Final Program

32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Trauma and Public Health:
Innovative Technology and Knowledge Dissemination
November 10 –12, 2016
Pre-Meeting Institutes, November 9
Sheraton Dallas Hotel
Dallas, Texas USA
Jointly Provided by
Boston University School
of Medicine and
the International Society for
Traumatic Stress Studies
www.istss.org
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
The ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting is supported in part by:
Silver Supporter
Wiley
Bronze Supporter
Elsevier
Non-Profit Sponsorship Program:
Meeting Bag – Cohen Veterans Network
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Dear Colleagues,
Welcome to the ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting! The theme of this year’s meeting is
“Trauma and Public Health: Innovative Technology and Knowledge Dissemination.”
Trauma and trauma-related disorders are significant public health issues that require
interdisciplinary approaches including epidemiology, biostatistics and health services
research. Advances in assessment, treatment and prevention efforts and knowledge
translation are of critical importance if we are to increase public awareness and destigmatize
trauma-related disorders. The use of Innovative Technology is closely tied to public health
strategies. Through modern technologies, including media and internet usage, knowledge
translation has increased. Research has a greater impact on clinical practice, just as practice
is informing the research agenda. Innovative technologies are being used in treatment and
research, and new clinical tools such as e-health and online therapy, as well as those that aid
supervision, have improved the speed and quality of treatment.
In this era of exciting methodological innovations and worldwide globalization, the aims
of this meeting are to integrate research, clinical practice, and public health initiatives and
facilitate the transference and implementation of knowledge. This meeting features the
ways that new, exciting, and innovative technologies are being used to advance the field of
trauma, including their potential to improve existing treatment interventions and to facilitate
the development of new treatment interventions. Recognized trauma experts from around
the world will share their work.
Moreover, panels and workshops will provide a lively forum for critical discussions on what
we have learned so far. In addition to high-quality, scientific contributions, there are ample
opportunities to reflect on the topics that need to be addressed from a clinical point of view
and the challenges in clinical practice that hamper optimal implementation of effective
interventions. All in all, this meeting will invite attendees to broaden their perspectives,
intensify the clinician-researcher dialogue, and promote more interdisciplinary collaborative
learning.
We specifically would like to invite you to join the Wednesday evening opening ceremony
featuring the panel ”Responding to Terror Attacks: What are the Right Ways to Act?” Experts
from different places that experienced terror attacks – Oslo, London, Paris and the USA – will
share their experiences related to immediate reactions from the respective communities, as
well as their initial and ongoing efforts to organize help for the survivors and to learn from
these incidents as a way to inform and direct future work.
For up-to-date information, please visit www.istss.org.
We look forward to welcoming you to Dallas for an outstanding educational event.
Christian Schmahl, MD (Chair, Scientific Committee),
Paul Frewen, PhD (Co-Chair, Scientific Committee)
Joanne Davis, PhD (Chair, Organizing Committee),
Rochelle Hanson, PhD (Co-Chair, Organizing Committee)
Grete Dyb, MD, PhD (ISTSS President)
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Table of Contents
Program Committee 4–5
Ethics-related presentations
