EMDR Bibliography
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6301. Wilkinson, S. (2000, Summer). Media reviews: EMDR: A closer look (40-minute video and program manual. Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, 64(3), 435-436.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
This video gives a visual recipe of the theory and process of how to do Eye Movement and Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR). The founder of EMDR, Francine Shapiro, demonstrates how to conduct an EMDR session. Several other well-known and respected clinicians and researchers provide their personal thoughts and experiences of EMDR. Hearing what these clinicians have to say about the impact o EMDR on their practice and research is interesting and compelling.
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6302. Wilson, D. L. (1998, June). Heuristics. EMDRIA Newsletter, 3(2), 24-25.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
Most of the published research on EMDR to date has focused on the “domain of verification” – many case studies on EMDR applied to different clinical issues, some reports on a series of cases, a few well controlled outcome studies, a very few component analyses (See Shapiro, 1995, 1996). This work in the domain of verification is necessary to corroborate clinical impressions and legitimize our work in the eyes of the academic and research community. However, in recent years this emphasis on the “domain of verification” seems to have overshadowed the exploration of the “domain of discovery.”
Keywords: Domain of Verfication Domain of Discovery Research
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6303. Wilson, D. L., & Covi, W. (1991, December). Autonomic correlates of EMDR. EMDR Network Newsletter, 1(2), 6.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
The purpose of this study was to identify autonomic correlates of EMDR as sampled by common measures of physiological
functioning: respiration, heart rate,
blood pressure, and the galvanic skin response.
Keywords: Autonomic Correlates
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6304. Wilson, S. A. (1995). Oklahoma city. EMDR Network Newsletter, 5(1), 14.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
This is a report on the EMDR Helping Hands Project which involved the volunteering and assistance provided by EMDR professional practitioners for the victims of the Oklahoma City bombing disaster in 1995.
Keywords: EMDR Helping Hands Project 1995 Oklahoma City Disaster Project
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6305. Withers, D. (2000, December). EMDR bilateral movement groups for children with ADHD. EMDRIA Newsletter, 5(Special Edition), 11-13.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
Using EMDR to treat children diagnosed with ADHD is challenging on many levels. Differentiating the effects of trauma versus pure ADHD or other diagnoses such as OCD, learning disabilities, and even autism is difficult at best because these symptoms could be present as the result of early trauma (Tinker, 1999). These experiences include birth trauma, illness, medical procedures and surgery as well as abuse or neglect (Becker, 2000). These children may be unintentionally further traumatized on a daily basis by parents, teachers, coaches and peers for missing social cues, being impulsive and disruptive and no paying attention or cooperating. They may not easily engage in therapy and tend to avoid new situations due to past failures and harbor negative views of themselves because of their belief that they somehow need to be “fixed.” These response could also be due to attachment disorders or to a “poor match” between temperament of parent and child (Bowlby, 1973).
Keywords: ADHD Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Children
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6306. Withers, D. (2001). EMDR therapy in the group setting. The Children’s Group Association Newsletter.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
I had been doing EMDR with children for a number of years for trauma and resultant anxiety, depression, sleep disorders, nightmares, hair pulling and a variety of symptoms, with excellent results. EMDR, or Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, is a powerful tool that seems to have a direct on the way the brain functions, reducing the disturbance of traumatic events and allowing the client to see them in a new and less distressing way. Researchers worldwide publishing in prestigious journals have shown its efficacy. Having a background in dance and movement therapy, I had previously developed an innovation, EMDR Bilateral Movement Therapy groups, for women with body image issues who are in 3rd stage trauma recovery. (Presented at the 1999 EMDRIA Conference). It was during a conversation with an EMDR trained child psychiatrist about these groups that I realized what a natural application they would have with ADHD children.
Keywords: ADHD Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Children
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6307. Withers, D. (2000, Spring). EMDR therapy in the group setting. EMDR Group Therapy for kids with ADHD, The Children's Group Association Newsletter, 21(1), 4.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
For kids with ADHD, movement is medicine. They often are asked to sit still and pay attention when their natural impulse is to move. What if they were validated and encouraged to trust this instinct and to use it creatively? [Author]
Keywords: ADHD Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Children
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6308. Witt, M. (1994). The positive core. EMDR Network Newsletter, 4(1), 12-13.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
Since I completed the EMDR Level I1
training last summer, I have been, on
occasion, using the technique described
below. To date, (I have found
that it has always "worked.") The
technique involves creating what I
term a "positive core." I have found
that some of the very damaged people
I see in practice who respond well to
EMDR are left with a feeling of emptiness.
(The group of clients with whom
I have used this have had in common
the fact that their parents were unrelentingly
critical or absent.) It is as if
the trauma defined who they were
and once it is "gone," they are not sure
what is left. They are feeling "good or
"relieved," but not "great." This technique
seems to clean up the loose ends
and put all the positive cognitions and
metabolized memories into an integrated
sense of self, and leaves the
clients feehg great.
Keywords: Positive Core
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6309. Wizansky, B. (2006, September). Footsteps through the maze: A model for facilitating the use of EMDR with children. EMDRIA Newsletter, 11(3), 6-11, 17.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Keywords: Children Footsteps Through the Maze
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6310. Wizansky, B. & Overkamp, B. (2007, März-August). Schritte durch das labyrinth: Ein modell zum leichteren einsatzgruppen von EMDR bei kindern [Footsteps through the maze - A model for facilitating the use of EMDR with children]. EMDRIA Deutschland e.V. Rundbrief, 12, 14-27.
Language: German
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
Dieser Artikel stellt ein Modell vor, das den Einstieg in die Therapie mit Kindern erleichtern soll,
die mit dem Einsatz von EMDR als Therapiemethode Schwierigkeiten haben und im
therapeutischen Prozess nicht mitarbeiten können. Das dem Modell zugrunde liegende
Konzept bezieht sich auf einen aus Erinnerungen und Assoziationen bestehenden inneren
psychischen Raum, in dem es die gesamte Bandbreite an Emotionen gibt, die dem Kind zur
Verfügung stehen, wenn es sich durch seinen Alltag navigiert. Nach meiner Vorstellung muss
ein Kind diesen inneren Raum betreten, wenn es Ausgleich und Veränderung erreichen will.
Für die Kinder aber, für die dieses Modell entwickelt wurde, ist das In Kontakt kommen mit
möglicherweise unangenehmen Gefühlen unerträglich gefährlich. Seine Angst vor dem Erleben
unkontrollierbarer Emotionen schließt Kommunikation aus – sowohl mit sich selbst als auch mit
dem Therapeuten.
