Department of Psychiatry, Academic Medical Centre
Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam
Centre of Work-Related Mental Disorders, Altrecht Mental Health Care, Utrecht
Department of Psychiatry, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Correspondence: Marit Sijbrandij, Academic Medical Centre, Department of Psychiatry, Tafelbergweg 25, 1105 BC, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Tel.: +31 20 5668783; fax: +31 20 6919019; email: e.m.sijbrandij{at}amc.uva.nl
Funding detailed in Acknowledgements.
* Preliminary results were presented to the International Society of
Traumatic Stress Studies at their 18th and 21st annual conferences. ![]()
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Aims We studied the effect of emotional ventilation debriefing and educational debriefing v. no debriefing on symptoms of PTSD, anxiety and depression.
Method We randomised 236 adult survivors of a recenttraumatic eventto either emotional ventilation debriefing, educational debriefing or no debriefing (control) and followed up at 2 weeks, 6 weeks and 6 months.
Results Psychiatric symptoms decreased in all three groups over time, without significantdifferences between the groups in symptoms of PTSD (P=0.33). Participants in the emotional debriefing group with high baseline hyperarousal score had significantly more PTSD symptoms at 6 weeks than control participants (P=0.005).
Conclusions Our study did not provide evidence for the usefulness of individual psychological debriefing in reducing symptoms of PTSD, anxiety and depression after psychological trauma.
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Inclusion criteria were: (a) having experienced a single traumatic event fulfilling the criterion A1 of the diagnosis of PTSD in the DSM-IV (American Psychiatric Association, 2001); (b) traumatic event occurred less than 2 weeks previously; (c) age 18 years or older; (d) proficiency in Dutch.
Exclusion criteria were: (a) suicidal ideation; (b) already having received a debriefing session since the trauma.
Sample size calculations suggested that each group should consist of 64 participants to detect a medium effect size (d=0.5) with a power of 80% and a two-sided significance level of 5% (Cohen, 1977). To allow for sample attrition we decided to enrol at least 225 participants (75 participants in each group) during the 2-year inclusion period. We assigned participants randomly to one of three groups: emotional debriefing, educational debriefing or no debriefing (control). Randomisation was carried out on a 1:1:1 basis using block sizes that randomly varied between six and nine participants, and was performed by the principal investigator (M.S.) on a central computer, and a log file of all randomisations was kept. Participants were not masked to their intervention, but they were asked not to reveal this information to the research assistants who conducted the assessments, as these assistants were masked to the allocated interventions.
Participants were invited to four assessments: a pre-intervention assessment (baseline) and three follow-up assessments: at 2 weeks, 6 weeks and 6 months after the intervention. Written informed consent was obtained from all participants after full description of the study protocol. The study protocol was approved by the Medical Ethics Committee of the Academic Medical Centre.
Interventions
Approximately 2 weeks after experiencing the traumatic incident (median 15
days, range 11-19), participants received either the emotional debriefing,
psychoeducational debriefing or no debriefing (control). We based the 2-week
interval between trauma and debriefing on medical ethical considerations, as
it was then assumed that an early timing of the intervention contributed to
the harmful effect (Chemtob et
al, 1997). The emotional and educational debriefings were
based on the Critical Incidents Stress Debriefing protocol originally designed
by Mitchell (CISD; Mitchell,
1983; Mitchell & Everly,
2001), but with exclusion of the psychoeducational elements and
the emotional elements respectively.
Emotional debriefing consisted of five stages:
Two stages were excluded:
Educational debriefing consisted of six stages of the Mitchell protocol:
The Reaction stage (4) was excluded. Both types of debriefing lasted 45 min to 1 h and were individually administered. Eight clinical psychologists performed the debriefing; these were trained during 2 days by the authors (I.C. and B.G.) in administering the debriefing protocols. Protocol adherence was ensured by monthly supervision, and was measured by a rating system specifically designed for this study. In this rating system, we measured the occurrence of both desired and undesired components in audiotaped sessions of both types of debriefing, following the recommendations of Waltz et al (1993). The rating system consisted of three parts, i.e. general, proscribed and forbidden behaviours, which were combined in an overall protocol adherence score. Raters were nine clinical psychologists. A random sample of 43 briefings was independently scored by two raters. Interrater reliability was good, with an intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.77 (95% CI 0.58-0.88). According to the raters, 88% (range 67%-100%) of the desired protocol components occurred.
Measures
Severity of symptoms of PTSD, anxiety and depression was assessed at
baseline (preintervention assessment) and at all three follow-up assessments
(2 weeks, 6 weeks and 6 months after the intervention). Nine clinical
psychologists conducted the assessments. All assessments of one participant
were performed by the same person.