48
49
ISTSS Leadership 6
Media Presentation Schedule at a Glance 8
Pre-Meeting Institutes 50 – 56
General Information 10 – 12
Special Interest Groups (SIGs) Meetings Exhibitor Directory 14 – 15
SIG Endorsed Presentations 58 – 59
Special Events/Meetings and In Memoriam 16
ISTSS Award Winners Membership Information 17
Guides to Information in Schedule 60
Internship & Postdoctoral Networking Fair 18 – 23
Presentation Type Descriptions Continuing Education 24 – 25
Daily Schedule Program Committee Disclosures Faculty Disclosures 26
27 – 28
Unlabeled/Investigation Uses of Products or Devices
29
57
61 – 62
62
63 – 123
Thursday Poster Map 124
Thursday Poster Listing 125 – 145
Welcome Reception Poster Map Potential for Participant Distress 30 – 32
Welcome Reception Poster Listing Keynote Addresses 33 – 36
Friday Poster Map Master Clinicians and Master Methodologists 37 – 42
Friday Poster Listing Invited Presentations 43 – 47
Floor Plans 146
147 – 150
151
152 – 172
173
ISTSS Scientific Program Committee
Program Co-Chairs
Deputies
Chair
Christian Schmahl, MD
Eva Alisic, PhD
Ruth A. Lanius, MD, PhD
Annual Meeting
Organizing
Committee
Maureen A. Allwood, PhD
Jutta Lindert, PhD
Co-Chair
Paul Frewen, PhD
Margaret E. Blaustein, PhD
Megan McDevitt-Murphy, PhD
Kathleen Chard, PhD
Anna McKinnon, PhD
Senior Advisor
Bernet Elzinga, PhD
Wendy D’Andrea, PhD
Tanja Michael, PhD
Douglas L. Delahanty, PhD
Rajendra A. Morey, MD
Thomas Ehring, PhD
Elana Newman, PhD
Deputies
Diane L. Elmore, PhD, MPH
Angela Nickerson, PhD
Abby Blankenship, PhD
Iris Engelhard, PhD
Patrick A. Palmieri, PhD
Chelsea Cogan, MA
Julian D. Ford, PhD
Neil Roberts, DClinPsy
Carolyn J. Greene, PhD
Bita Ghafoori, PhD
Benjamin E. Saunders, PhD
Synne Stensland, MD
Lutz Goldbeck, PhD
Marit Sijbrandij, PhD
Amy Williams, PhD
Rochelle Hanson, PhD
Talma Hendler, MD, PhD
Zachary Steel, PhD,
MClinPsych
Rafaele Huntjens, PhD
Kathleen Thomaes, MD, PhD
Tine Jensen, PhD
Siri Thoresen, PhD
Boston University
School of Medicine
Course Director
Tanja Jovanovic, PhD
Robyn D. Walser, PhD
Danny Kaloupek, PhD
Birgit Kleim, PhD
Amy Williams, PhD
Hilit Kletter, PhD
Erika Wolf, PhD
Chair
Joanne Davis, PhD
Co-Chair
Rochelle Hanson, PhD
Jessica Lambert, PhD
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Reviewers
Moshe Abramovitz
Ceren Acarturk
Zachary Adams
Fredrik Ahs
George Ake III
Lisa Angert-Morris
Cherie Armour
Christina Armstrong
Filip Arnberg
Anu Asnaani
Millie Astin
Kimberly Babson
Christal Badour
Anne Banducci
Alexander Basile
Michelle Bedard-Gilligan
Aimee Bellmore
David Berle
Lucy Berliner
Nancy Bernardy
Marianne Birkeland
Jonathan Bisson
Ines Blix
Marcel Bonn-Miller
Karen Bos
Michelle Bovin
Bethany Brand
Ernestine Briggs-King
Adam Brown
Lisa Brown
Vanessa Brown
Wilson Brown
Melissa Brymer
Berre Burch
Jessica Carlsson
Lohmann
Mauro Carta
Yael Caspi
Ruby Charak
Kathleen Chard
Ateka Contractor
Joan Cook
Andrew Cooper
Nida Corry
Nick Coupland
January Cwik
Katie Dawson
Carien de Kloet
Alexandra De young
Lisa Dell
Jon DePierro
Anne DePrince
Terri deRoon-Cassini
Lauren Dewey
Julia Diehle
www.istss.org
Katherine Dondanville
Martin Dorahy
Monika Downey
Joseph Dunsmoor
Jon Ebert
Amanda Edwards Stewart
Marieke Effting
Jon Elhai
Charles Engel
Negar Fani
Norah Feeny
Erika Felix
Kim Felmingham
David Forbes
Alyce Foster
Steffany Fredman
Elizabeth Gainer
Isaac Galatzer Levy
Matthew Gallagher
Tara Galovski
Dana Rose Garfin
Amy Garrett
Rich Gilman
Andrea Gold
Belinda Graham
Damion Grasso
Carolyn A. Greene
Carolyn J. Greene
Gertrud Hafstad
Muriel Hagenaars
Christine Hassija
Peter Haugen
Jasmeet Hayes
Ellen Healy
Tobias Hecker
Christophe Herbert
Hilary Hodgdon
Pamela Holens
Tonje Holt
Bryce Hruska
Benjamin Iffland
Sabra Inslicht
Brian Isakson
Lalitha Iyadurai
Marija Jakubauskiene
Ella James
Lisa Jobe-Shields
Dawn Johnson
Amy Joscelyne
Katherine Juhasz
Richard Kagan
Stacey Kaltman
Nancy Kassam-Adams
Debra Kaysen
Lucy Kenny