This article presents a model that will facilitate entry into therapy with children,
with the use of EMDR as a treatment method with children who have difficulties and can not participate in the therapeutic process. The model underlying
concept refers to an existing memories and associations inner
mental space in which there is a whole range of emotions that the child
finds when it navigates through his everyday life. I imagine a child must
enter this inner space, if it is to achieve balance and change.
This model was developed for the children who come in contact with
potentially dangerous unpleasant insufferable feelings. Their fear of the experience of uncontrollable emotions does connect with both themselves and the therapist.
Keywords: Children Footsteps Through the Maze
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6311. Wolpe, J. (1992). Commentary on eye movement desensitization and reprocessing method: Commentary on statements by Johnson and Shapiro. The Milton H. Erickson Foundation Newsletter, 12(2), 7.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
No abstract available.
Keywords: Commentary Johnson Letter Shapiro
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6312. Wolpe, J. (1992). Commentary on eye movement desensitization and reprocessing method: Eye movement desensitization of post-traumatic stress syndrome. The Milton H. Erickson Foundation Newsletter, 12(2), 6.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
No abstract available.
Keywords: Commentary Posttraumatic Stress Disorder PTSD
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6313. Woodward, V. (2000, December). Incorporating EMDR and psychodrama into therapy. EMDRIA Newsletter, 5(Special Edition), 16-18.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
The Mental Health Treatment Supervisor at the Danville Center for Adolescent Females where I worked previously is a secure, residential treatment program for girls between ages 14 and 18 who have been adjudicated by the courts. Residents are supervised at all times. There is almost continuous interaction with staff, except for brief periods when residents are expected to work on clinical issues in their rooms. Doors to rooms are always open during waking hours, with 15-minute checks performed. Residents deemed to be at risk of hurting themselves or others can be placed on one-to-one supervision. If a resident become physically aggressive or is threatening to herself or others, she can be restrained.
Keywords: Psychodrama
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6314. Yarosh, D. (2001, December). Teaseproofing a resource installation for adults. EMDRIA Newsletter, 6(4), 37-38.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
I came across the “tease-proofing” repertoire
in Ricky Greenwald’s book Eye Movement
Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR)
in Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy
(Greenwald,1999) According to Greenwald ,
“Tease Proofing includes a series of techniques
which help the youth become less reactive to
provocation. First the youth is asked to imagine
a fantasy scenario in which he is able to
overpower his antagonist. Then he is taught to
erect an imaginary wall to keep his antagonist’s
barbs from getting through to him. Finally he
is asked to consider, and then picture himself
imitating a pro-social role model’s effective
coping.”(Greenwald, in press) The goal is to
help the child or adolescent understand the
dynamics of teasing so he no longer takes it
personally.
Keywords: Resource Installation
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6315. Yellin, Z. (1993, Spring). The use of EMDR with a behavioural cognitive approach in the treatment of a patient with a long history of depression and anxiety. EMDR Network Newsletter, 3(1), 6-7.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
I used EMDR with a 45 year-old man called David who presented with a long history of depressive anxiety episodes, characterized by intense feelings of fear and anger, the later directed at women whom he had always fear and by whom he felt rejected.
Keywords: Anxiety Depression
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6316. Young, W. (1992, Winter). Observations on using EMDR with patients with a history of sadistic and ritual abuse. EMDR Network Newsletter, 2(3), 9-11 .
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
For some time, therapists have been struggling with the issues of ritual abuse as they have been working with patients having Multiple Personality Disorder. Recently, an number of therapists who have extensive experience working with ritual abuse, particularly with patients who have a Multiple Personalit Disorder, have put together protocols to be used in treating this disorder. In this section, I would like to point out some specific issues, and perhaps some cautions, in our thinking concerning EMDR until we gain some more information and data about its effective usages and recognized side effects.
Keywords: Ritual Abuse Sadistic Abuse
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6317. Young, W. C. (1992, December). Observations on using EMDR with patients with a history of sadistic and ritual abuse. EMDR Network Newsletter, 2(2), 14-15.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
When working with patients with a
history of sadistic and ritual abuse,
judgment needs to be made as to his
or her readiness to continue when
alters present for EMDR. For example,
in preparing one patient for
EMDR, a child alter presented. Feeling
that this was her starting point,
she began to realize she was not yet
prepared and felt too much was coming
at her. In another patient, a
"non-feeling" satanic alter presented.
I assumed the starting point was of a
state that did not feel and that the
processing would lead this state to
the pain of the others (which it did).
Another woman recalled concentrating
on "Satan's" robe when raped,
seeing i t was not ironed, but
wrinkled, and asked herself how a
demon could present with a wrinkled
robe. She was on the way to becoming
more realistic.
Keywords: Ritual Abuse Sadistic Abuse
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6318. Zangwill, W. (1994). Mistakes to avoid in using EMDR: Or “Do what I say, not what I’ve done”. EMDR Network Newsletter, 4(1), 13-14.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
There are a number of people involved with EMDR who have specialties in various areas including children, veterans, sexual abuse, peak performance,
smoking cessation, etc. Though
I have my own areas of clinical specialization,
when it comes to EMDR, my
particular area of expertise seems to
be in the area of What NOT To Do. In
this first of a two-part article, I want to
review many of the mistakes that I
and others have made using EMDR.
While this list is probably most helpful
for those beginning to use EMDR, I
have found it useful for experienced
clinicians as well.
Keywords: Mistakes
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6319. Zangwill, W. (2001, November). In the aftermath of 9-11: Trauma and EMDR. EMDRNews.com, page 1, 3.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
The events of September 11 continue to have a profound impact on us as a nation and as individuals. The pain and suffering of those victims who survived, the families and friends who lost loved ones, and the rescue workers who have had to rpeatedly face the horror of those events has been numerous. Yet, they are not the only ones who have suffered. Many in this country and around the world have been, and continue to be, traumatized by what happened even if they were not directly affected.
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6320. Zangwill, W. (1995). The poetry of Loftus and Calof. EMDR Network Newsletter, 5(2), 16-17.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
Recently we received network materials
containing tapes by Loftus (1994)
and Calof (1994) continuing the debate
on the False Memory Issue. If
you have not listened to them yet, do,
for they each have a form of poetry
within. Good poetry does two things
well. It helps us reconstructour experiences
and see things in new and
Merent ways. It also stirs our emotions.
