The role of time since trauma on treatment outcomes of veterans in two intensive posttraumatic stress disorder treatment programs

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Abstract

Research on the impact of time since trauma (TST) on posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) treatment outcomes lacks consensus and has not been examined in cognitive processing therapy (CPT)–based intensive PTSD treatment programs (ITPs). Furthermore, little is known about how TST impacts other trauma-related outcomes, such as depressive symptoms and negative posttrauma cognitions. We examined whether TST predicted severity and changes in PTSD and depressive symptoms and negative posttrauma cognitions, controlling for trauma type (combat or military sexual trauma), age, sex, and race, in two separate samples of veterans with PTSD who completed 2-week (n = 132) or 3-week (n = 407) CPT-based ITPs. In the 3-week sample, PTSD symptom reduction differed based on TST; however, these differences lacked clinical significance, TST x Time R2b =.002, and were not replicated in the 2-week sample, R2b

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Splaine, C., Smith, D. L., & Held, P. (2023). The role of time since trauma on treatment outcomes of veterans in two intensive posttraumatic stress disorder treatment programs. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 36(1), 83–93. https://doi.org/10.1002/jts.22881

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