Patricia Kerig
Maryam Kia-Keating
Rachael Kiely
Al Killen-Harvey
Yoshiharu Kim
Nathan Kimbrel
Veronica Kirsch
Cassandra Kisiel
Ellen Klaassens
Rosemarie Kluetsch
Christine Knaevelsrud
Haim Knobler
Ihori Kobayashi
David Kolko
Volker Köllner
Teresa Kramer
Anne Krause-Utz
Linn Kuehl
Eric Kuhn
Sam Schwartz Landrum
Jason Lang
Sadie Larsen
Johanna LassHennemann
Winnie Lau
Dean Lauterbach
Arne Leer
Catrin Lewis
Belinda Liddell
Ramon Lindauer
Heather Littleton
Anja Lok
Miriam Lommen
Teresa Lopez Castro
Margaret-Anne
Mackintosh
Nikhil Majumdar
Luana Marques
Brian Marx
Ryan Matlow
Shannon McCaslinRodrigo
Margaret McKinnon
Robert McMackin
Mariel Meewisse
Richard Meiser-Stedman
Olivia Metcalf
Thomas Meyer
Per-Olof Michel
Vasiliki Michopoulos
Melissa Milanak
Laura Miller-Graff
Katherine Mills
Reese Minshew
Karen Mitchell
Richard Mollica
J Richard Monroe
Trudy Mooren
Angie Moreland
Nexhmedin Morina
Joanne Mouthaan
James Naifeh
Jennifer Naylor
Frauke Nees
Summer Nelson
Katrin Neubacher
Elizabeth Newnham
Angela Nickerson
Mirjam Nijdam
Barbara Niles
Sonya Norman
Seth Norrholm
Nicole Nugent
Holly Orcutt
Silje Ormhaug
Kile Ortigo
Sarah Ostrowski
Gina Owens
Maria Pacella
Laurie Anne Pearlman
Monique Pfaltz
Kathleen Pierce
Keri Pinna
Anica Pless Kaiser
Sebastian Pohlack
Nnamdi Pole
Kyle Possemato
Abigail Powers Lott
Jana Pressley
Matthew Price
Wei Qi
Daniela Rabellino
Andrew Rasmussen
Sheila Rauch
David Ready
Gavin Rees
Elizabeth Reichert
Heidi Resnick
Gilbert Reyes
Alyssa Rheingold
Marleen Rijkeboer
Donald Robinaugh
Carie Rodgers
Michelle Roley
Simon Rosenbaum
Walton Roth
Justin Russell
Naomi Sadeh
Carolina Salgado
Kristen Samuelson
Vedat Sar
Julia Schellong
Susann Schmiedgen
Franziska Schreiber
Priscilla Schulz
Jeremiah Schumm
Sophia SchüsslerFiorenza Rose
Soraya Seedat
Brooke Seydler
Jun Shigemura
Erica Simon
Marieke Sleijpen
Stefanie Smith
Leila Soravia
Carolin Steuwe
Jennifer Stevens
Daniel Stjepanovic
Bradley Stolbach
Andrew Stone
Jennifer Sumner
Steven Szabo
Kuowei Tay
Janine Thome
Mischa Tursich
Johanna
Unterhitzenberger
Rens van de Schoot
Arnold Van Emmerick
Sanne van Rooij
Gerrit van Wyk
Mirjan van Zuiden
Dawne Vogt
Anka Vujanovic
Lynn Waelde
Kristen Walter
Elizabeth Warner
Frank Weathers
Terri Weaver
Brandon Weiss
Tore Wentzel-Larsen
Aditi Werth
Maren Westphal
Jeff Wherry
Jennifer Wild
Sarah Wilker
Joah Williams
Sharon Wills
Shannon Wiltsey-Stirman
Blair Wisco
Stephanie Wolf
Sahika Yuksel
Doug Zatzick
Lori Zoellner
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
ISTSS Executive Committee
ISTSS Past Presidents
President
Grete A. Dyb, MD, PhD
Miranda Olff, PhD
Nancy Kassam-Adams, PhD Karestan C. Koenen, PhD Eve Carlson, PhD Marylène Cloitre, PhD Ulrich Schnyder, MD Patricia Resick, PhD Stuart Turner, MD, MA, FRCP, FRCPsych Elana Newman, PhD Dean G. Kilpatrick, PhD Barbara O. Rothbaum, PhD Paula Schnurr, PhD Onno van der Hart, PhD John Briere, PhD Bonnie Green, PhD John Fairbank, PhD Alexander McFarlane, MD Sandra Bloom, MD Terence M. Keane, PhD Matthew J. Friedman, MD, PhD Elizabeth Brett, PhD Charles Marmar, MD Susan Roth, PhD Robert S. Pynoos, MD Bessel van der Kolk, MD Jacob D. Lindy, MD Yael Danieli, PhD John Wilson, PhD Charles Figley, PhD Vice President
Debra L. Kaysen, PhD
Treasurer
Alyssa A. Rheingold, PhD
Secretary
Markus A. Landolt, PhD
President-Elect
Meaghan O’Donnell, PhD
Past President
Miranda Olff, PhD
ISTSS Board Members
Maureen A. Allwood, PhD
Ananda Amstadter, PhD
Charles “Chip” Benight, PhD
Alain Brunet, PhD
Diane T. Castillo, PhD
Kathleen Chard, PhD
Joan Cook, PhD
Joanne L. Davis, PhD
Jane Herlihy, DClinPsych
Justin Kenardy, PhD
Yoshiharu Kim, MD, PhD
Gladys Mwiti, PhD
Carolina Salgado, MD
Amy Street, PhD
Douglas Zatzick, MD
Student Program
Chair
Sacha McBain, MS
ISTSS Staff
Executive Director
Rick Koepke, MSW, MSIS
Program Director
Michael Hagedorn
Administrative Director
Krista Baran
Education Director
Kismet Saglam, MS, Ed.