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6321. Zangwill, W. (2007, June). Providing adjunctive EMDR treatment. EMDRIA Newsletter, 12(2), 8-11.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
For the past several years, in addition to my work as an EMDR trainer and private practitioner, I have provided consultation to many
EMDR clinicians. During these consultations, one of the most frequently asked questions has been how to handle requests for EMDR
treatment for a client currently in therapy with someone else. Providing adjunctive EMDR treatment can be intensely productive and
stimulating if done properly; it can also be counterproductive if not. In this article I want to share with you a series of steps that I have
found to be important if adjunctive EMDR treatment is to be optimally effective and problems avoided, or at least minimized.
Keywords: Adjunctive EMDR Treatment
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6322. Zangwill, W. M. (1993, March). And still more. the Behavior Therapist, 16(3), 89.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
This article continues "More thoughts on EMDR training" by J. Kleinman
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6323. Zangwill, W. M. (1998, December). Integrating EMDR with schema-focused therapy. EMDRIA Newsletter, 3(4), 16.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
The following is an overview on the integration of EMDR with schema-focused therapy.
Keywords: Schema-Focused Therapy
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6324. Zangwill, W. M. (1998, December). EMDR consultation: The need for flexible rigidity. EMDRIA Newsletter, 3(4), 8, 10, 12, 26, 28.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
In addition to my work as an EMDR trainer and private practitioner, for the past several years I have provided supervision to EMDR-trained clinicians. During supervision, one of the most frequently asked questions has concerned how to handle requests for EMDR from a client currently in therapy with someone else.
Keywords: Consultation
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6325. Zangwill, W. M. (1995). EMDR and applied behavior analysis. the Behavior Therapist, 18(8), 156.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
No abstract available.
Keywords: Applied Behavior Analysis Letter
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6326. Zangwill, W. M., & Kosminsky, P. (2002, December). The need to strengthen the mindfulness component of EMDR. EMDRIA Newsletter, 7(4), 4-5.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
Since we began using it in our work (12 and 5 years ago, respectively) we have
found EMDR to be the most powerful and effective form of therapy we have ever
used. Most of our EMDR work has ir~volvedh ealing the wounds caused by past
traumas and hurts, and helping to weaken clients' underlying maladaptive
schemas. For the past few years, however, we have become increasingly aware
of the need to put greater emphasis on another aspect of EMDR -that of
Mindfulness.
Keywords: Meditation Mindfulness
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6327. Zeiss, A. (1998). EMDR 1997 update. the Behavior Therapist, 21, 28.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6328. Zengin, F. (2006). Behandlung von hörsturz und tinnitus mit EMDR-therapie [Treatment of acute hearing loss and tinnitus with EMDR therapy]. EMDRIA Deutschland e.V. Rundbrief, 7, 45-53.
Language: German
Format: Newsletter
Abstract:
Es wurden 17 an Tinnitus leidende PatientInnen mit EMDR behandelt. Behandlung und
Nachuntersuchung fanden in der Zeit von Juni 2002 bis Juni 2005 in meiner psychiatrischen
und psychotherapeutischen Praxis in Solingen statt. Mit Ausnahme von zwei Patienten kamen
alle Behandelten persönlich zur Kontrolluntersuchung im Folgejahr der Behandlung (88,2 %).
82,4 % aller Patienten (14) waren nach der 5-stündigen EMDR-Behandlung beschwerdefrei, 3
beklagten weiterhin (eher geringe) Beschwerden, die durch 2 weitere EMDR-Therapie-
Sitzungen zum Abklingen gebracht werden konnten Ein Patient hatte nach Therapieabschluss
einen Verkehrsunfall, der eine PTBS auslöste. Er wurde mit traumazentrierter Psychotherapie
behandelt, die auch die Tinnitus-Symptome zum Abklingen brachte.
It treated 17 patients suffering from tinnitus with EMDR. Treatment and
Follow-up found in the period from June 2002 to June 2005 in my psychiatric
and psychotherapeutic practice, held in Solingen. With the exception of two patients were
all patients personally for a check in the following year of treatment (88.2%).
82.4% of all patients (14) were symptom-free after 5 hours of EMDR treatment, 3
defendant continued (rather small) complaints by two other EMDR Therapy
Sessions could be brought to subside after a patient had completed therapy
a traffic accident that caused PTSD. He was with trauma-centered psychotherapy
treated, which also brought the tinnitus symptoms to subside.
Keywords: Hearing Loss Tinnitus
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6329. Admininstration. (2011, October 12). The impact of the brain’s survival ‘wiring’. Irish Medical Times. Retrieved from http://www.imt.ie/features-opinion/2011/10/the-impact-of-the-brains-survival-wiring.html on 10/13/2011.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Because EMDR can get through to the limbic brain, Dr Uram estimated that approximately 85 per cent of people show a marked improvement, with many recovering completely.
Keywords: Braim General Limbic Brain Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6330. Aftergood, D. (2005, February). The value of EMDR. Clinical Psychiatry News, 33(2), 8.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Value of EMDR It is always a pleasure to read about Dr. Robert T. London's approach to psychiatry, which combines not only medication and psychotherapy, but also philosophy and a broad array of psychotherapeutic techniques (“Strategies for Treating PTSD,” The Psychiatrist's Toolbox, December 2004, p. 20). [Elsevier]
Keywords: Letter
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6331. Alexander, J. (2000, February 14). Exploring the alternatives. The Express.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
EMDR is a technique which can help you look fears and phobias in the eye. With a simple series of rapid eye movements, practitioners believe you can access the source of anxieties and dispel the fear. It's swift, effective and the results are long-lasting.
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6332. Anderson, S. (2002, September 25). Parent power. Glasgow, Scotland: Daily Record, Vital, 14.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
EMDR stands for Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing.
This long and complicated term refers to a technique discovered to alleviate the symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder or PTSD.
Keywords: General Glasgow, Scotland Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6333. Ansorge, R. (1997, April 22). Certain emotional signs can point to post-traumatic stress disorder. Colorado Springs, CO: Gazette, Lifestyle, 2.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Are you or someone you know a candidate for EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing)?
You might be if you suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder and have not responded to traditional talk therapy, medication or lifestyle changes.
Keywords: Colorado Springs Posttraumatic Stress Disorder PTSD
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6334. Ansorge, R. (1997, April 22). Taming the terror: Local therapists seek to ease children’s fears with a relatively new – and controversial - technique. Colorado Springs, CO: Gazette, Lifestyle, 1.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
The Tibbetts (not their real name) credit EMDR - Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing - a relatively new technique used on adults to defuse memories of traumatic events ranging from surgery and car accidents to combat and rape.