Symptoms were measured with the Structured Interview for PTSD (SI-PTSD;
Carlier et al, 1998;
Davidson et al,
1989), which is a 17-item clinical interview that records the
presence and severity of the 17 DSM-IV diagnostic criteria for PTSD. Each item
is rated on a 0-4 scale; scores of 3 or higher indicate the presence of that
particular symptom. In accordance with DSM-IV, interview items are clustered
into the three PTSD symptom groups: re-experiencing (5 symptoms), avoidance (7
symptoms) and hyperarousal (5 symptoms). In the presence of at least one
re-experiencing re-experiencing symptom, at least three avoidance symptoms and
at least two hyperarousal symptoms during 1 month, PTSD according to DSM-IV
may be diagnosed. The sum of the item scores results in a maximum continuous
PTSD score of 68. Higher scores indicate the presence of more symptoms. In
this study, we also used the baseline SI-PTSD scores to measure acute
psychological distress. For that purpose, re-experiencing, avoidance and
hyperarousal scores were dichotomised into high and low using the cut-offs for
DSM-IV diagnosis. SI-PTSD scores correlate highly with clinicians' ratings and
with other similar self-report PTSD instruments
(Carlier et al, 1998;
Davidson et al,
1989). For the Dutch version of the SI-PTSD, adequate internal
consistency (Cronbach's
=0.93) and interrater reliability were found
(Cohen's
=0.88; Carlier et
al, 1998).
States of anxiety and depression were measured with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS; Zigmond & Snaith, 1983; Spinhoven et al, 1997), a well-established 14-item scale consisting of two sub-scales: HADS-A (anxiety, 7 items, range 0-21) and HADS-D (depression, 7 items, range 0-21). Higher scores indicate more anxiety and/or depression. The Dutch version of the HADS showed satisfactory reliability and validity (Spinhoven et al, 1997).
Data analysis
We used chi-squared tests and independent t-tests to examine
whether participants lost to follow-up differed from other participants. For
the main outcomes, we used repeated-measurement analyses to study the changes
over time in SI-PTSD and HADS scores between the three intervention groups. We
applied mixed linear models to take into account that measurements within the
same individual are correlated (Verbeke
& Molenberghs, 1997). No mathematical pattern was imposed on
the covariance structure for measurements within the same individual
(unstructured). Another advantage of this repeated measurements model is that
not only the complete cases, but all available cases, are used in the
analysis. The mean score for each outcome was modelled as a function of the
intervention given (three levels), time since intervention (as a categorical
variable with three levels) and the pre-intervention measurement (continuous).
The interaction term between time and intervention was added to the model to
test whether trends over time differed for the three intervention groups. To
determine whether symptoms of acute psychological distress influence the
effect of the intervention, we added the following interaction terms to the
model: re-experiencing, avoidance and hyperarousal at baseline (all
dichotomised into high and low).
All our analyses were on an intention-to-treat basis, unless otherwise indicated. A two-tailed a level of P=0.05 was used to determine statistical significance. For all analyses, the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences, version 11.0.1 for Windows was used.
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![]() View larger version (38K): [in a new window] [as a PowerPoint slide] |
Fig. 1 Study protocol and flow of patients through trial. EMO, emotional
debriefing; EDU, educational debriefing.
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2=6.2, d.f.=2, P=0.046), more participants in
educational debriefing had secondary school as their highest education
(
2=11.7, d.f.=4, P=0.020) or experienced an accident
rather than an assault (
2=6.6, d.f.=2, P=0.04) than
in the other two groups. No other significant differences in baseline
characteristics between the study groups were found. |
View this table: [in a new window] |
Table 1 Baseline characteristics of the study group (n=236)
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Main outcomes
The mean SI-PTSD and HADS anxiety and depression scores at the three
follow-up assessments are shown in Table
2.
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View this table: [in a new window] |
Table 2 Main outcome measures (n=236)
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Mixed-model analysis on SI-PTSD total scores based on all 236 participants showed that the severity of PTSD decreased over time in all three groups (P<0.001), but that there was no significant difference in SI-PTSD total score between groups (F=1.17, d.f.=174, P=0.33) (Fig. 2). The estimated reductions for the SI-PTSD between 2 weeks' and 6 months' follow-up (adjusted for baseline) were 7.1 in the emotional (95% CI 4.7-9.5), 6.4 in the educational (95% CI 4.0-8.8) and 5.9 in the no debriefing group (95% CI 3.6-8.2). No significant differences between intervention groups were found on the SI-PTSD subscales of re-experiencing (P=0.058), avoidance (P=0.84) or hyperarousal (P=0.20). Completer analysis of SI-PTSD scores in which the 12 participants who did not receive the allocated debriefing were excluded revealed similar results, showing no significant differences between groups in SI-PTSD total score (P=0.28), reexperiencing (P=0.058), avoidance (P= 0.82) or hyperarousal score (P=0.15).
