Feasibility of EMDR toward personality functioning in older adults with PTSD
Description
Objectives
Severe posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in older adults (≥60 years) has been found to be associated with maladaptive personality functioning and personality disorders (PD). Emerging evidence in adults supports that reprocessing adverse events with Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) could improve personality functioning and reduce full PDdiagnosis.
Methods
A multicenterfeasibility study in 24 older PTSD-patients receiving weekly EMDR-sessions for either 3, 6 or 9 months. A linear-mixed-model was used with personality functioning (SIPP-SF) as dependent variable and time, PTSD-severity (CAPS-5), and “othertreatment” as predictor variables. Secondary, pre- and posttreatment percentages were calculated for the PDspresence.
Results
Symptom changes over time showed a significant influence of CAPS-5 on SIPP-SF (b = −1.40, 95% CI=[−2.48 to −0.33], p = .012), no significant effect of time for total SIPP-SF, and a significant improvement of SIPP-SF “identityintegration”-scale over time (b = 9.20, 95% CI=[0.97–17.42], p = .029). There was a marginal significant effect of “othertreatment” (b = 8.42, 95% CI=[−0.30–17.13], p = .058). There was 31% full PDs-decrease.
Conclusions
Observed improvements in personality functioning from pre to post EMDRtreatment were explained by PTSD-severity. Identityintegration improved significantly over time. Results suggest that participants with “othertreatment” showed more severe baseline-pathology and thus lower personality functioning.
Clinical implications
EMDR, in addition to being a feasible treatment option for older adults with PTSD, improves personality functioning and reduces the presence of PDs over time.
Severe posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in older adults (≥60 years) has been found to be associated with maladaptive personality functioning and personality disorders (PD). Emerging evidence in adults supports that reprocessing adverse events with Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) could improve personality functioning and reduce full PDdiagnosis.
Methods
A multicenterfeasibility study in 24 older PTSD-patients receiving weekly EMDR-sessions for either 3, 6 or 9 months. A linear-mixed-model was used with personality functioning (SIPP-SF) as dependent variable and time, PTSD-severity (CAPS-5), and “othertreatment” as predictor variables. Secondary, pre- and posttreatment percentages were calculated for the PDspresence.
Results
Symptom changes over time showed a significant influence of CAPS-5 on SIPP-SF (b = −1.40, 95% CI=[−2.48 to −0.33], p = .012), no significant effect of time for total SIPP-SF, and a significant improvement of SIPP-SF “identityintegration”-scale over time (b = 9.20, 95% CI=[0.97–17.42], p = .029). There was a marginal significant effect of “othertreatment” (b = 8.42, 95% CI=[−0.30–17.13], p = .058). There was 31% full PDs-decrease.
Conclusions
Observed improvements in personality functioning from pre to post EMDRtreatment were explained by PTSD-severity. Identityintegration improved significantly over time. Results suggest that participants with “othertreatment” showed more severe baseline-pathology and thus lower personality functioning.
Clinical implications
EMDR, in addition to being a feasible treatment option for older adults with PTSD, improves personality functioning and reduces the presence of PDs over time.
Format
Journal
Language
English
Original Work Citation
Gielkens, E. M. J., Sobczak, S., Gerrits, N., Rosowsky, E., Stas, L., Rossi, G., & van Alpen, S. P. J. (2024, April). Feasibility of EMDR toward personality functioning in older adults with PTSD. Clinical Gerontologist. doi:10.1080/07317115.2024.2344793
Collection
Citation
“Feasibility of EMDR toward personality functioning in older adults with PTSD,” Francine Shapiro Library, accessed May 18, 2024, https://francineshapirolibrary.omeka.net/items/show/29126.