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TITLE: Evaluating Evidence for the Treatment of Co-occurrence of PTSD amd mTBI in Role Transitioning for Veterans: Case Study Approach AUTHOR NAMES: AUTHOR 1, M.Sc.OT, OT Reg. (Ont.) 1,3 AUTHOR 2, M.Sc.OT, O.T. 2,3 AUTHOR AFFILIATIONS: 1 Author 1 is a private practice occupational therapist in Toronto, Ontario. 2 Author 2 is an occupational therapist and PhD student at the University of Alberta, Dept. of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry, in Edmonton, Alberta. (Address: Autism Research Centre, Glenrose Rehab Hospital – E209, 10239 – 111 Ave, Edmonton AB) 3 This work was completed as part of coursework for University of Toronto’s Master of Science in Occupational Therapy program. (Address: Dept of OS & OT, University of Toronto, 160 – 500 University Ave, Toronto ON) CORRESPONDING AUTHOR EMAIL ADDRESS: [email protected] ABSTRACT The application of cognitive strategies as part of role transitioning for this population subset has been understudied; the primary purpose of this paper is to draw conclusions based on available literature to inform current rehabilitation practice in mental health and future areas of research. We will evaluate the efficacy of cognitive strategy to support role transitions in post-tramatic stress disorder (PTSD) with co-occurrence mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) for veterans using a case-study approach. Although typical interventions for these separate conditions are based on a variety of theoretical underpinnings, they can work together harmoniously with a complex and co-morbid population. KEYWORDS: Rehabilitation, evidence evaluation, co-morbid, PTSD, mTBI, veteran MANUSCRIPT TEXT: This paper is informed by case of Bobby Wu (BW), a returning Canadian Military soldier concurrently experiencing mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). BW was referred to a small team of occupational therapists who work within a multidisciplinary rehabilitation team in a Veterans Clinic, specifically designed for returning soldiers and military service members. The aim of a multidisciplinary rehabilitation team is to support the reintegration of soldiers returning from war into society and to address physical, cognitive, and psychosocial dysfunction that may be evident after traumatic war experiences. Occupational therapist’s are invaluable rehabilitation practitioners on the multidisciplinary team as their scope of practice addresses return of physical, cognitive, and psychosocial functioning, and specifically enabling individuals to return to previous life roles and previously enjoyed occupations. BW sustained a mTBI while deployed overseas and during intake other issues became apparent that were impeding his occupational performance specifically PTSD. In addition, Bobby questions his role as a “good father” and “loving husband” since returning home to civilian life. Management has agreed to allow the scope of the initial referral to be expanded and with Bobby’s consent the occupational therapist’s decide to concurrently address mTBI, PTSD, and role transition difficulties. The question raised is regarding the potential contraindications for best practices when addressing these issues concurrently. Although we have framed this paper within the context of a case study, Canada’s military force is currently deployed in several international conflicts including Afghanistan, Democratic Republic of Congo, Darfur, South Sudan and the boarder between Israel and Syria.1 Soldiers returning from duty may face a multitude of physical and psychological challenges, potentially in combination. As rehabilitation professionals, we must consider the appropriateness and potential contraindications of treating comorbidities concurrently (mTBI and PTSD) to promote re-engagement of BW’s roles as husband and father, including the evidence that supports or refutes such an approach. Prior to investigating the evidence about the co-occurrence of mTBI, PTSD and role transitioning, our assumption was that there might be contraindications between therapies. Our clinical reasoning questioned the efficacy of using already impaired cognitive processes due to mTBI to rehabilitate co-occurring psychological dysfunction (PTSD) and its relationship to successful role transitioning. Therefore, this paper outlines the process of enabling occupation from a multi-faceted evidence-informed clinical perspective. Background A head injury is considered to be a mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) when: a person experiences a loss of consciousness for less than thirty minutes, an altered state of consciousness for up to 24 hours, or posttraumatic amnesia of one day or less.2 Initial symptoms include: headache, dizziness, nausea and vomiting, sleep disturbances, sensitivity to noise and light, slowed thinking and reaction time, memory impairments, irritability, depression, and visual changes.3 Individuals who sustain a mTBI can present with symptoms at the time of the incident or days to weeks after the traumatic event.1 BW is experiencing both attention and concentration deficits weeks after the injury occurred. In most cases, symptoms resolve within three months of injury, however 1030% of people with mTBI experience symptoms that persist and can affect resumption of life roles and occupations.1 Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating anxiety disorder that may cause a person a significant distress and often goes undiagnosed.4 As defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth Edition Text Revised (DSM-IV-TR),5 our client experiences PTSD as he was exposed to repeated traumatic events as part of his job as a soldier as well as recurrent distressing dreams and dissociative reactions (flashbacks) in which he feels the event is re-occurring. He also experiences difficulty concentrating on tasks. As well, BW has persistent internal stimuli (i.e. thoughts and feelings) that are constantly arousing the recollection of these traumatic events. This has lasted over one month and has severely impaired his occupational and social functioning. For men, the types of trauma most commonly associated with PTSD are exposure to military combat and witnessing a person being badly injured or killed.4 Evidence shows that 11.3% of soldiers returning from Afghanistan experience PTSD.6 Keeping in mind the high prevalence of soldiers who experience PTSD and research stating that PTSD often goes undiagnosed, occupational therapists (OTs) can play a critical role in detecting symptoms of PTSD in military service men. In general, understanding the process and risk factors associated with combat stress relating to mental health is important in rehabilitating psychological distress.7 Early intervention is important to consider as the research shows that continued mental health concerns, such as PTSD, continue to manifest today for soldiers who have served in World War 1, World War 2, the Korean War and the Vietnam War. 7 Considering the transitioning needs of military men returning to Canada after deployment is crucial to the treatment plan for BW. Re-integration is defined as “the process of personal transitioning back into personal and organizational roles and society after having been deployed.”8 Transitions can be associated with increased stress due to the process of re-adjusting to an environment that is no longer familiar. BW is experiencing difficulties with role transitioning after deployment, specifically his role as husband and father. Methods We have conducted a preliminary literature search for “combat stress”+ “occupational therapy” + “transition” since 2009. After feedback from course instructors, we conducted a second literature search for “combat stress”+ “mild traumatic brain injury” since 2009 in Medline, CINHAL and Scopus. From this we found approximately 22 relevant articles, mostly situated within an American military context. Even though much of the research comes from the American rehabilitation perspective, we believe that there are clinical implications that can inform our own Canadian military service men’s re-integration into society. To understand the perspective of returning soldiers such as BW, we visited several online forums for individuals with PTSD and trauma experiences. In addition, we read through several online newspaper articles and editorials to guide our understanding of current national and international events. From the University of Toronto’s Gerstein library, we located a comprehensive resource entitled “Effective Treatments for PTSD” which provided an evidence-based clinical perspective on PTSD. Intervention for Mild Traumatic Brain Injury The high incidence of mTBI in military service men can be attributed to the consequences of blasts or explosions caused by explosive devices placed on the roadside or hidden in buildings.9 Evidence for primary blast effects (effects of the blast “wave” itself) on the central nervous system is limited and is currently being investigated through research.10 However, preliminary research suggests that there are a number of specific characteristics associated with a blast induced brain injury including high rates of sensory impairment, pain issues, and polytrauma.10 These characteristics differ from more commonly associated brain injuries due to motor vehicle accidents or falls in a civilian population.10 BW’s most concerning symptom is his inability to attend to tasks and maintain his concentration. Aspects of a comprehensive mTBI intervention plan for military service men returning from the war include client education, and cognitive rehabilitation approaches depending on the symptoms present.1 Education includes providing individuals with both verbal and written education about mTBI and its associated symptoms. Anxiety may be reduced after reassuring clients that their symptoms will most likely resolve over a period of weeks to months.1112 The premise of client education assumes that if a client understands the symptoms related to mTBI they are less likely to overreact to them.11 In a study exploring the impact of patient education for patients with mTBI, it was concluded that patients who reviewed and discussed extensive written instructions about mTBI with their therapists before leaving the hospital reported considerably shorter symptom duration and fewer symptoms altogether than those receiving routine discharge information.13 Military men with mTBI can often experience impairments in both attention and concentration up to three months after the incident, which is consistent with BW’s symptoms.14 Interventions at the cognitive level introduce compensatory strategy training for individuals with mTBI to aid with their everyday life functioning as the symptoms of mTBI resolve.1 Attentional strategies may include teaching the client to complete a single task at one time, removing visual or auditory distractions in the environment, performing difficult tasks in the morning when the person is more alert, pacing, planning breaks, and monitoring self-fatigue and attention levels.1 For example, the use of a timer is recommended to encourage using planned breaks throughout activities.1 Knowing BW’s most salient mTBI symptoms are attending to and concentrating on tasks, we continue to question the feasibility of introducing PTSD interventions that may require these cognitive processes. Intervention for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder While being cognisant of BW’s mTBI symptoms, we are going to concurrently explore best practice interventions for PTSD as part of a multi-faceted intervention plan. The efficacy of various types of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) treatments have been studied specifically for chronic PTSD related to victims of war and combat trauma. Examples of CBT based therapies include group