Cognitive Behavioral Interventions for PTSD

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 30 лип 2019
  • Dr. Dawn-Elise Snipes is a Licensed Professional Counselor and Qualified Clinical Supervisor. She received her PhD in Mental Health Counseling from the University of Florida in 2002. In addition to being a practicing clinician, she has provided training to counselors, social workers, nurses and case managers internationally since 2006 through AllCEUs.com 📢SUBSCRIBE and click the BELL to get notified when new videos are uploaded.
    If this video has helped you, please consider donating to support the channel Cashapp: 💲DocSnipes Paypal: DocSnipes.com/Donate UA-cam: DocSnipes.com/Join
    💻 Online course based on this video can be found at
    AllCEUs.com Unlimited continuing education CEUs $59
    ⭐ Specialty Certificate Programs and Masterclasses in Case Management and Counselor Certification beginning at $89 AllCEUs.com/certificate-tracks
    Cognitive Behavioral Interventions for PTSD
    CEUs are available for this presentation at AllCEUs
    www.allceus.com/member/cart/i...
    #cognitivebehavioral
    #CBT #PTSD #trauma #traumatrvovery
    #selfhelp #cognitivebehavioraltherapy #tips #counseling #counselling
    NOTE: ALL VIDEOS are for educational purposes only and are NOT a replacement for medical advice or counseling from a licensed professional.
    Video by Dr. Dawn Elise Snipes on integrative behavioral health approaches including counseling techniques and skills for improving mental health and reducing mental illness.
    AllCEUs.com provides multimedia counselor education and CEUs for LPCs, LMHCs, LMFTs and LCSWs as well as addiction counselor precertification training and continuing education on many of the videos on this channel. Unlike other providers like CE4Less, AllCEUs includes a weekly LIVE Stream Webinar with your unlimited continuing education and professional development membership.
    Part of #PTSDawareness explore cognitive behavioral therapy techniques to address trauma and PTSD related symptoms. #cognitivebehavioral #traumainformed
    Sponsored by TherapyNotes.com Manage your practice securely and efficiently. Two free months of TherapyNotes with coupon code "CEU"
    Want to listen to it as a podcast instead? Subscribe to Counselor Toolbox Podcast
    Also check out our other podcasts, Happiness Isn't Brain Surgery and Addiction Counselor Exam Review
    AllCEUs provides multimedia #counseloreducation and CEUs for LPCs, LMHCs, LMFTs and LCSWs as well as #addiction counselor precertification training and continuing education.
    Live, Interactive Webinars ($5)
    Unlimited Counseling CEs for $59
    Specialty Certificates starting at $89 including
    #AllCEUs courses are accepted in most states because we are approved as an education provider for NAADAC, the States of Florida and Texas Boards of Social Work and Mental Health/Professional Counseling, the California Consortium for Addiction Professionals and Professions.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 55

  • @DocSnipes
    @DocSnipes  8 місяців тому +1

    👌More videos can be found on this topic at: ua-cam.com/play/PLcB3trehXswg6FS0YzaQLwvX7jj1avd_F.html&si=T0Xm154Gm21Rrv-P
    ❤️Self help activities and worksheets and concierge coaching with Dr. Snipes can be accessed at DocSnipes.com
    👍Online Courses for Continuing Education (CEU, OPD, CPD) and Substance Abuse Counselor Certification

  • @salandersalgado4038
    @salandersalgado4038 2 роки тому +12

    There should be a online therapy video, because not everyone can afford therapy to heal from Ptsd.

    • @alecnolastname4362
      @alecnolastname4362 2 роки тому +6

      not everybody can enter a confined space with an authority figure (like a docs office) because of the same.

  • @musicmom2161
    @musicmom2161 Рік тому +3

    Thank you so much for this video. For being an RN who suffers from cPTSD this was extremely helpful. Loved the way you explained and supported your lecture with visuals. Very clear format.

    • @DocSnipes
      @DocSnipes  Рік тому +4

      You’re so welcome. I am grateful to be of help and I appreciate you watching the video. Other videos you might be interested in can be found at ua-cam.com/users/DocSnipessearch?query=PTSD

    • @musicmom2161
      @musicmom2161 Рік тому +1

      @@DocSnipes Thank you very much! I am watching all your other videos with great interest and finding them extremely helpful.

  • @clareliang9340
    @clareliang9340 Рік тому +3

    Thank you for another super information video Doc Snipes, I really like how when you touch on a technique that you really explains how to do it in detailed structured manner. Instead of saying, just do cognitive restructuring (or the tree example), you actually explain the steps and provide examples which I find super helpful and can immediately implement in work. I appreciate your videos because it makes so much sense and they take sometimes overwhelming or confusing information and simplified in a digestible chunks. I'm a trainee therapist, and I look up your videos everytime I need some clarification.