Keywords: Children Colorado Springs General Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6335. Ansorge, R. (1999, April 6). New therapy may help traumatized children. Colorado Springs, CO: Gazette, Lifestyle, 1.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
The therapy they used was EMDR - Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing. During an EMDR session, therapists have patients recall the traumatic event. Then they rapidly wave their fingers back and forth in front of the patients' faces.
EMDR proponents believe the finger-waving stimulates right-brain, left-brain activity, enabling patients to process memories of traumatic events and alleviate associated emotions of rage, terror and depression.
Keywords: Bob Tinker Children Colorado Springs Sandra Wilson Trauma
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6336. Ansorge, R. (1998, April 9). Psychologists see benefits of finger-waving therapy. Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
"He said, 'Hey!,'" Tinker says. `"After that session, the tantrums stopped. That's the significant thing with EMDR. The emotions change first, then the behavior tags along."
Keywords: General Overview Robert Tinker
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6337. Armbruster, S. (2000, July 9). No fear Valley: Readers share their flying anxieties and how they got over them. Fresno, CA: The Fresno Bee, Final, Life, E1.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Fresno therapist Stark, who specializes in helping people with trauma, including flying phobia, claims success with a psychotherapy method called EMDR, or eye movement desensitization and reprocessing.
Keywords: Fear of Flying Fresno
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6338. Associated Press. (1994, August 14). New therapy eases trauma, study says. Cincinnati, OH: The Cincinnati Enquirer, A14.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Los Angeles - A treatment
that included watching a therapist's
fingers move significantly
helped people who were suffering
psychologically from long-ago traumatic
experiences, a study found. (Excerpt)
Keywords: Cincinnati General Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6339. Associated Press. (1997, November 30). Springs cops take part in stress study: Tests will compare new, traditional techniques. Denver, CO: Rocky Mountain News, Final, Local, 25A.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Colorado Springs - A California psychologist developed EMDR in 1989. Therapists have patients recall traumatic events, then waggle their fingers in the patients' faces in an effort to stimulate certain brain activities that allow patients to feel for the first time that the trauma is over.
Keywords: Denver, Police Stress
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6340. Associated Press. (1995, June 21). Therapy aids bomb survivors. Galveston, TX: The Daily News, Health & Science, 3-A.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Oklahoma City — Desperate
to rid himself of nightmares
about the federal building
bombing, Greg Pruitt settled
into a chair and watched his
therapist's fingers move rhythmically
from side to side. (Excerpt)
Keywords: Bombings General Oklahoma City Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6341. Baker, J. (2002, April 22). Lawrence therapists work with EMDR process to offer a different direction in healing. Lawrence, KS: Lawrence Journal-World.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
"They used it initially with Vietnam vets (suffering from
PTSD). We use it a lot now with sexual traumas. Now, the one
thing I really like about EMDR, if anybody is really stuck in
therapy, it can serve as a wonderful way to go in, try it and
see if you can get unstuck, even if you're not working with a
trauma," said Ed Bloch, a licensed specialist clinical social
worker.
Bloch and his wife, Jena Bloch, a licensed clinical marriage
family therapist, own the Life Enrichment Center, 5200 Bob
Billings Parkway.
Keywords: General Lawrence Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6342. Baker, J. (2001, December 1). Visuals aid therapy: Lawrence psychotherapist uses eye movement technique. Lawrence, KS: Lawrence Journal-World.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
The therapy has helped more than 1 million people worldwide who have survived trauma such as sexual abuse, domestic violence, combat and crime, according to the EMDR Institute of Pacific Grove, Calif., which trains clinicians in the technique.
Francine Shapiro, who created the eye movement therapy in 1985, is a licensed psychologist and a senior research fellow at the Mental Research Institute in Palo Alto, Calif. Shapiro is also the director of the EMDR Institute.
Keywords: General Lawrence Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6343. Balderrama, M. (2010, October 6). El Paso therapists using breakthrough PTSD treatment. KFOX News, El Paso, Texas.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
The number of people suffering from post traumatic stress disorder is rising in the El Paso area. It's not just soldiers returning from war; it's also children and families exposed to the violence in Juarez.
Keywords: El Paso, General Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6344. Balenger, V. (2001, November 2). Interactions. Washington, DC: Washington Post, Health, F02.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
With its misplaced emphasis on the supposed controversy around Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, "EMDR, In the Eye of the Storm" [Oct. 30] seemed intent on derailing the EMDR's Disaster Response Network's generous offer to provide free treatment to survivors of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The article's biases and distortions are too numerous to cite, but the headline describing EMDR as an "aggressively marketed but unproven therapy" captures them pretty well.
Keywords: General Letter Overview Washington, DC
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6345. Balenger, V. (2004, July 6). Interactions. Washington DC: Washington Post, Health, F02.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract: Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) has been documented as one of the most effective treatments for post-traumatic stress by numerous well-designed empirical studies. Describing it in the same paragraph as the rebirthing/attachment therapy that caused the smothering death of a 10-year-old girl betrays a glaring lack of knowledge and familiarity with today's mental health landscape.
Keywords: General Letter Overview Washington, DC
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6346. Barron, C. (2004, February 11). Navy doctor wants new treatment for war-related stress disorders. The Sun, Bremerton, Wash., State and Regional edition.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
The treatment, performed by Russell, is known as EMDR, or eye movement desensitization and reprocessing.
The Marine, in a dozen or more 15-second sessions, discussed feelings and emotions associated with the traumatic event while focusing on a left-to-right movement - following a finger, a light or an auditory signal.
Keywords: Mark Russell Navy Posttraumatic Stress Disorder PTSD
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6347. Barrs, J. (2002, Sep 16). Therapy in motion. Tampa, FL: The Tampa Tribune, Final, Baylife, 1.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
An unusual method of trauma treatment frees sufferers from guilt and anger, proponents say. But naysayers reject it as pseudoscience.
Keywords: General Overview Tampa
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6348. Bates, B. (2003, August). Sensory-based PTSD therapy may prove more calming than words. Clinical Psychiatry News, 31(8), 53.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Vancouver, BC — Terror registers most sharply in the subcortical brain, not the prefrontal cortex, explaining why talk-based therapies for posttraumatic stress disorder often have limited success, Dr. Bessel van der Kolk said at a meeting on Posttraumatic Stress Disorder sponsored by Vancouver General Hospital.
