post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms, the presence of trauma-related shame and guilt can potentially hinder the process of disclosure during treatment, thus diminishing their overall effectiveness. It is hypothesized that providing psychoeducation about common defense responses will reduce feelings of shame and guilt, thereby increasing receptivity to trauma-focused treatment. This paper describes the rationale, study design, and methods of the BLAME-LESS study. The effects of a brief online psychoeducation program will be compared with a waiting-list control group. The intervention aims to reduce feelings of trauma-related shame and guilt that adolescents experience regarding their own defense responses during and after physical/sexual violence or sexual abuse. Adolescents (12 - 18 years old) with a history of physical/sexual violence or sexual abuse who suffer from trauma-related feelings of shame and guilt can participate in the study. The study follows a two-arm RCT that includes 34 participants. The primary outcomes includes trauma-related feelings of shame and guilt. The secondary outcomes includes PTSD symptoms, anxiety and depression symptoms, traumatic cognitions, readiness to disclose details of memories of the trauma, and motivation to engage in trauma-focused therapy. Assessments take place after screening, at baseline, two weeks after allocation to the intervention or waiting-list, and, only for the waiting-list participants, seven weeks after allocation to the intervention. There is a need for treatment approaches that target trauma-related feelings of shame and guilt. A recently developed brief online psychoeducation program on defense responses during and after trauma offers victims of physical/sexual violence or sexual abuse a free and accessible way to obtain reliable and valid information. The proposed RCT will evaluate the effectiveness of this online psychoeducation program. Request is pending.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10878330PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20008066.2024.2315794DOI Listing

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