    • @DocSnipes
      @DocSnipes  Рік тому +1

      I am grateful to be of help and I appreciate you watching the video. Other videos you might be interested in can be found at ua-cam.com/users/DocSnipessearch?query=ptsd

  • @goatrockhunters7866
    @goatrockhunters7866 2 роки тому +2

    I’ve been diagnosed with PTSD. Did several tours in Afghanistan and Iraq. I had a bad incident last year involving my wife and son. I was arrested and put in confinement. Judge ordered me to seek treatment and psych evaluation. Charges have not been dropped and I have to see him about every 6 months. I will be in treatment for years. I have had severe episodes of anger, anxiety, even intense rage. I often feel so ashamed and helpless. My sons are adults now and don’t have much to do with me because of my many episodes of unbelievable rage. Head hurts all the time. I’ve gone thru Bio-mass treatment and see a psychologist every week. Overall, I’ve gotten better. However, there are times when the demon comes back!

    • @DocSnipes
      @DocSnipes  2 роки тому +1

      Thanks for watching. Wishing you peace, health, and happiness.

    • @maeveours4378
      @maeveours4378 Рік тому +1

      So impressed by your strength! Hope everything keeps going well for you

  • @justinweichel8563
    @justinweichel8563 2 роки тому +4

    Thank you so much for putting this video together. It was very educational and helpful for me in understanding myself, ptsd, and therapy.

  • @straynoodle5057
    @straynoodle5057 Рік тому +2

    Great presentation. Thank you!

    • @DocSnipes
      @DocSnipes  Рік тому

      So welcome! I appreciate you watching!Other videos you might be interested in can be found at: ua-cam.com/users/DocSnipessearch?query=PTSD

  • @GALENO713
    @GALENO713 19 днів тому

    Amazing CE. Thank you.

    • @DocSnipes
      @DocSnipes  19 днів тому

      You’re most welcome

  • @markusschaffer9712
    @markusschaffer9712 2 роки тому +2

    This explains my symptoms and why I react the way I do. PCS doesn't help,either. Thank you for this great explanation.

    • @DocSnipes
      @DocSnipes  2 роки тому +1

      Thanks for watching. Wishing you peace, health, and happiness.

  • @mukimbarahedi-pinkamazonth219
    @mukimbarahedi-pinkamazonth219 2 роки тому +1

    I love that you changed the channel name... I like Allceus but I love Doc Snipes ...

  • @helenewebster9462
    @helenewebster9462 2 роки тому +1

    This is very helpful for me. This is what I need to understand and to be understood.

  • @jessbroken1261
    @jessbroken1261 2 роки тому +2

    Excellent video. Very informative and helpful to understand what I am going through. Thank you!!

    • @DocSnipes
      @DocSnipes  2 роки тому

      Thanks for watching and commenting.

  • @terrikhat2
    @terrikhat2 2 роки тому +2

    3 emotional support cats.

  • @furkandesign-art9213
    @furkandesign-art9213 Рік тому +1

    31:00

  • @schwul1956
    @schwul1956 3 роки тому +4

    This is an excellent video!
    Why is the person in the thumbnail wearing a face mask?

  • @cheeks6310
    @cheeks6310 2 роки тому +1

    I keep coming across ptsd, bpd and more recently adhd all having similar symptoms.

    • @DocSnipes
      @DocSnipes  2 роки тому +1

      Thanks for watching and commenting.

  • @terrikhat2
    @terrikhat2 2 роки тому

    I had a skull fracture and a broken collar bone when I was a toddler.I wonder if this was just more trauma on top of everything else...

  • @susanmazzella865
    @susanmazzella865 2 роки тому +2

    Yes I Know I'll die young thanks to my messed-up childhood. Actually finding help is almost impossible and my cortisol is over the moon. It looks like the only relief is death. Feeling hopeless and helpless.

    • @justinweichel8563
      @justinweichel8563 2 роки тому

      Jesus loves you. There's good and supportive people in church.

    • @muslimwarrior9891
      @muslimwarrior9891 2 роки тому

      You’re not alone 💕 , ur friends might cry I will cry , if u die so plz don’t

  • @danielraypickrel4316
    @danielraypickrel4316 2 роки тому

    31:07 tears.

  • @lavamapiaegologica9668
    @lavamapiaegologica9668 3 роки тому +1

    8.00 earley intervention: is that after 23 months? (child 9 jear 11 now?)
    9.39 geen herinnering aan (no memory on it) cronicly stressed.

  • @HeatherLandex
    @HeatherLandex Рік тому +2

    I notice an overlap with the symptoms of ADHD. So could adults with ADHD actually have CPTSD? Interesting. I have I understood it's basically chronic hyper alertness breaks the normal feedback loop?

    • @DocSnipes
      @DocSnipes  Рік тому +1

      Yes, they could have cPTSD and that could be overlooked and diagnosed as ADHD. Thanks for watching. Other videos that might help can be found at: ua-cam.com/users/DocSnipessearch?query=cPTSD

  • @sterlgirlceline
    @sterlgirlceline Рік тому +2

    👏🏻👏🏻😊⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

    • @DocSnipes
      @DocSnipes  Рік тому

      Thanks so much for watching the video. What did you find most helpful from it?

