Post-Traumatic Stress Specialist Dade City FL

PTSD (post'traumatic stress disorder) has always been associated with combat veterans, but as Laura’s story suggests, they’re not the only victims. In fact, as many as 70 percent of us experience or witness an event that can trigger PTSD—a car crash, a rape, a crime, a natural disaster, abuse. And up to 10 percent of Americans will suffer from it at some point, according to the American Psychiatric Association.

Harbor Behavioral Health Care Institute the
(352) 521-1474
14527 7th St
Dade City, FL
Industry
Mental Health Professional

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Marlene Hart
(352) 518-2000
14027 5th St
Dade City, FL
Specialty
Psychiatry

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Corradini Frank Lcsw
(813) 783-2135
6536 Stadium Dr
Zephyrhills, FL
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Mental Health Professional

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Beatrice S Braun
(352) 540-6800
300 S Main St
Brooksville, FL
Specialty
Psychiatry

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Serenity Springs Spa
(352) 683-1842
13215 Spring Hill Dr
Spring Hill, FL
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Health Spa, Hypnotherapist, Massage Practitioner, Mental Health Professional

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Allauddin Khan
(352) 567-7364
13417 Us Highway 301
Dade City, FL
Specialty
Neuropsychiatry

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Barkat Khan
(813) 782-1147
6719 Gall Blvd
Zephyrhills, FL
Specialty
Psychiatry

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Pius Jacob
(813) 788-1266
38188 Medical Center Ave
Zephyrhills, FL
Specialty
Psychiatry

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Quality of Life
(352) 754-2818
328 W Jefferson St
Brooksville, FL
Industry
Mental Health Professional

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Springbrook Hospital
(352) 596-4306
7007 Grove Rd
Spring Hill, FL
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Mental Health Professional

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Spotlight on Post-Traumatic Stress

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By Julia Van Tine

In her freshman year in college, Laura Curry was raped at a party. Dazed, she wandered the neighborhood until her friends found her. She told no one, and the rapist was never charged.

A few months later the flashbacks began, once while she was kissing a man on a bed. “When he rolled into a position similar to the rapist’s, I freaked,” says Laura, today 39 and a fitness trainer in Minneapolis. “That’s when I knew I needed help.”

Laura consulted a therapist, but talking about the problem didn’t help, she says, and she soon terminated their sessions. The flashbacks continued, and in her sophomore year, another therapist diagnosed post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a psychiatric ailment that can occur after experiencing—or even witnessing—a life-threatening event. In the next six years she graduated, landed a job and climbed the corporate ladder, married, and divorced. She also went through seven therapists.

PTSD has always been associated with combat veterans, but as Laura’s story suggests, they’re not the only victims. In fact, as many as 70 percent of us experience or witness an event that can trigger PTSD—a car crash, a rape, a crime, a natural disaster, abuse. And up to 10 percent of Americans will suffer from it at some point, according to the American Psychiatric Association. Symptoms can include flashbacks, jumpiness, insomnia, nightmares, guilt, and emotional numbness. Women are affected twice as often as men, perhaps because they’re more likely to experience the kinds of trauma, like rape and abuse, that can cause PTSD.

It’s not clear why some people develop the disorder and others don’t, but researchers say the brains of sufferers tend to have higher-than-normal levels of stress hormones. The job of one of these, norepinephrine, is to activate the hippocampus, the part of the brain that governs long-term memory. When the hippocampus gets flooded with too much of this chemical, the result may be searing memories experienced as flashbacks or intrusive thoughts.

There’s no standard treatment for PTSD. Some patients benefit from antidepressants, others from different forms of therapy, such as the cognitive-behavioral approach, which aims to change how we feel and behave by changing how we think.

And recently therapists have begun combining cognitive-behavioral therapy with New Age relaxation techniques—with striking results. One theory is that these treatments work by bypassing the more evolved parts of the brain, which govern thought and speech, and engaging its primitive areas, where images, physical sensations, and feelings are experienced.

“It’s in the sensory and emotional channels of the primitive brain where most of the trauma is processed,” says psychotherapist Belleruth Naparstek, a pioneer in the use of guided imagery who wrote Invisible Heroes: Survivors of Trauma and How They Heal, and created programs used to help victims of 9/11, the Oklahoma City bombings, and the Columbine tragedy. ...

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