Keywords: Posttraumatic Stress Disorder PTSD
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6349. BBC. (2012, April 1). Childhood abuse victims given light therapy. BBC News. Retrieved from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-tayside-central-17893954 on 5/1/2012.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
NHS [Ms] Forth Valley's head of behavioural psychotherapy, Therese McGoldrick, said victims of childhood sexual, physical and emotional abuse often found it difficult to speak about what they had suffered. [Excerpt]
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6350. Beam, A. (2010, October). Justice served, with tea and crumpets. Boston, MA: The Boston Globe.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Is there a spooky psychiatrist, a la Dr. Emil Skoda, who can be relied upon to thwart defendants’ insanity pleas? Absolutely: Her name is Dr. Elizabeth Rawls, and she sports a mean tonsure of darkly coiffed dreadlocks. In a forthcoming episode, Dr. Rawls solves a murder using EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) therapy, which looks a lot like hypnosis but has a much fancier name.
Keywords: Law & Order TV
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6351. Bednar, J. (2010, March 29). Clearing the block: Eye-movement technique helps patients overcome psychological traumas. BusinessWestnline, 26(24), 51-54.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
The engineer was recalling all this as he began a behavioral-health technique known as eye-movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR), which helps victims of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other types of psychological trauma to overcome the mental burden of disturbing events.
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6352. Benjamin, C. (1999, June 19). Technique aids people with anxiety. Las Vegas, NV: Las Vegas Review-Journal, Final Edition.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Clinical social worker Jocelyne Shiromoto might have cured a patient's infertility with a few waves of her hand.
Shiromoto does not claim her fingers have magic wandlike powers. What she did was a process called Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprogramming. Known to practitioners as EMDR, the therapy is widely used to treat patients suffering post-traumatic stress disorder and, increasingly, other forms of anxieties.
Keywords: Anxiety Jocelyne Shiromoto
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6353. Berson, C. (2008, September 19). Innovative trauma center opens in Newhallville. New Haven Independent, New Haven, CT.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Over the years, EMDR has been used to treat survivors of traumatic experiences ranging from death of a loved one to rape. EMDR clinicians have worked with survivors on an individual basis as well as with victims of large-scale events — from 9/11 to violence in the Middle East. Shapiro emphasized the importance of treating mental trauma; if gone untreated, it can breed further violence in the community.
Keywords: New Haven Trauma Center
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6354. Bevan, K. (2009, November 4). Local therapist hopes to make EMDR a household term in Berkshire County. The Advocate.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
When Lenox psychotherapist Valerie Sheehan recently spoke to a group of Berkshire County school adjustment counselors about EMDR, a therapy technique originally developed to treat trauma-related disturbances and now used to treat a wide range of psychological disorders, her passion on the topic was hard to conceal.
Keywords: General Overview Valerie Sheehan
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6355. Bexson, T. (2003, April 28). Treating the child abusers. London, England: London Evening Standard, 26-27.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Child sex abuse is probably the most taboo subject in Britain despite the increased reporting and publicity given to it. And those who are involved with treating child sex offenders are inevitably faced with a difficult task, but there are rewards, not least protecting potential victims.
Keywords: Child Abuse London Perpetrators Treatment
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6356. Bonczijk, L. (2009, October 16). Treatment, therapy there for victims of sex abuse. Newberg, Oregon: Newburg Graphic.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
A multipart series looks at the incidents of sex crimes in the Newberg area, its causes,
prosecution and treatment options
Keywords: General Overview Sexual Abuse
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6357. Boodman, S. G. (2001, October 30). EMDR, In the eye of the storm: Volunteers offer a controversial trauma therapy to September 11 survivors. Washington, DC: The Washington Post, Health, F01.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Now proponents of a controversial and increasingly popular treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) called Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, or EMDR, are offering free therapy sessions to the latest group of traumatized Americans: survivors of the Sept. 11 attacks at the Pentagon and World Trade Center, relatives of those who were killed and workers involved in the ghastly rescue and recovery efforts.
Keywords: 9/11 General Overview Volunteers Washington, DC
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6358. Boodman, S. G. (2004, June 29). All in the head: Three approaches to mental health treatment that stretch the boundaries – and, sometimes, credulity. Washington, DC: The Washington Post, Health, F1.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Imagine being able to quickly banish phobias by rhythmically tapping on various body parts. How about a painless treatment that eliminates depression by exerting gentle pressure on a patient's shoulders or torso? What if it were possible to overcome attention- deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) by having a child focus on a computer image that retrains his brain waves?
Keywords: General Overview Wasington, DC
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6359. Boudreau, J. (1997, April 22). Making the memories stop. Walnut Creek, CA: Contra Costa Times, E01.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Her biopsychological treatment, called Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing, involved a kind of new-age finger waving. The method seemed simple. Smith was told to remember combat while following the side-by-side movement of Shapiro's two fingers.
Keywords: General Overview Walnut Creek, CA
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6360. Bowden, M. (1994, July 3). Finger-wagging seems to work: Treatment is the latest rage for dealing with traumatic memories. Mobile, AL: Mobile Register, AM, E13.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Now, they've taken to furiously wagging their fingers in front of the patient's face. It's called ``Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing,'' or EMDR to the cognoscenti, and it's the latest rage, practiced now by thousands of respected therapists in the treatment of traumatic memories and phobias.
Keywords: General Overview Mobile
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6361. Bowden, M. (1994, June 26). The eyes have it in a new therapy: It looks like finger-wagging, but it’s a treatment that has caught fire. Philadelphia, PA: The Philadelphia Inquirer, Final, National, A01.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Over the years, therapists have
tried a bizarre variety of methods to
heal people's minds.
Keywords: General Overview Philadelphia
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6362. Bowden, M. (1994, July 3). Finger-wagging, schoolmarm style, the rage in therapy. Tampa, FL: The Tampa Tribune, Metropolitan Edition, Nation/World, 16.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Now, they've taken to furiously wagging their fingers in front of the patient's face. It's called "Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing," or EMDR to the cognoscenti, and it's the latest rage, practiced now by thousands of respected therapists in the treatment of traumatic memories and phobias.
Keywords: General Overview Tampa
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6363. Bowden, M. (1994, July 12). Rapid eye motion may heal minds. Columbia, SC: The State, Living, Final Edition, D1.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Now, they've taken to furiously wagging their fingers in front of the patient's face. It's called "Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing," or EMDR, and it's the latest rage, practiced now by thousands of respected therapists in the treatment of traumatic memories and phobias.
