Next Steps.
Even much improved patients sometimes feel shaky in leav-
ing treatment. Therapist and patient discuss risks of symptom recurrence and
forecast ways of coping with future challenges. The patient should optimally
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127
leave treatment with a new recognition of the impact of the trauma he or she
has suffered, its interpersonal sequelae, and with gains in and tools for further
improving interpersonal functioning.
Termination is a time to anticipate future problems the patient may face and
to discuss interpersonal coping strategies to deal with them. “What problems
can you anticipate arising in future?”
For patients whose PTSD has really improved, the prognosis may actually
be better than it is for major depression (Judd et al., 1998), which tends to
recur in the absence of maintenance treatment (Frank et al., 1990). Patients
whose PTSD gets better generally stay better unless they suffer a new trauma.
A patient who understands how to handle interpersonal stressors by calling
on social supports to express their feelings and gain validation may well be
less likely to suffer a recurrence. Some patients may benefit from a shift in
treatment from the current focus to treating comorbid disorders, or referral to
another therapist for that purpose.
Patients who do not improve in acute (14- week) IPT for PTD, or who
show minimal improvement but have considerable residual symptoms and
need ongoing further treatment, should be referred appropriately. For IPT
non- responders, this might include pharmacotherapy with serotonin re-
uptake inhibitors (SRIs) and psychotherapies such as Prolonged Exposure,
Cognitive Processing Therapy, or another empirically validated treatment. In
our randomized treatment study, we offered non- responders to 14 weeks of
study treatment a choice of one of the other study therapies (IPT, Prolonged
Exposure, or Relaxation Therapy), medication, or a combination thereof.
Many of those patients subsequently responded to this second course of
treatment.
When patients with PTSD (or any diagnosis) do not improve, it is impor-
tant to help them see that this lack of improvement is not a personal failure,
but that the
treatment
has failed: no approach works for everyone, and there
are alternative, effective treatments available. The approach is comparable to
a failed pharmacotherapy trial: blame the treatment, not the patient, and find
a different treatment that might work better. Under such circumstances, it is
important to help patients recognize any gains they have made, and to help
them fight off demoralization that might keep them from proceeding toward
treatments that might help.
One way to do this in IPT is to review interpersonal progress, which may
well have been significant: How has the patient learned to handle relation-
ships differently? What skills has the patient applied in dealing with people
with whom he or she had previously been detached and distant? The patient
who has progressed in this area has fulfilled his or her part of the bargain
in IPT: this is what we have been asking the patient to do. Symptoms are
128
I P T F O R P T S D
supposed to have improved as a result: if they have not, then (1) the patient still
has gained some interpersonal skills, which is good; and (2) it should be clear
that it is the therapy itself that has failed to deliver its promise, not the patient.
It is reasonable to ask a patient who is terminating treatment to check in
with you in future. This simply adopts the general practitioner’s approach to
treatment: “Now that you’re better, you can go home; if you feel ill again, please
come back.” This stance follows from the IPT emphasis that illness is treatable
and not the patient’s fault. You can also ask whether, if it’s not an imposition,
the patient could check in with you in 6 or 9 or 12 months to let you know how
things are going. Most patients are happy to do so. This provides a sense of
continuity even after treatment has formally ended, and indicates the thera-
pist’s ongoing interest in the patient’s well- being.
MAINTENANCE TRE ATMENT
Several studies at the University of Pittsburgh have demonstrated that main-
tenance IPT, conducted as infrequently as once a month, can protect patients
from recurrence of even highly recurrent major depressive disorder (e.g., Frank
et al., 1990; Frank et al., 2007; Reynolds et al., 1999). Some patients may benefit
significantly from acute IPT for major depression, yet remain at high risk of
recurrence, either because of a history of multiple prior episodes or because of
high residual depressive symptoms. For example, they may have improved in
treatment from an initial Hamilton Depression Rating Scale score of 29 to a
post- treatment score of 14, but at 14 remain on the cusp of major depression.
For such patients, who already know the approach and their therapists, main-
tenance treatment makes clear clinical sense, and research has validated this.
For such patients, the IPT approach is to terminate acute treatment and then
re- contract for continuation or maintenance IPT: for example, once- monthly
sessions for three years, or twice monthly sessions for two years.
How about ongoing treatment for PTSD? Many patients with PTSD im-
proved in our IPT study, and yet many did not fully recover and might have
benefitted from maintenance IPT therapy. Indeed, most patients with chronic
PTSD who receive any empirically validated treatment do not remit and might
benefit from further treatment. Our research trials simply tried to determine
whether IPT worked acutely, a necessary first step before considering longer
term treatment. Now that we have an initial positive answer supporting IPT, it
would be helpful to know whether maintenance IPT works— but absent data,
we simply cannot say. Because the National Institute of Mental Health is not
funding expensive maintenance treatment trials these days, we will probably
have no answer in the near future.
Termination Phase and Maintenance
129
In clinical practice, it makes intuitive sense for a patient with PTSD who
has improved in IPT but remains symptomatic to continue treatment with a
therapist whom he or she has come to trust. To do so, the therapist should first
conclude acute treatment as originally contracted, then set up a new schedule
incorporating the patient’s preference. How frequently would the patient
like to meet? For how long an interval into the future? And with what goals?
Maintenance IPT has the flexibility of switching problem areas to meet new
interpersonal issues that may arise over the course of time. This maintenance
approach has worked well for PTSD patients in my private practice who ben-
efitted from acute IPT.
11
Difficult Situations
and Special Circumstances
“The man who in a fit of melancholy kills himself today would have
wished he lived had he waited a week.”
— Voltaire,
Philosophical Dictionary
Like many individuals with other psychiatric diagnoses, patients with PTSD
present potential clinical risks. The therapist needs always to keep these in
mind in order to minimize them. Our treatment study minimized risk to some
degree through study exclusion criteria (excluding substance dependence, for
example), frequent evaluation of symptoms, and encouraging patients to tell
us of crises.
DANGEROUSNESS
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