Manager of
Meetings & Expositions
Kim Santos
Coordinator of
Meetings & Expositions
Elizabeth Oshinson
www.istss.org
2014-2015
2013-2014
2012-2013
2011-2012
2010-2011
2009-2010
2008-2009
2007-2008
2006-2007
2005-2006
2004-2005
2003-2004
2002-2003
2001-2002
2000-2001
1999-2000
1998-1999
1997-1998
1996-1997
1995-1996
1994-1995
1993-1994
1992-1993
1991-1992
1990-1991
1989-1990
1988-1989
1987-1988
1985-1987
Marketing Communications
Director
Eric Bailey
Vice Chairs
Jon Magnus Haga, MD
Stephanie Wells, BA
Traumatic StressPoints
Managing Editor
Donald Rolfe
ISTSS Editors
Marketing Communications
Associate
Rachel Nathanson
Journal of Traumatic Stress Editor
Daniel S. Weiss, PhD
Accountant
Genevieve Sapp
StressPoints Newsletter Editor
Jonathan Purtle, DrPH, MSc
Journal of Traumatic Stress Editor-Elect
Patricia Kerig, PhD
Website Editor
Damion Grasso, PhD
Social Network Administrator
Anne Farina, MSW, LCSW
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33rd Annual Meeting
Trauma and Complexity: From Self to Cells
SAVE THE DATE
November 9-11, 2017
Pre-Meeting Institutes, November 8
Palmer House Hotel
Chicago, Illinois, USA
www.istss.org
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Schedule at a Glance (subject to change)
Tuesday, November 8 Friday, November 11
4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. 7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. Coffee and Tea Service
7:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. Registration Desk Open
7:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. Exhibits Open
7:30 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. Bookstore Open
8:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m. Poster Session Two Set Up
Registration Desk Open
Wednesday, November 9
7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. Coffee and Tea Service
7:30 a.m. – 6:30 p.m. Registration Desk Open
8:30 a.m. – Noon Pre-Meeting Institutes
Noon – 1:30 p.m.
Lunch on your own
8:30 a.m. – 9:50 a.m. Keynote Address
and ISTSS Awards
1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Bookstore Open
10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Concurrent Session Five
1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Pre-Meeting Institutes
10:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. Poster Viewing Session Two
3:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Exhibitor Set Up
11:30 a.m. – 1:15 p.m. Lunch on your own
5:15 p.m. – 6:15 p.m.
Student Attendee Orientation
11:45 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. Student Lunch Meeting
6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. Keynote Opening Panel
1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. Concurrent Session Six
1:45 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Internship and Postdoctoral
Program Networking Fair
2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. Concurrent Session Seven
4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. Concurrent Session Eight
Evening Events to be Announced
Thursday, November 10 7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. Coffee and Tea Service
7:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. Registration Desk Open
7:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Exhibits Open
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. Author Attended Poster
Session Two (Cash Bar)
7:30 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. Bookstore Open
6:45 p.m. – 7:45 p.m. ISTSS Business Meeting
8:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m. Poster Session One Set Up
8:30 a.m. – 9:50 a.m. Keynote Address
and ISTSS Awards
Saturday, November 12
7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. Coffee and Tea Service
10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Concurrent Session One
7:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Registration Desk Open
10:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. Poster Viewing Session One
7:30 a.m. – Noon Exhibits Open
11:30 a.m. – 1:15 p.m. Lunch on your own
7:30 a.m. – 1:15 p.m.