Keywords: General Overview Columbia
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6364. Bowden, M. (1994, June 30). Therapists put their fingers on new memory treatment. Lexington, KY: Lexington Herald-Leader, Main News, Final Edition, A3.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Now, they have taken to furiously wagging their fingers in front of the patient's face. It's called Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, or EMDR, and it is the latest rage, practiced by thousands of respected therapists in the treatment of traumatic memories and phobias.
Keywords: Alan Goldstein General Overview Lexington
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6365. Bowden, M. (1994, June 30). New tool for therapy: Finger-wagging. San Jose, CA: San Jose Mercury News, Morning Final, Front, 17A.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
No abstract available.
Keywords: General Overview San Jose
Accuracy Verified: No
6366. Bowden, M. (1995, June 16). It looks like finger-wagging. Logansport, Indiana: Pharos-Tribune, A4.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
EMDR came to Shapiro in one of
those inexplicable, serendipitous
leaps that are typical of both crackpot
notions and breakthrough ideas. She
was walking in a park, she said,
plagued by disturbing thoughts,
when, all at once, the thoughts went
away. (Excerpt)
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6367. Braude, T. (2001, May 29). Quick visual treatment may help heal trauma. Detroit, MI: Detroit Free Press, Metro Final, Science, Body & Mind, 3F.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
EMDR was developed by Francine Shapiro, PhD, while she was a graduate student at University of California at Berkeley in 1987. Initially applied to people who had suffered severe traumatic stress -- like rape victims and Vietnam War veterans -- it has become a successful methodology for working with people who have experienced a variety of stressful conditions.
Keywords: General Detroit Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6368. Braun, A. (2003, March 14). Old war wounds resurface, can be healed. Sebastian, FL: Sebastian Sun, Indian River County, A5.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Luckily Greg had not just been a soldier, he had in him a true warrior spirit. He was brave in the face of his pain - and thoroughly tired of it. So, after I explained the healing method to him, he agreed to try it. This procedure, known as EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is a revolutionary way to treat painful memories of all kinds. During the many years I have used it, it has never failed me once. Here is how it works.
Keywords: Overview General Sebastian, FL
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6369. Braun, A. (2000, December 8). Trauma can be overcome with help. Sebastian, FL: Sebastian Sun, Indian River County, A5.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
One of the best techniques to heal old pain is called EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing), admittedly a terrible name.
Keywords: General Overview Sebastian, FL
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6370. Bresnan, A. (2000, September 1). Ask Beth: Grandmother too important to forget. Boston, MA: The Boston Globe, Third Editon, Living, C10.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Thank you for supporting therapy in your column. I'd like to tell you about a technique I've been using with clients for almost four years. Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing helps people heal from traumas and works faster than just talking, as it helps the person unload negative feelings. It is helpful with adolescents who were exposed to criticism and other forms of mental abuse at home
Keywords: Boston General Letter Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6371. Brogan, J. (2000, March 26). EMDR: New look in trauma therapy. Providence, RI: The Providence Journal, Health & Fitness, M-1.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), an alternative to traditional talk
therapies, may seem bizarre.
Patients must follow the therapist's fingers waving before their eyes, as if they were trying to keep
track of a tennis match. Or they watch a blinking light traveling along a special light bar.
Keywords: General Overview Providence
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6372. Brogan, J. (2011, June 11). Shifting the focus. Boston, MA: Boston Globe. Retrieved from http://articles.boston.com/2011-07-11/lifestyle/29761983_1_emdr-ptsd-eye-movement-desensitization on 7/11/2011.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Once highly controversial, EMDR has made gains in acceptance. In 2004, both the American Psychiatric Association and the Department of Defense recommended it as an effective treatment for PTSD. In May, the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, an agency of the Department of Health and Human Services, recognized EMDR as an evidence-based treatment for depression and anxiety as well as for PTSD. (Excerpt)
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6373. Brokaw, N. S. (2006, March 20). Healing the pain: Counselor, minister helps people help themselves. Bloomington, IL: Pantagraph, Main, Money C1.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Over that time, Mather has explored new counseling techniques, particularly as insurance companies and other financial constraints continue to demand faster results. Whether Mather is using hypnosis, eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR), thought field therapy (TFT), biofeedback, self-psychology, good old talk therapy or something else, his goal is the same - to help patients lead better lives.
Keywords: Overview General Bloomington, IL
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6374. Brown, A. (2007, December 6). Helping kids cope with bereavement. Glasgow, England: Daily Record, Featurse, 24.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
The service also uses Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing (EMDR) on victims of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. It is a psychotherapy method which features the child focussing on a disturbing memory image while moving the eyes from side to side.
Keywords: Bereavement London
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6375. Bruno, L. (1995, September 10). Trauma: ‘It’s real, it’s painful’. Staten Island, NY: Staten Island Advance, A19.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
During an EMDR session, a patient's eyes follow Ms. Cosentino's fingers back and forth while the patient "focuses on a specific picture of a troubling issue," she said. Invented eight years ago by California therapist Francine Shapiro, EMDR has shown promising anecdotal success in reducing anxiety and post-traumatic stress symptoms such as nightmares and flashbacks. Critics say there is not enough scientific data to warrant claims that EMDR works.
Keywords: General Overview Staten Island
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6376. Burne, J. (2004). Healing without Freud or prozac. London, England: The Independent.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Where do you get the blues? Most people would say in the head. That's
where we look for mental problems. Depression, anxiety, distress are all the
result of brain chemistry going wrong - not enough serotonin, for example.
And that's why we treat them with talking therapies and "serotonin reuptake
inhibitors" such as Prozac.
Keywords: General London Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6377. Burne, J. (1994, July 26). Just follow my finger, can simple eye treatments cure deep-seated traumas?. London, England: The Independent.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract: At 38, Emma was walking Which? -guide to therapies: behaviourist, cognitive, hypnosis, family and psychiatry. For 18 years she had tried the lot in an increasingly despairing attempt 'to conquer her agoraphobia. So it was with considerable scepticism that she embarked last year on a new therapy - Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing (EMDR) - that was apparently achieving miracle cures across the United States. What made her even more wary was that It sounded as absurdly simple as it was bizarre.
Keywords: General London Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6378. Burne, J. (2006, November 27). Can this man cure your depression?. London, England: The Independent, Features, 10-11.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Pills and therapy can't heal the blues, says David Servan-
Schreiber. But the leading French psychiatrist thinks he knows
what can.