![]() View larger version (41K): [in a new window] [as a PowerPoint slide] |
Fig. 2 Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) scores as measured by Structured
Interview for PTSD in participants (n=236) randomly assigned to an
emotional or educational debriefing or a waiting-list control condition. Mean
(s.e.) values at baseline, 2 weeks, 6 weeks and 6 months from a
repeated-measurement model adjusting for baseline value of PTSD score.
,
educational debriefing; , no debriefing.
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Mixed-model analysis based on all 236 participants showed that HADS anxiety scores decreased significantly over time in all three groups (P<0.001), without a significant difference between intervention groups (F=0.15, d.f.=175, P=0.96). The mean reductions in HADS anxiety scores between 2 weeks' and 6 months' follow-up (adjusted for baseline) were estimated as 2.4 in the emotional (95% CI 1.4-3.3), 2.2 in the educational (95% CI 1.2-3.2) and 2.1 in the no debriefing groups (95% CI 1.1-3.0). HADS depression score also decreased over time in all three groups (P<0.001), without a significant difference between intervention groups (F=1.4, d.f.=175, P=0.23). The mean reductions in HADS depression scores between 2 weeks' and 6 months' follow-up (adjusted for baseline) were estimated as 1.6 in the emotional (95% CI 0.6-2.6), 1.5 in the educational (95% CI 0.5-2.5) and 1.4 in the no debriefing group (95% CI 0.4-2.4). Completer analyses were consistent with intention-to-treat results, showing no significant differences between groups in HADS anxiety (P=0.95) or depression scores (P=0.20).
At baseline, a total of 23 participants (9.7%) fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for PTSD, ignoring the time criterion. At 2 weeks' follow-up, the disorder was diagnosed in 10 participants (5.4%), at 6 weeks' follow-up in 9 participants (4.9%) and at 6 months' follow up in 8 participants (4.8%). No significant differences between the three intervention groups in the distribution of participants with and without the diagnosis were found.
Subgroup analyses
To examine whether in this study the effect of an intervention interacted
with acute psychological distress, we added the following factors to our
model: high v. low intrusion, avoidance, and hyperarousal at
baseline. Based on cut-off scores of one symptom present for intrusion, three
for avoidance and two for hyperarousal, 147 participants (62.3%) had high
intrusion, 29 participants (12.2%) had high avoidance and 59 (25.0%) had high
hyperarousal. Mixed-model analyses based on all 236 participants showed that
effects of debriefing were not different in any of these subgroups, with the
exception of the subgroup of participants with two or more hyperarousal
symptoms. Participants in the emotional debriefing group with two or more
hyperarousal symptoms had significantly higher PTSD scores than similar
participants in the control group at 6 weeks after the intervention (test for
interaction P=0.005 for SI-PTSD score). There were no other
differences between groups. Subgroup analyses based on completers were
consistent with those of the intention-to-treat analysis and did not show a
differential effect for debriefing in any of the subgroups as defined above,
with the exception of the subgroup of participants with two or more
hyperarousal symptoms at baseline. These participants had significantly higher
PTSD scores if they had received emotional debriefing than similar
participants in the control group at the 6 weeks' follow-up (test for
interaction P=0.003 for SI-PTSD score).
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Relation of findings to previous debriefing studies
The absence of an effect of debriefing in our overall study group is in
line with the results of recent randomised clinical trials in which no
differences were found between debriefed trauma victims and non-debriefed
victims in symptoms of PTSD, anxiety or depression
(Conlon et al, 1999;
Rose et al, 1999),
but differs from individual debriefing trials that showed adverse effects
(Hobbs et al, 1996;
Bisson et al, 1997). A
difference between our study and previous studies is that we included a
relatively heterogeneous group of participants with regard to their type of
traumatic experience. Also, we found a substantially lower rate of PTSD across
the three study groups (mean 5.4% at 1 month) than was found in earlier
studies on debriefing (varying from 19% at 3 months to 26% at 6 months after
the traumatic event; Conlon et
al, 1999; Rose et
al, 1999). The low occurrence of PTSD in our trial was not
anticipated; rather, we expected that our participants would be more likely to
be symptomatic because they had been referred. However, within our subgroup of
participants with two or more early hyperarousal symptoms, rates and severity
of PTSD were very similar to those found in earlier debriefing trials
(Hobbs et al, 1996;
Bisson et al, 1997;
Mayou et al, 2000),
which might explain the fact that the adverse effects were limited to that
subgroup. Another difference between our study and previous studies is that we
found only short-term negative effects in the participants with hyperarousal
whereas, in previous studies, long-term adverse effects were found at 13
months (Bisson et al,
1997) or adverse effects were more pronounced at 3 years than at 4
months (Mayou et al,
2000). Possibly the four assessment interviews influenced natural
recovery, making the three groups more equal with regard to the attention
received at the end-point of our trial.
