Publication | Open Access
The EMDR Integrative Group Treatment Protocol: Application With Child Victims of a Mass Disaster
75
Citations
12
References
2008
Year
Emergency ManagementHuman Provoked DisasterInjury PreventionMental HealthTrauma In ChildTrauma (Addiction Psychology)Mexican StateTrauma SystemMass DisasterTrauma (Critical Care Medicine)Health SciencesPsychiatryDisaster ResponseChild VictimsTrauma TreatmentTrauma CareDisaster ManagementPediatricsMedicineDisaster Risk ReductionGroup Therapy ModelEmergency MedicinePost-traumatic Stress Disorder
The EMDR Integrative Group Treatment protocol (EMDR-IGTP) has been used in different parts of the world since 1998 with both adults and children after natural or man-made disasters. This protocol combines the eight standard EMDR treatment phases with a group therapy model, thus providing more extensive reach than the individual application of EMDR. In this study the EMDR-IGTP was used with 16 bereaved children after a human provoked disaster in the Mexican State of Coahuila in 2006. Results showed a significant decrease in scores on the Child’s Reaction to Traumatic Events Scale that was maintained at 3-month follow-up. Although controlled research is needed to establish the efficacy of this intervention, preliminary results suggest that EMDR-IGTP may be an effective means of providing treatment to large groups of people impacted by large-scale critical incidents (e.g., human-provoked disasters, terrorism, natural disasters).
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