Affiliation:
1. Southeast Louisiana Veterans Health Care System New Orleans Louisiana USA
2. South Central Mental Illness Research Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC) New Orleans Louisiana USA
3. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Tulane University School of Medicine New Orleans Louisiana USA
4. School of Medicine Louisiana State University New Orleans Louisiana USA
Abstract
AbstractWritten exposure therapy (WET) is a brief, manualized trauma‐focused treatment typically delivered in five individual weekly sessions. Given the brevity and effectiveness of WET, researchers have begun to focus on its delivery in a massed format. However, only one case study examining massed delivery has been published to date. As such, the objective of the current study was to examine the acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary effectiveness of massed WET among veterans with a trauma‐ and stressor‐related disorder receiving care on an acute inpatient mental health unit. Veterans (N = 26) were assessed prior to, immediately after, and 1 month following massed WET. Most veterans found massed WET to be useful and acceptable. Recruitment and retention rates suggested that the treatment was feasible. Notably, the results revealed statistically significant reductions in overall posttraumatic stress symptoms, ηp2 = .81, p < .001; depressive symptoms, ηp2 = .71, p < .001; and functional impairment, ηp2 = .42, p = .002. These findings add to a growing body of literature highlighting the preliminary effectiveness of WET across various settings, populations, and delivery formats. Limitations include the small sample size and uncontrolled design.
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