Keywords: David Servan-Schreiber Depression London
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6379. Butler, K. (1992, November 25). Memories “reprocessed:” New therapy for post-trauma stress. San Francisco, CA: San Francisco Chronicle, Final, News, A1.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
For 4 1/2 years, the rape retained the vividness of a nightmare.
Keywords: General Overview San Francisco
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6380. Cahill, P. (2000, August 25). Therapy may help some recover from disorders. Springfield, MA: Union-News, All, Health & Science, E01.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
But now there's a new choice, called Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR).
It's a therapy so low-tech that it sounds like magic or science fiction. But it works, and in a fraction of the time that it takes talk therapy to work, said George Abbott, a psychologist at the Center for Behavioral Health at Holyoke Hospital who also has a private practice in Northampton.
Keywords: General Overview Springfield
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6381. Cano, D. (1992, November 26). Therapists to help hurricane victims. Los Angeles, CA: Los Angeles Times.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Two Orange County therapists will
spend the holidays in South Florida to
help survivors of Hurricane Andrew.
which decimated the area last summer.
Judy Albert, a Huntington Beach
marriage, family and child counselor, is
leaving today to help hurricane survivors deal with anxiety, depression and
other disorders.
Keywords: General Los Angeles Overview Ruth Knowles Grainger
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6382. Carr-Elsing, D. (1997, November 17). Therapy frees grim memories. Madison, WI: Capital Times, Lifestyle, 1D.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Called Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, or EMDR, the technique combines many of the successful, traditional approaches of psychotherapy with eye movements or other forms of rhythmic stimulation.
Keywords: General Overview Madison
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6383. Carse, K. (2013, February 4). Staten Islanders can ease the stress of Sandy's aftermath with counseling. Staten Island Advance. Retrieved from http://www.silive.com/healthfit/index.ssf/2013/02/ease_the_stress_of_sandys_aftermath_with_counseling.html on 2/5/2013.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Recommended by the Department of Defense and the American Psychiatric Association among many other organizations, EMDR uses a set of standardized protocols that incorporate elements from many different treatment approaches. It “essentially shines a light on the emergency event or events stored in the more primitive brain allowing the event to be processed in a safe way,” said Joyce Goldstein of West Brighton a family therapist and trained EMDR therapist.
Volunteer licensed and EMDR trained therapists from Staten Island, Manhattan and Boston will be available, several of whom have helped relieve suffering after September 11, Hurricane Katrina and the earthquake in Haiti as part of the EMDR Humanitarian Assistance Program.
Keywords: Hurricane Sandy
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6384. Cevikthe, I. (1999, October 29). Republic is our treasure. Turkish Daily News.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
The Turkish Psychologists Association has initiated psychological treatment for earthquake victims through the Trauma Treatment Center, established jointly with experts from the American Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing Institute (EMDR). The Trauma Treatment Center was introduced on Wednesday by Dr. Emre Konuk, the director of the Turkish Psychologists Association's Istanbul Office, and representatives of EMDR Dr. Philip Manfield and Dr. James Knipe. Konuk said they had contacted EMDR three days after the earthquake for psychological treatment of the victims. Konuk, who noted that they had prepared a one-year program as the result of the cooperation, said they established a Trauma Treatment Center for carrying on work as an organization. The training of volunteer psychologists who will work at the center is being undertaken by EMDR, experts of problems related to trauma. Seventeen experts will come to Turkey twice at four-month intervals to provide training to 115 psychologists on active treatment techniques for trauma.
Keywords: Earthquakes Turkey
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6385. Chilson, M. (2002, March 4). Client can direct treatment, define goals. Topeka, KS: Topeka Capital-Journal, B1.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
A volunetter network of therapists trained in post-traumatic stress disorder is providing free treatment programs for people affected by the World Trade Center terrorist attack. The clinicians are trained in a technique called eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) that is proven to help the stress disorder, and the free service is part of the nonprofit Disaster Mental Health Recovery Network. The Mental Health Association of Suffolk County will provide names of EMDR specialists participating in the program. For information call the association at 631-226-3900, or 917-626-9117 for clinicians in the five boroughs. The Nassau County Mental Health Association also has social workers trained to deal with people contemplating suicide. The help line is 516-504-HELP.
Keywords: General Overview Topeka
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6386. Chilson, M. (2002, March 4). EMDR anxiety relief with a flick of the eye?. Topeka, KS: Topeka Capital-Journal. Retrieved from http://cjonline.com/stories/030402/hea_emdr.shtml on 3/4/2002.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract: Critics call EMDR "laughable" while believers call it "miraculous." You will discover that the acronym stands for Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, but you won't find a solid definition anywhere.
Keywords: General Overview Topeka
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6387. Chomin, L. A. (2009, February 22). EMDR unlocks traumatic events frozen in time. Observer & Eccentric, B8.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Complicated grief is one
of traumatic events
in which Eye Movement
Desensitization and
Reprocessing (EMDR) can
be used to unlock and resolve
disturbing events that remain
frozen in time. Chaloux had
been partying with a friend
on Super Bowl Sunday and
missed the call that his
grandmother was dying.
Family thought his presence
might have strengthened her
her will to live since the two were
close. Chaloux's grandmother
helped raise him.
Keywords: Complicated Grief David Breeden General Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6388. Churchill, M. A. (2000, January 7). Junk science invades psychiatry. Detroit, MI: Detroit Free Press.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
This psychiatrist tries to cure mental illness with eye wiggles. He says memory of
childhood abuse is stored in the hips, elbows and toes. And he wants to bill
health insurers for his services, the same as other medical doctors, a concept called
"parity."
Keywords: Detroit General Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6389. Clapson, J. (2013, February 3). Treating PTSD in the armed forces: How pupil movement is helping symptoms of post-traumatic stress. Soldier Magazine. Retrieved from https://www.gov.uk/government/news/treating-ptsd-in-the-armed-forces on 2/3/2013.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Lost in mental illness, he became one of the first troops to try out the intriguing and cutting-edge therapy called eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR) - a practice which would force him to relive suicidal thoughts but ultimately go on to help save his life. [Excerpt]
Keywords: Posttraumatic Stress Disorder PSTD Military Soldiers
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6390. Cole, J. (2007, February 16). How left my trauma behind; The victims; What they really think. Belfast, Ireland: Belfast Telegraph, City Edition, Features, 19.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
I trained in Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), a specialised treatment for trauma, and began practising in 1998. I work with police officers, ex-military personnel and civilians who have been traumatised in the Troubles.
