Elsevier

The Lancet

Volume 360, Issue 9335, 7 September 2002, Pages 741-742
The Lancet

Commentary
Post-trauma debriefing: the road too frequently travelled

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(02)09947-6Get rights and content

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      Other researchers argue that not everyone wants or needs emotional support. From this perspective, it is believed that CISM could be ineffective for those individuals who under normal circumstances repress their emotional feelings (Gist & Devilly, 2002, Devilly & Cotton, 2003). Other critics postulate that the process of remembering traumatic events has the potential to result in the reoccurrence of posttraumatic stress disorder (Lewis, 2004).

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      The goal of CISD is to prevent the emergence of full-blown psychopathology; it typically is based in group work run with high-risk occupational groups, although individual debriefing sessions may be used (Adler et al., 2008; Devilly, Gist, & Cotton, 2006). Use of CISD is widespread (Devilly et al.; Gist & Devilly, 2002) and CISD is popular with the law enforcement community (Miller, 2006). CISD includes reconstructing, venting, and normalizing the traumatic event along with some psychoeducation.

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