by Lionel Bascom — November 11th, 2007 — 1 comment
Psychologists estimate that hundreds, even thousands, of people directly affected by the events of Sept. 11, 2001, are still crippled by post-traumatic stress disorder.
This news comes from HealthDay on MedicineNet.com. Reporter E.J. Mundell wonders if a virtual-reality “revisiting” of that horrific day actually help them?
ββNew York City psychiatrist Judith Cukor believes that it can.
We are getting tons of calls for 9/11-related post-traumatic stress disorder — it’s five years out, and we are still seeing people who have never had treatment,” said Cukor, an instructor in the department of psychiatry at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center. “A lot of people have had traditional treatment, too, but it’s not helping.”
Cukor is supervising a clinical trial already reported on this blog that uses high-tech virtual reality to help fight the more stubborn cases of 9/11-linked post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. “We’re seeing very positive results here, in terms of people finally getting better,” she said.
For people who suffer from the emotional numbness, terrifying flashbacks, nightmares and avoidance behaviors of PTSD, “exposure therapy” remains the gold-standard treatment. The therapy involves patients being asked to imagine in detail the past event that caused them such pain.
It sounds counterintuitive, but this type of controlled re-exposure “allows your brain to metabolize it, break it down and deal with it,” Cukor explained. “At the end of the treatment, people’s memories are still sad and difficult, but they are not taking over their lives.”
In many cases, however, simply imagining the scene isn’t enough.
“Sometimes people aren’t able to engage when they close their eyes — they are still avoiding,” explained Cukor, an instructor in the department of psychiatry at Weill Cornell. “That’s where virtual reality comes in.”
The new project at Weill Cornell uses state-of-the-art, multi-sensory technology to create a “virtual reality 9/11″ that helps PTSD patients break through that avoidance “wall” and find the path to healing. During a typical session, patients stand in place, wearing the type of video-equipped helmet usually associated with high-end video games.
Except this is no game. Instead, the programmers who designed this “virtual 9/11″ listened carefully to eyewitness accounts and recreated that day onscreen in fine detail. Patients see and hear the first notes of alarm from inside the offices of the Twin Towers. They frantically search for an exit. They make the nerve-wracking descent down long, claustrophobic stairwells and finally emerge into the ensuing chaos on the ground.ββ
10:53 PM in Uncategorized, World Trade Center, Ground Zero, Related Stories
I’m not a psychiatrist, but I worry about the use of technology to portray the truth of what one experienced in one’s past. There are so many ways that someone proficient in technology could alter the truth and thus, provide a false recreation, ultimately manipulating the patient’s perspective of his/her reality. Even when a patient reveals through verbal discourse, there is a chance that events could have been misinterpreted.
Nevertheless, I am glad to see that some astute individuals are looking at the psychological impact that the events of 9/11 had on so many, which is all the more reason why the new Freedom Tower needs to be a beacon of healing.
Jeanne · November 12th, 2007 at 4:28 pm