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Military Sexual Trauma MST

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Title: Military Sexual Trauma MST


1
Military Sexual TraumaMST
  • Wounds of War Conference
  • Diane T. Castillo, Ph.D.
  • Coordinator, WSDTT
  • February 6, 2008

2
Overview
  • Definitions
  • Diagnoses and Statistics
  • Effective Treatments

3
MST Mandate in VA System
  • Public Law 102-585 Mandated outreach and
    counseling
  • Public Law 103-452 MST counseling to men as
    well as women
  • Public Law 106-177 Veterans Millennium Health
    Care Act
  • Above laws require assessing and treating all
    veterans with MST

4
Definitions by VA
  • When you were in the military, did you ever
    receive uninvited or unwanted sexual attention
    (i.e., touching, cornering, etc.)?
  • or
  • When you were in the military did anyone use
    force or the threat of force to have sex against
    your will?

5
Standard Definitions
  • Sexual Harassment-Repeated, unsolicited, verbal
    or physical contact of a sexual nature
  • Sexual Assault-Actual sexual contact through the
    use of threat, non-consensual
  • Rape-Non-consensual sexual penetration through
    use of force
  • Abuse-Intentionally caused or attempted bodily
    injury or apprehension of injury

6
Common Signs of Sexual Abuse
  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Sleep Difficulties
  • Alcohol/SA
  • Somatic Complaints

7
Most Common Diagnosis Post traumatic Stress
Disorder--PTSD
  • Trauma
  • 3 Categories of Symptoms
  • Reexperiencing
  • Avoidance/Numbing
  • Hyperarousal
  • Symptoms last more than 1 month

8
Trauma
  • The person has been exposed to a traumatic event
    in which both of the following were present
  • The person experienced, witnessed, or was
    confronted with an event or events that involved
    actual or threatened death or serious injury, or
    a threat to the physical integrity of self or
    others
  • The persons response involved intense fear,
    helplessness, or horror.

9
PTSD Symptom Categories
  • Reexperiencing (min. of 1)
  • Intrusive recollections
  • Nightmares
  • Flashbacks
  • Psychological distress with reminders
  • Physiological reaction to reminders
  • Avoidance/Numbing (min. of 3)
  • Avoidance of thoughts, feelings
  • Avoidance of reminders
  • Social isolation
  • Feelings of detachment from others
  • Reduction of emotions (positive)
  • Sense of foreshortened future

10
PTSD Symptom Categories (cont.)
  • Hyperarousal (min. of 2)
  • Sleep difficulties
  • Irritability and/or anger outbursts
  • Poor concentration
  • Exaggerated startle response
  • Hypervigilence

11
Demographics (N236)
  • Mean Age49.9, SD10.4
  • 77 Veteran, 20 ChampVA, 3 AF
  • 43 Army, 29 AF, 22 Navy, 3 Marine Corps
  • 14 OIF/OEF veterans
  • 60 white, 26 Hispanic 9 African American, 3
    Native American, 2 other
  • 42 married, 29 divorced, 26 never married

12
Demographics (cont.)
  • 72 sexual trauma, 8 other, 20 combo
  • 28 childhood trauma, 31 adult, 41 both
  • 69 diagnosed with PTSD another diagnosis (31
    PTSD only)
  • 84 more than one trauma

13
Percentages of MST in VA System
14
Treatment for PTSD at Alb. VA
  • Trauma clinic for mennot just for combat-related
    trauma
  • Womens Stress Disorder Treatment Teammilitary/
    childhood/other adult rape other traumas
  • Both programs offer individual and group
    counseling as well as medication
    evaluation/management

15
Womens Stress Disorder Treatment Team (WSDTT)
  • Staff
  • Two f/t psychologists
  • One f/t social worker
  • One h/t psychiatrist
  • One h/t nurse clinical specialist

16
WSDTT Program Components
  • Assessment
  • Initial Interview
  • Psychological Testing (MMPI, MCMI, BDI, BUSS)
  • CAPSClinician Administered PTSD Scale

17
  • Treatments Groups, Individual, Medication
  • Core Groups
  • PsychEd (intro)
  • Cognitive Processing
  • Skills
  • Sexual Intimacy
  • Focus (exposure therapy)
  • Most effective for PTSD

18
Assessment Data
  • CAPS
  • Current M73.8, SD27.7
  • Lifetime M104.9, SD24.7
  • MMPI2
  • Peaks on F(86.8), 2(78.5), 8(82.5), PK(79.2),
    and PS(79.3)
  • MCMI2
  • Peaks on Schizoid and Avoidant scales (BRgt80).
  • BDI M24.7, SD11.9

19
Outcome Data with PCL
  • Focus--Sig. improvement on
  • Overall PTSD
  • Avoidance/ Numbing
  • Cognitive--Sig. improvement on
  • Overall PTSD
  • Avoidance/Numbing
  • Hyperarousal
  • Skills--Sig. improvement on
  • Avoidance/ Numbing
  • Sexual Intimacy No sig. improvement in PTSD

20
Conclusion
  • MST is priority for VA in assessing for and
    treating male and female veterans
  • MST can result in variety of symptoms,
    particularly PTSD
  • Effective treatments are available for treating
    PTSD and are available at VA
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