1st Edition

Treating Traumatic Stress Injuries in Military Personnel An EMDR Practitioner's Guide

By Mark C. Russell, Charles R. Figley Copyright 2013
    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    Treating Traumatic Stress Injuries in Military Personnel offers a comprehensive treatment manual for mental health professionals treating traumatic stress injuries in both male and female veterans. It is the first book to combine the most recent knowledge about new paradigms of combat-related traumatic stress injuries (Figley & Nash, 2006) and offers a practical guide for treating the spectrum of traumatic stress injuries with EMDR, which has been recognized by the Department of Veterans Affairs and Department of Defense clinical practice guidelines as one of the most studied, efficient, and particularly well-suited evidence-based treatments for military-related stress injuries.

    Russell and Figley introduce an array of treatment innovations designed especially for use with military populations, and readers will find pages filled with practical information, including appendices that feature a glossary of military terminology, breakdowns of rank and pay grades, and various clinical forms.

     

    Series Editor's Foreword. Foreword. Introduction. Part I: EMDR Treatment of Military Populations 1. Warriors, War, and Resilience 2. Overview of EMDR Therapy 3. Research on EMDR and War Stress Injury 4. Why Use EMDR Therapy in the Armed Services? Part II: The EMDR Protocol for Military Populations 5. Phase One: Client History, Rapport, and Treatment Planning 6. Phase Two: Client Preparation and Informed Consent 7. Phase Three: EMDR Assessment 8. Phase Four: Basic and Specialized Reprocessing Protocols 9. Phases Five-Six: Standard Reprocessing Protocols 10. EMDR Treatment for Acute War/Traumatic Stress Injury Part III: EMDR Treatment for Chronic War/Traumatic Stress Injury 11. EMDR Therapy of Pre-Military/Military-Trauma and Medically Unexplained Symptoms 12. EMDR Treatment of Traumatic Grief and Interpersonal Violence 13. Other Military Stress Injury and EMDR Treatment Considerations 14. Phases Seven-Eight: Closure and Re-evaluation Part IV: Special Considerations 15. Ethical and Medico-Legal Issues 16. Enhancing Resilience/Performance and Preventing Compassion Fatigue Appendix A: Military Mental Healthcare Referral Resources Appendix B: EMDR Reprocessing Troubleshooting Guide Appendix C: References

    Biography

    Mark C. Russell, PhD, is a retired U.S. Navy commander and board-certified clinical psychologist with 26 years of military experience. He is the author of multiple publications on war stress injuries and recipient of the 2006 Distinguished Psychologist Award by Washington State Psychological Association. Currently, he serves as chair of the PsyD program and founding director of the Institute of War Stress Injuries and Social Justice at Antioch University in Seattle.

    Charles R. Figley, PhD, is the Paul Henry Kurzweg Distinguished Chair in Disaster Mental Health at Tulane University. A former Marine sergeant who served early in the Vietnam War, he went on to help pioneer the modern study and treatment of trauma and many innovations in helping the traumatized, including practitioners themselves, in his more than 200 scholarly articles, chapters, and books.

    "This book brings to readers the combined experience and lessons learned from trauma studies pioneer Charles R. Figley and military trainer Mark C. Russell, both veterans and clinical psychologists who have spent decades in the mental-health trenches. Detailed scripts and actual clinical case examples help lead the therapist through the intricacies of each stage of treatment, beginning with suggestions for establishing the therapeutic alliance and overcoming the often encountered resistance, resentment, and distrust of mental health professionals. The authors’ comprehensive review of treatment issues pertinent to both active military and combat veterans provides invaluable guidance for clinicians of all orientations."

    Francine Shapiro, PhD, senior research fellow, Mental Research Institute and founder of the EMDR Humanitarian Assistance Programs

    "Treating Traumatic Stress Injuries in Military Personnel is a fascinating examination of why and how EMDR is valuable in treating war-related stress injuries and medically unexplained symptoms. This book is a must read for any mental health provider who uses EMDR."

    Colonel David Rabb, Combat Stress Control, United States Army Reserves and OIF/OEF Veteran

    "In this well-written volume, Russell and Figley provide the reader with six books in one: an in-depth treatment manual for EMDR, a practical discussion of some of the most important clinical issues in psychotherapy, a comprehensive guide to contemporary military culture, an analysis of types of military traumatic stress injury, a compendium of EMDR intervention protocols for military personnel, and a detailing of rich case studies that make EMDR with military populations come vividly alive. A superb resource for those working with the military, utilizing EMDR, or focusing on trauma."

    Therese A. Rando, PhD, clinical director, Institute for the Study and Treatment of Loss

    "Everyone interested in evidence-based treatment of traumatic stress among veterans and military personnel should own a copy of Treating Traumatic Stress Injuries in Military Personnel. Russell and Figley have made a significant contribution to the literature on treating military personnel and veterans with traumatic stress using EMDR. This is a book that EMDR clinicians will value and consult throughout their professional career, and one that will be required reading for the clinicians we train at Soldier Center."

    E.C. Hurley, PhD, colonel, U.S. Army (Ret.) and executive director of Soldier Center

     "Russell and Figley, being veterans as well as psychologists, recognize the knowledge deficit of MUS and effectively offer a broad lens covering topics that impact both clinical practice as well as applications within the military circle. To that end, they are highly successful in covering an extensive range of issues pertaining to MUS. In Treating Traumatic Stress Injuries in Military Personnel, Russell and Figley effectively synthesize the perspectives of the clinician and the warrior to provide an in-depth analysis and argument for the benefits of EMDR treatment."

    - Tina R. Lee, New York University, International Journal of Psychotherapy