Cmdr. Carr stated that although some treatments, such as medication, manage symptoms, it is talk therapy that is most successful in improving PTSD. Cmdr. Carr recommended that talk therapies specifically tailored to combat-related PTSD be developed.
It is the therapeutic relationship between clinician and patient that is the hallmark of talk therapy. This relationship allows the person coming for treatment to feel safe and understood – even while relating experiences that may be too horrific to verbalize anywhere else. Talking helps those in treatment make sense of their experiences and eventually live with them.
Cmdr. Carr’s training as a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, and his deployment in Iraq, where he experienced the trauma of war firsthand, makes his expert testimony particularly compelling. As he stated to the members of the subcommittee, “I understand why some combat veterans feel they deserve to die, why they feel more at ease sleeping under a bridge than rejoining the communities they fought to defend, but I also understand why we must fight every day to help them.”
Also testifying before the subcommittee were Vice Adm. Matthew L. Nathan, M.D., surgeon general of the Navy; Lt. Gen. Patricia D. Horoho, RN, surgeon general of the Army; Lt. Gen. Thomas W. Travis, M.D., surgeon general of the Air Force; and Assistant Secretary of Defense (Health Affairs) Jonathan Woodson, M.D. The panel’s written statements and the video of the hearing are available online here and here, respectively.
About The American Psychoanalytic AssociationThe American Psychoanalytic Association is a professional organization of psychoanalysts with approximately 3,300 members. The Association is comprised of psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, educators, researchers and students who have an interest in psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic therapy. Visit apsa.org for more information.# # #