therapy specifically for military service men and exposure therapy. Group therapy is one of the most common treatment modalities for PTSD.15 Each group therapy program varies on several dimensions including goals and objectives, theoretical rationales and strategies, structure of the group (open or closed), frequency and length of sessions and duration of treatment.15 Group therapy for PTSD offers an environment where interpersonal skills can be practiced and where people can restore a sense of safety, trust, self-esteem, and intimacy with others and can decrease the sense of isolation and alienation.15 The effectiveness of a 12 week group therapy program offering 10 hours of therapy per week for 46 male veterans with PTSD and substance abuse was studied.16 The treatment included mainly cognitive behavioral skills training, trauma processing, and peer support. Significant decreases in PTSD and addiction severity were identified at both 6 month and 12-month follow-ups.16 Exposure therapy (ET) is a collective term to describe prolonged exposure to anxiety provoking stimuli without relaxation or other anxiety reducing methods including flooding, imaginal, invivo, and directed.17 The first step of ET begins with the development of a client rated anxiety hierarchy.17 With some forms of ET, treatment sessions begin with exposure to the highest rated item on the hierarchy, while others begin with items rated as moderately anxiety provoking.17 Evidence suggests that by confronting frightening yet safe stimuli and by continuing to expose oneself to fighting stimuli, anxiety diminishes over time which leads to a decrease in the escape and avoidance behaviors maintained via negative reinforcement.18 The physiological responses to combat memories in Vietnam veterans experiencing PTSD and treated with ET were studied.19 The treatment group received ET over 12-14 sessions of 50 minutes each while the control group received treatment as usual.19 At follow-up the ET group had decreased physiological responses to exposure scenes and showed improvement on community adjustment measures of anxiety, depression, alienation, vigor and confidence in skills when compared to the control group.19 ET over standard psychotherapeutic and pharmacologic approaches for the treatment of PTSD in combat veterans through a randomized control trial have been demonstrated to be effective.20 The treatment consisted of once or twice weekly ET, up to 14 sessions that were 90-minutes in duration in addition to regular weekly individual 60-minute therapy sessions plus 120-minute weekly group therapy sessions.20 The intervention group was superior to the control group on measures of anxiety; sleep disturbances, nightmares, and subject anxiety during behavioral avoidance tasks and treatment gains were maintained up to three months post treatment.20 A limitation of this study was its small sample size. Also studied were the effects of implosive ET on the symptoms of PTSD in Vietnam combat veterans through a randomized control trial.21 The intervention group received 14-16 sessions of ET, while the control group was assigned to a waiting list.21 When compared to the waiting list control, veterans receiving ET showed significant improvement across many of the psychometric measures and the therapist ratings of psychopathology.21 Changes were noted in the re-experiencing dimension of PTSD, anxiety, and depression for the treatment group, however treatment did not seem to influence the numbing and social avoidance aspects of PTSD.21 The authors conclude by outlining the need for additional social skills training interventions directed at improving social competence in interpersonal relationships.21 Overall, this research informs the inclusion of ET in BW’s treatment plan given the above-mentioned benefits such as symptom reduction and remediating the underlying PTSD. The research however, does not directly indicate that either mTBI and/or PTSD interventions remediate or promote role transition to civilian life. This is a self-identified area of concern for BW as he wants to re-adjust to previous family roles and we will therefore review the evidence to support BW in his role transition. Intervention for Role Transition Re-integration is a process in which military service men transition back into personal, organizational, and societal roles after having been deployed to war.8 At a mesosystem level, the effects of a poor re-integration to civilian life is not solely experienced by the returning soldier but also by their family members who can experience increased stress, disruption and negativity.22 For BW, there are several severe consequences associated with poor community adjustment that has lasting effects on his self-identity and family relationships. A group-based transitional program for eighteen soldiers who were experiencing various degrees of trauma exposure related to their deployment was evaluated.23 This program was called the Veterans Transition Program (VTP) and was evaluated using quantitative and qualitative measures that explored change in PTSD symptoms, depression and self-esteem. As part of the program, two sessions encouraged participants to bring family to the program and participate in family awareness evenings about PTSD. A critique of VTP is the authors did not evaluate a change of the primary targeted outcome of transitions, but only some aspects of it such as self-esteem. Only during qualitative interviews were family roles touched upon, with the majority of the participants reporting an increase in partner intimacy.23 The essential need for returning soldiers to talk to each other as a means of support for re-integration builds upon the concept of group therapy using CBT approaches.22 Similar it explores the need for group therapy composed strictly of military men as part of the decompression process of returning home related to role transition.22 This is consistent with the evidence