Bookstore Open
11:45 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. Special Interest Group
(SIG) Meetings
8:30 a.m. – 9:50 a.m. Keynote Address
and ISTSS Awards
1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. Concurrent Session Two
10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Concurrent Session Nine
2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. Concurrent Session Three
11:30 a.m. – 1:15 p.m. Lunch on your own
4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. Concurrent Session Four
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. Author Attended Poster
Session One (Cash Bar)
11:45 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Special Interest Group
(SIG) Meetings
Noon – 5:30 p.m. Exhibitor Dismantle
6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. Welcome Reception with
SIG Endorsed Posters
1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. Concurrent Session Ten
2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. Concurrent Session Eleven
4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. Closing Plenary
www.istss.org
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Find us on Facebook
Did you know ISTSS is on Facebook?
Be the first to know about:
• News in the trauma field
• Educational webinars
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Join the ISTSS Facebook Community Today!
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Use the #ISTSS2016 and get the conversation started
Follow us @ISTSSnews
Participate with #ISTSS2016
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
General Information
Registration
Family Room
The ISTSS Registration and CE/Membership Services desks are
located on the first floor of the conference center, and will be
open at the following times:
Trinity 3, third floor, South Tower elevator, Hotel side
Tuesday, November 8 4:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday, November 9 7:30 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Thursday, November 10 7:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Friday, November 11 7:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Saturday, November 12 7:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.
Participation in the ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
is limited to registered delegates.
Your full registration includes:
•
Education sessions and materials
•
Admission to all program sessions (except Pre-Meeting
Institutes, which require an additional fee)
•
Admission to poster sessions
•
PDF Final Program, Online Conference App and access to
online itinerary builder
Networking/Social Events
A room has been set aside for parents in need of a private
space for caring for their infants. A signup sheet is at the door
to reserve times.
Wednesday, November 9 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Thursday, November 10 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Friday, November 11 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Saturday, November 12 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Meeting Hotel and Meeting Rooms
All sessions and events at the ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting will
take place at the Sheraton Dallas Hotel and conference center.
Floor plans of the meeting facilities can be found on page 173.
Sheraton Dallas Hotel
400 North Olive Street
Dallas, TX 75201, USA
Toll Free Reservations: +1-888-627-8191
General Guest Phone: +1-214-922-8000
Guest Fax: +1-214-922-0308
Attire
•
Welcome Reception with Featured Poster Presentations
•
Morning coffee and tea networking opportunities
•
Special Interest Group (SIG) meetings
•
Conference Sessions
•
Keynote Addresses with Award Presentations
•
Invited Sessions
•
Master Clinician Series
•
Master Methodologist Series
•
Annual Business Meeting
•
Committee and Task Force Meetings
•
Student Poster Award
Contact Marcie Lifson at Professional Books at
+1-800-210-7323 or +1-617-630-9393, [email protected].
•
Internship and Postdoctoral Program Networking Fair
The bookstore is open during the following hours:
•
Exhibits of products and services
Wednesday, November 9 1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
•
ISTSS Bookstore
Thursday, November 10
7:30 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Attire for the conference is business casual.
Badges
The Annual Meeting badge you received at registration checkin is required for admittance to all sessions and social activities. A fee is charged to replace lost badges.
ISTSS Bookstore
Grand Hall, First Floor of the conference center
Professional Books offers a large selection of trauma-related
publications for sale during the meeting.
Contemplation and Reflection Room
Trinity 2, third floor, South Tower elevator, Hotel side
Friday, November 11
Saturday, November 12
7:30 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
7:30 a.m. – 1:15 p.m.
A special room has been set aside for quiet reflection, prayer
and meditation.
Wednesday, November 9 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Thursday, November 10 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Friday, November 11 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Saturday, November 12 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
General Information
Business Center
Hotel Third Floor
Penfield’s Business Center
Committee Meeting Room Trinity 1
Sheraton Dallas Hotel
400 North Olive Street
Dallas, TX 75201
Phone: +1-214-303-4141
Fax: +1-214-969-7650
Email: [email protected]
Committee Meeting Room Trinity 4
Committee Meeting Room Trinity 5
Prayer and Reflection Room Trinity 2
Family Room Trinity 3
Copying, faxing, office supplies, computer and printer stations
and other business services are available.
Poster printing service available.
Operating Hours:
Monday – Friday 7:00 a.m. – 9:00 p.m.
