What makes events traumatic?
Events are traumatic when they overwhelm the coping
capacities of the person. Traumatic events threaten the
physical integrity or life of a person and induce feelings
of helplessness, terror or horror in survivors. After
exposure to a traumatic event most survivors show some
symptoms such as intrusive re-experiencing, anxiety, sleep
disturbances, nightmares, and depression. Because stimuli
that are reminiscent of the traumatic event tend to make
these symptoms worse, people often start trying to avoid
being exposed to these kind of reminders. In some people
these initial symptoms may fade over a period of weeks, but
in many people the passage of time will not lessen their
symptoms and they will develop a Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder.
Not everyone who experiences a specific event will develop
a Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. Because children have
fewer coping capacities they are more easily traumatized
than are adults. Adults who were traumatized or experienced
other adverse life events as children (such as death,
incarceration, serious illness or substance abuse of a
parent) are more easily retraumatized by overwhelming adult
experiences.
People need to make sense of what happened to them as part
of recovery. When traumatic events are shared environmental
or man-made disasters they are usually remembered and
talked about. When traumatic events involve betrayal by a
parent, family member or trusted adult (such as a teacher
or a religious leader), it may not be possible to talk
about the experience and there will be a tendency to have
psychogenic amnesia or other dissociative symptoms such as
experiences of numbing or disorientation when stressed by
cues that share some similarity with the original traumatic
events.
Trauma
Recovery
Recovery from trauma involves working through the impact
and meaning of the traumatic experience. Specific types of
psychotherapy have been shown to be especially helpful for
trauma recovery. These include EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and
Reprocessing) and Prolonged Imaginal Exposure (which is
a specialize type of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy). Some
prescription medications can be helpful for managing
symptoms of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. Alcohol,
caffein, tobacco, and illegal street-drugs will not help
and will generally make symptoms worse. While some
trauma survivors do not get referred for needed
treatment for long periods of time, the good news is
that specific treatments are highly effective and that
with treatment most survivors can make a full
recovery.