reported in group therapy, in that clients who identify with group members similar to themselves gain a greater sense of security and safety within the group, which allows for therapeutic group progression. In addition, participants valued group members only consisting of military personnel who “have actually been there”23 increasing group trust and cohesiveness. Consolidation of Evidence Existing evidence-based interventions need to be modified to meet the needs of individuals who have sustained an mTBI, experiencing PTSD and working towards role transition from soldier to civilian life. A challenge of working with co-morbid populations is that the symptoms attributed to any one diagnosis may overlap with another.24 From a treatment perspective, this means that the alleviation of one symptom may not be due to treatment intervention, but rather part of the natural spontaneous recovery process; therefore detecting and evaluation change may be difficult. The intersection of these issues and challenges requires special consideration of how to best utilize cognitive rehabilitation for mTBI in conjunction with psychological interventions for PTSD. Recent literature acknowledges that little is known about the effectiveness of cognitive strategies for returning soldiers with co-morbidities such as mTBI and PTSD.24 Evidence informed treatments for PTSD, such as CBT, are argued to rely on intact cognitive processes such as concentration, memory, and executive function.24 Therefore, some literature questions if an impaired cognitive resource (such as attention) could have negative implications for a client’s ability to use CBT effectively to address PTSD as part of coping for role transition24, which paralleled our initial concerns with providing treatment for our client. At the present time, there is no research to show that CBT interventions (such as group therapy and ET) for PTSD are contraindicated for a person with a diagnosis of mTBI.24 Similarly, interventions for co-morbid mTBI and PTSD populations were found not to be contraindicated.25 However, a modified CBT instructional approach using additional resources (such as video-taping for feedback) was utilized. Military service men exposed to combat deployment stressors, including physical injuries (i.e. mTBI) and psychological trauma (i.e. PTSD), describe challenges when re-integrating into personal and professional roles.8 Many service men that are diagnosed with PTSD experience social adjustment problems including high rates of divorce, poor work histories, alcohol and substance abuse, and difficulties in interpersonal relationships.26,27 Understanding the above mentioned challenges and risk factors, the goal of VTP was to reduce combat related trauma symptoms (PTSD) to promote improved internal coping skills ultimately leading to successful transition back to roles in civilian life.23 A limitation of this study was that that authors failed to disclose participant history of possible co-morbidities such as mTBI. Interestingly, there is a study that argues that mTBI and CBT approaches are not contraindicated for PTSD but rather CBT may contribute to mTBI remediation.28 Based on our clinical reasoning and understanding of metacognitive processes, we can appreciate this finding and its potential benefit for this client population. All above-mentioned studies would benefit from further validation and exploration within this population and the inclusion of a standardized occupational performance measure (i.e. Canadian Occupational Performance Measure)29 to evaluate related occupational performance issues, such as role transitioning. Role transitioning itself is an under researched area related to military personnel although it is a common experience for the returning soldier and their family. The potential for OTs to work within and generate evidence for role transitioning for military personnel within Canada provides tremendous opportunities as an emerging field. Based on our critical analysis of all evidence we feel confident integrating PTSD interventions with non-resolved mTBI symptoms. As consciously competent practitioners we will monitor and evaluate a multifaceted intervention for BW including: 1) education and compensatory strategies to address attention deficits due to mTBI, 2) enrolment in a minimum 12 week closed CBT group (including ET) for military service men that includes family sessions, and 3) using CBT approaches directed to role transitioning with ongoing peer support. Conclusion Overall, the critical appraisal and integration of current evidence demonstrates that these interventions, although based on a variety of theoretical underpinnings, can work together harmoniously with a complex and co-morbid population. As with any new and emerging field, further research to inform clinical practice would be beneficial for the client and health care professionals. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: The authors thank Lynn Cockburn and Deidre Dawson, course instructors in the Dept. of Occupational Science & Occupational Therapy, for their feedback and guidance in the preparation of this manuscript. CONFLICTS OF INTEREST: Authors report no conflicts of interest. SUPPORTING INFORMATION: None. REFERENCES: Current Operations of Canadian Expeditionary Force Command. (2012, December 11). Retrieved January 12, 2013, from http://www.cjoc-coic.forces.gc.ca/exp/cur-acteng.asp 1 Radomski MV, Davidson L, Voydetich D, Erickson MW. Occupational therapy for service members with mild traumatic brain injury. American Journal of Occupational Therapy. 2009 Oct;63(5):646–655. 2 Carroll LJ, Cassidy JD, Holm L, Kraus J, Coronado VG. Methodological issues and research recommendations for mild traumatic brain injury: The WHO Collaborative Center Task Force on Mild Traumatic Brain Injury. Journal of Rehabilitative Medicine. 2004 Feb;43:113–125. 3 Grinage BD. 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