Keywords: Michael Paterson Police Officers
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6391. Colmenares, C. (2000, July 11). Doorway to healing?. Nashville, TN: The Tennessean, Living, 1D.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Then a sixth therapist, Nashville psychologist Wallace Reynolds, suggested EMDR, eye movement desensitization reprocessing, a relatively new psychotherapy technique that opens the boxes where monsters dwell so the mind can flick the switch and send them scattering.
"It's not magic, just accelerated processing," Reynolds says.
Indeed it's not magic in fact, it's smoke and mirrors, say scientists who dispute not only the efficacy of EMDR but the theories behind it.
Keywords: General Nashville Overview Wallace Reynolds
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6392. Condon, G. (2000, August 22). Eye-opening therapy: Method simulating REM succeeds in soothing painful memories, but nobody knows why. Hartford, CT: The Hartford Courant, Statewide, Life, D3.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract: Over time, the memory helped shape the low self-esteem, disturbed sleep, anxiety and depression that brought him to Carole MacKenzie's psychotherapy practice in Hartford last year. MacKenzie, a clinical social worker, used a technique called Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), a controversial but increasingly popular method that has been used for a decade to help heal those suffering the psychological aftereffects of trauma.
Keywords: General Hartford Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6393. Cook, J. (2003, November 5). Dallaire's demons. Canada: National Post, Editorials, A17.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
It is also true that there are at least three relatively new therapies widely practised in North America which can help expedite relief for PTSD sufferers. These therapies are: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) developed by Dr. Francine Shapiro; Traumatic Incident Reduction (TIR) developed by Frank A. Gerbode, M.D.; and even a Christian version, TheoPhostic Ministry (TPM) developed by Dr. Ed Smith.
Keywords: Editorial General Letter Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6394. Corcoran, M. (2001, July 5). 6-string therapy for Dale. Austin, TX: Austin American-Statesman Starr, Sec. XL ENT.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Out of hardship often comes great art. That's the message behind "Every Song I Write Is For You," the album by Dale Watson that hits stores July 24. The hard-core honky-tonker wears his heart on his sleeve -- literally, the sleeve of his CD, which features a picture of Teresa Lynn Herbert, the girlfriend he lost to a car accident Sept. 15. She crashed en route to Houston, where Watson had a gig. He had shut off his cell phone at lunch, and when he turned it back on a couple hours later, the caller ID showed that Herbert had called 13 times. "She had something she really wanted to tell me, but I'll never know what," says Watson, who plays every Monday at Ego's. The singer took the tragedy hard, and on New Year's Eve, he swallowed a handful of pills in a suicide attempt. After being evaluated by a psychiatrist, Watson was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and has been undergoing EMDR treatments. "After about 20 minutes, I'd felt like an 800-pound gorilla had been lifted off my shoulders," Watson says of the hypnosis-like therapy said to rejuvenate sleep-deprived patients. "For four months after Teresa's death, I'd relive it every day, all day. My mind was like a needle stuck in the groove of a record." Watson's next release was supposed to be a live album for Audium/KOCH, but he insisted that this "love song album with no apologies" come out first. "It was an easy album to write, but real hard to record."
Keywords: Austin General Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6395. Cowan, B. (2002, April 23). I felt the memory gush out. London, England: The Times, Features.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
"After ten hours of EMDR, I had made the breakthrough I needed and I left the
surgery in a state of euphoria. I haven't had a panic attack or nightmare since
and now realise that they were the physical memory of the rapist crushing and
suffocating me. Replaying events gave my brain another chance to process them.
This time it got it right and emotionally, not just rationally, I now
acknowledge that you can't control everything."
Keywords: General London Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6396. Cowley, G. (1994, July 4). In the blink of an eye - Treating emotional trauma takes a new, controversial turn. Dallas, TX: The Dallas Morning News, Home Final, Today, 3C.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Discouraged by six months of conventional psychotherapy, Sgt. Baumgartner turned last August to a treatment called EMDR, or "eye-movement desensitization and reprocessing."
Keywords: Dallas General Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6397. Cox, J. (2005, January 11). Skittish riders —afraid of getting hurt again — use calming techniques to get back in the saddle. Denver, CO: The Denver Post, Scene, F-01.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Clinical psychologist Margot Nacey of Greeley, a lifelong equestrian who calls such fear a form of post-traumatic stress, says she has had great success treating it with the brain-reprogramming technique EMDR - eye movement desensitization and reprocessing.
Keywords: Denver General Margot Nacey Overview
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6398. Cramer, J. D. (1997, November 28). City police to help test new therapy for stress: Eye movements key to technique. Colorado Springs, CO: The Gazette, City/Sate, 1 [2 pages].
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Simply put, that's the question Colorado Springs police will try to answer in a study of a controversial psychoanalysis technique called eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR).
Keywords: Colorado Springs Stress
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6399. Crittenton Children’s Center. (2013, May 28). Crittenton Children's Center receives grant for study of psychotherapy trauma treatment. Sacramento Bee, Sacramento, CA. Retrieved from http://www.sacbee.com/2013/05/28/5453013/crittenton-childrens-center-receives.html 5/28/2013.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
Crittenton Children's Center has received a two-year, $10,000 grant from the Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) Research Foundation to conduct a first of its kind study addressing trauma in children. [Excerpt]
Keywords: Press Release Research
Accuracy Verified: Yes
6400. Crudele, B. (2012, November 16). Touch, sound and light help heal inner wounds. Marine Corps Times. Retrieved from http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/article/20121126/NEWS/211260306/Touch-sound-and-light-help-heal-inner-wounds 4/9/2013.
Language: English
Format: Newspaper
Abstract:
EMDR therapy, recognized by the Defense Department as an evidence-based treatment for PTSD, includes image exposure, desensitization, cognitive processing, assessment, psychoeducation and coping strategies, according to the Naval Center for Combat & Operational Stress Control.
During each session, patients are asked to recall a traumatic event and identify the positive and negative feelings associated with the event. Repetitive exercises including bilateral eye movements, with simultaneous bilateral sounds through headphones and tapping sensations in the palms, are provided to stimulate both hemispheres of the brain.
The most common task is side-to-side eye movements, allowing the patient to focus on the provider's moving finger or a light bar. The exercises are conducted for each traumatic event until the patient reassesses or recalibrates his level of emotional distress. [Excerpt]
Keywords: Military Posttraumatic Stress Disorder PTSD Veterans
Accuracy Verified: Yes
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