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The Way We're Treating Trauma is Failing Survivors. Here's Why. [PsychoTherapyNetworker.org]

 

As a graduate student at Harvard in the mid-1990s, I participated in research studies carried out by the psychology department that began in October 1996 and continued until August 2005 to interview adults who had experience sexual abuse as children and learn what effects the abuse had had on their lives. Although I was sure I knew what I would discover—that the abuse would be remembered as a horrible experience that overwhelmed the people I interviewed with fear when it happened and had always been viewed as a traumatizing occurrence—what I heard in the hundreds of interviews I conducted was quite different. In nearly all the cases, the adults I questioned had not experienced the abuse as traumatic when it occurred and only came to regard it as so years later. And in many of the cases, they had never been questioned about their evolving sense of the abuse and the ongoing impact that it had on their lives, but only about what the traumatic experience had been like at the time. These findings led me to question the progress professionals in the sexual abuse field have made when it comes to understanding and treating child sexual abuse.

Certainly we have advanced to the point that the right things are being said (sexual abuse is common and harmful; it is never the child's fault). Funding in the trauma field has been secured, research conducted, studies and books published, treatment centers established, and public awareness raised through sex-education programs and campaigns in the media. But is any of it translating into actual progress for victims? Do they feel that they're being helped, that they're understood and their needs are being served effectively?

The trauma model's main purpose—one of the primary reasons why mental health professionals welcomed it with such enthusiasm in the 1980s—was to provide an explanation for how and why sexual abuse wreaks such psychological and social havoc in victims. Armed with a better understanding of the impact of abuse, mental health professionals hoped to be better able to help victims cope with and recover from these damaging crimes.



[For more of this story, written by Susan Clancy, go to https://www.psychotherapynetwo...king-the-trauma-myth]

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As an adult survivor myself, I can say that I don't believe locally enough is being done to promote healing and recovery.  Here in Montgomery County, MD, the issue is largely unaddressed and adults are left to their own resources to find help.  Nationally, I think elsewhere progress is being made.  I see Twitter chats (#sexabusechat on Tuesday nights in the US; #CSAQT on Monday afternoons for UK and US survivors; and a Trauma University YouTube event each Monday night for those who want to watch and/or participate from anywhere on the globe.  Beyond that, I think this topic and adult healing and recovery is largely ignored, swept under the carpet, or hit and miss.  We need to take this issue out of the closet and shed new light, in the hopes of helping the MANY millions of adult survivors who struggle through life without hope of healing and recovery.

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