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Gros DF, Strachan M, Ruggiero KJ, Knapp RG, Frueh BC, Egede LE, Lejuez CW, Tuerk PW, Acierno R. Innovative service delivery for secondary prevention of PTSD in at-risk OIF-OEF service men and women. Contemporary clinical trials. 2011 Jan 1; 32(1):122-8.
Service personnel involved in Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom are at high risk for trauma-related physical injury and emotional problems, including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and major depression. Although evidence-based psychotherapies are increasingly available and effective in treating symptoms of PTSD, a large number of service personnel are reluctant to seek mental health treatments due to both perceived stigma associated with these treatments and geographically-based barriers to care at specialized treatment facilities. The present investigation evaluates an innovation in service delivery designed to address these concerns. Specifically, we are comparing exposure-based therapy for PTSD delivered via traditional, in-person settings to the same exposure-based treatment delivered via telehealth technology. The proposed project is a prospective, randomized repeated measures design with two treatment groups (telehealth and in-person) assessed at pre-treatment, mid-treatment, post-treatment and 3- and 12-month follow-up points. Outcome measures ascertain longer-term effects of the treatments on three domains: clinical, process, and economic. Non-inferiority and superiority analyses will be conducted to determine symptom changes between pre-treatment, post-treatment, and follow-up time points between the two treatment conditions. The study will determine whether an exposure therapy for PTSD delivered via telehealth is at least as successful as the same exposure-based therapy delivered in-person in treating the symptoms of PTSD in both subthreshold and fully diagnosed cases.