Role of hyperarousal in response to emotional debriefing
The possibility that some survivors, especially those with high arousal,
are put at heightened risk for adverse outcomes as a result of debriefing was
previously assumed by professionals attending a workshop to reach consensus on
early interventions following mass violence
(National Institute of Mental Health,
2002), an assumption now supported by the subgroup results in this
trial. The relationship between high initial hyperarousal and adverse effect
of emotional debriefing, after first controlling for baseline PTSD symptoms,
could be explained as follows. In previous studies it has been established
that high degrees of arousal in the immediate aftermath of a traumatic event
are associated with an increased risk for the development of PTSD, measured
both by self-report (Carlier et
al, 1997; Schell et
al, 2004) and physiologically by means of heart rate response
(Shalev et al, 1998;
Bryant et al, 2000;
Zatzick et al, 2005).
Encouraging highly aroused trauma survivors to express their feeling and
emotions concerning the trauma might activate the sympathetic nervous system
to such a degree that successful encoding of the traumatic memory is
disrupted. Moreover, during an emotional debriefing session negative appraisal
of one's sense of mastery may be promoted
(Weisaeth, 2000). This is
assumed to keep the hyper-reactive individual in a state of high arousal which
may cause symptoms of PTSD to escalate rather than resolve
(McCleery & Harvey,
2004).
Strengths and limitations
Our trial had several methodological strengths. First, we used
randomisation to assign participants to intervention groups and masked outcome
assessment. Second, protocol adherence was systematically assessed, which to
our knowledge has never been done before in debriefing research. Third,
intention-to-treat analysis was compared with completer analysis. A limitation
might be that the relatively low PTSD rate in our overall study group caused a
loss of statistical power, leaving small differences between intervention
groups undetected. Another limitation might be the possibility that there was
some overlap between the emotional and educational debriefing protocols in
their content. In both interventions participants were asked to give a
description of the traumatic event (in the `Facts phase'), so that - even
though it was discouraged by the debriefers - participants in the educational
debriefing group might have expressed their emotions during that part of the
intervention. Furthermore, translating our results to practice should be done
with caution. Since we applied debriefing individually, the results cannot be
generalised to group settings. Finally, based on medical-ethical
considerations we were not allowed to offer the debriefing session until 2
weeks after the traumatic experience, whereas in most instances debriefing is
offered within a few days of the trauma.
Clinical and practical implications
The practice of offering single-session psychological debriefing to trauma
victims in order to prevent symptoms of PTSD, anxiety and depression is not
supported by the results from this study or earlier research
(Litz et al, 2002;
van Emmerik et al,
2002; Rose et al,
2002). Our findings are in line with recent expert statements in
which the use of single-session individual interventions focusing on the
traumatic event or the expression of emotions for all those involved is not
recommended (National Institute of Mental
Health, 2002; National
Collaborating Centre for Mental Health, 2005). The fact that
single-session trauma-focused interventions do not ameliorate psychological
distress resulting from traumatic experience, and that the focus on emotions
even appears to negatively affect psychological recovery at least in some
trauma victims, show that there are all too many reasons for discontinuing its
use in practice. On the basis of current evidence, more benefits are expected
from early treatment of only those patients with acute stress disorder or
acute PTSD with four or five sessions of cognitive-behavioural therapy (Bryant
et al, 1998,
1999,
2003;
Bisson et al, 2004) or
12 sessions of cognitive therapy (Ehlers
et al, 2003) in order to prevent a chronic course of
PTSD.
Thus, there is no evidence for the usefulness of individual single-session emotional or educational debriefing in reducing psychiatric symptoms of individuals who have experienced various kinds of traumatic events. Moreover, this study highlighted the contribution of early hyperarousal symptoms to the adverse effects of single-session emotion-focused psychological debriefing.
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