  • @spencerratcliffe6840
    @spencerratcliffe6840 2 роки тому +2

    I’ve had ptsd for many years & now luckily I’m at the stage that I can manage it. The interesting thing for me is that I’ve just been diagnosed with a pituitary tumour. I’m wondering if the 2 are linked.

    • @DocSnipes
      @DocSnipes  2 роки тому +2

      I don't know if there is any research on that? Thanks for watching.

    • @spencerratcliffe6840
      @spencerratcliffe6840 2 роки тому +1

      @@DocSnipes pleasure to watch. Thanks for posting the content

    • @muslimwarrior9891
      @muslimwarrior9891 2 роки тому +1

      Yass queen , (abt the managing part)

  • @nujnujabram4234
    @nujnujabram4234 Рік тому +1

    Thunderstorm inside our brain how to control it????

  • @cyandiaz1800
    @cyandiaz1800 3 роки тому +1

    discibingisnot counselling..8im 5 min in andaboutto click awayfor some solves tothe problem

  • @DrCognitive
    @DrCognitive 3 роки тому +4

    I'm currently working with many PTSD cases with active duty police officers who are, essentially, not looking at their trauma just in the rearview mirror, but rather it is in their review mirror AND still ahead of them down the road. They are subjected to more trauma and triggering events every day. How would you propose helping them process it and reduce the impact of PTSD symptoms? Would past tense language still be used even knowing that tomorrow they might get traumatized again in a similar way?

    • @DocSnipes
      @DocSnipes  3 роки тому +5

      In general I would still use past tense language because the trauma they experienced is in the past. We do not know what is going to happen tomorrow. Mindfulness and focusing on the present moment can be helpful and assist in reducing constant HPA_Axis overactivation. I would also explore their strengths and steps they can take to prevent and mitigate trauma in the future. What skills and tools helped them survive past trauma? If they are writing their story, what does the next chapter look like? What will they do the same? Different? Yes, they are exposed to triggers on the daily. Trauma is disempowering and removes a persons sense of safety. What can they do to regain their power and sense of safety? What cognitive distortions might be continuing to make them feel disempowered. Each officer is unique, so these are just really general guidelines. It sounds like your people are focused on the expectation that horrible things WILL happen again instead of MIGHT.

    • @DrCognitive
      @DrCognitive 3 роки тому +2

      @@DocSnipes Thank you so much for the thoughtful and helpful reply.

    • @lisasternenkind6467
      @lisasternenkind6467 3 роки тому

      By using CPT - cognitive processing therapy.
      I am suffering from complex PTSD and I must say, that confrontation might be the right therapy for anxiety disorders, or maybe even as act of PREVENTION of PTSD, but definitely NOT as therapy for any form of PTSD, as it is actually a way to retraumatize somebody, who is already traumatized. So it does nor only make no sense, but also means harm! In the best possible sense, confrontation would train to have no emotional reaction, which may be the right way to go if you intend to train killers, sociopaths, and such.
      Please remember, that de-sensibilization does not mean to make somebody un-emotional. If this were the case, then there would be so many psychopharmacal medications out there to use.

    • @DrCognitive
      @DrCognitive 3 роки тому +4

      @@lisasternenkind6467 Respectfully, I disagree with your assessment Lisa. I am using CPT with many cases of complex PTSD with police officers who have been traumatized for 20-30 years on a near daily basis by a variety of traumatic events from having babies and other innocents die in their arms to seeing the aftermath of suicides and murders, to being around horrific accidents, to being involved in truly life threatening events, and it *IS* effective. I've seen symptom reductions in as little as 4-6 sessions of up to 50% with a massive number of patients - however, one size does not fit all and there are a few that don't seem to mesh with CPT in which case I change to a more traditional CBT model which, albeit slower, is helping. I think for you to say "definitely NOT as therapy for any form of PTSD" based on your personal experience is inappropriate and, if others read your message, could lead them to additional suffering by causing prospective clients to turn away from therapy. So, while it is perfectly okay to say CPT did not work for you (assuming there were no therapist factors involved as well) but to say it doesn't work and should never be used is flat out wrong.
      My comment focused on specific use cases with those officers still on active duty and working who continue to return to an environment which traumatizes them as their trauma experiences are past, present, and future. That is why I asked the question I did.

    • @debb.3857
      @debb.3857 2 роки тому

      @@DrCognitive AND POLICE NEED A LOT OF PROFESSIONAL HELP & THERAPY FOR THEIR ADDICTIONS & ALCOHOLISM, & ANGER & RAGE ISSUES TOO!

  • @cyandiaz1800
    @cyandiaz1800 3 роки тому +2

    we KNOW whatitisdthereisnevera solve

    • @lisasternenkind6467
      @lisasternenkind6467 3 роки тому +2

      The past cannot be changed, and neither will our scars vanish. But we can learn to live with it and with our scars, the physical and the psychological, without being trapped and tortured by it all for the rest of our lives. And this is what we HAVE to aim for, as otherwise it will overrun us.

  • @debb.3857
    @debb.3857 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks 🐾for the VIDEO.
    Do you know how I can get a Support DOG??(** DJ.DEB.USA WANTS TO KNOW*)THANKS