Saturday 8:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Sunday 8:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Hotel 38th Floor
Chapparell – Student Events
Meeting rooms are available on the Conference Center
Third Floor and the Hotel Third Floor for committee or small
meetings at designated times during the meeting. Attendees
can reserve meeting times by using the signup sheets outside
each of the rooms.
Meeting Room Locator Key at
the Sheraton Dallas Hotel
Exhibits
Floor plans of the meeting facilities can be found at the end of
this program.
Thursday, November 10 7:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Conference Center First Floor
Friday, November 11
7:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Registration
Saturday, November 12
Exhibits
Stop by the exhibits to see the display of products and services
of interest to the trauma field. The exhibits provide valuable
interaction between the profession and organizations that
supply products and services.
Bookstore
IntelliQuest
Posters
Plenary Room - Dallas B/C
Dallas A1
Grand Hall, Conference Center First Floor
7:30 a.m. – Noon
A list of the exhibitors can be found on pages 14 and 15 of the
final program with additional exhibitors listed in the on-site
newsletter in your registration packet.
Dallas A2
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting Session Abstracts
Dallas A3
The abstracts for the ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting are available
on the ISTSS website, www.istss.org, in the online Final
Program and through the online itinerary planner.
Dallas D1
Dallas D2
Dallas D3
Conference Center Third Floor
San Antonio A
San Antonio B
Houston A
Houston B
Houston C
Speaker Ready Room – State Room 2
Committee Meeting Room State Room 4
www.istss.org
Meeting Evaluation
ISTSS needs your input to enhance future ISTSS meetings. A
link to an online meeting evaluation survey will be emailed to
you shortly after the ISTSS Annual Meeting. Your participation
in this survey is encouraged and greatly appreciated.
Message Center
Grand Hall, Conference Center First Floor
The ISTSS message center is located next to the registration
desk on the Conference Center First Floor. Messages for
registrants are posted alphabetically by last name. Please
remove your messages after you have received them. The
ISTSS message center can be reached by calling the hotel
operator at +1-214-922-8000 and ask to be transferred to the
ISTSS registration desk.
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
General Information
Smoking Policy
ISTSS Awards
Smoking is prohibited at any ISTSS function.
The ISTSS Awards will be presented during the morning Keynote Plenary Sessions at 8:30 a.m. each morning.
Special Assistance
Notify the ISTSS registration desk on the Conference Center
First Floor if you require special assistance at the conference.
ISTSS-2016 Meeting App
Download the ISTSS-2016 Annual Meeting App. Put the whole
searchable program on your phone or tablet.
iTunes Store
Google Play
With the app you can search by:
• Times so you can see everything offered in that session
• Keywords
• Authors
Thursday, November 10:
•
Frank W. Putnam trauma research Scholars
•
ISTSS Lifetime Achievement Award
Friday, November 11:
•
Public Advocacy Award
•
Robert S. Laufer Award for Outstanding Scientific
Achievement
•
Chaim and Bela Danieli Young Professional Award
Saturday, November 12:
•
Dart Awards for Excellence in Coverage of Trauma
Internet Access
•
Frank Ochberg Award for Media and Trauma Study
Free wi-fi is available in your sleeping room.
Ask the hotel registration desk for instructions.
•
Student Poster Award
Free wi-fi is available in all ISTSS meeting rooms.
• Connect to Wireless Network: Meeting@Sheraton
• Open Internet Browser (should bring you to sign on page)
• Click on “I agree” to the terms & conditions.
• Enter Access Code: ISTSS2016 (case sensitive)
• Click on “Submit”
Student Poster Award
ISTSS will present the annual Student Poster Award at the
Saturday morning Keynote Plenary, November 12 at 8:30
a.m. The winner will receive a complimentary 2017 meeting
registration, with additional presenters receiving honorable
mention certificates.
Itinerary Builder
Find the sessions you don’t want to miss
http://owpm.net/abstracts/ISTSS/itinerary
Speaker Ready Room
State Room 2, Conference Center Third Floor
If you plan to use audiovisual aids (i.e. PowerPoint slides)
during your presentation, visit the speaker ready room before
your presentation. The room is equipped with much of the
same audiovisual setup as session rooms, so you may test your
materials and rehearse your presentation.
Speaker Ready Room Hours
Wednesday, November 9 7:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Thursday, November 10
7:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Friday, November 11
Saturday, November 12 www.istss.org
7:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
7:30 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Itinerary Builder
12
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Access the Abstracts
al Meeting
32nd Annu
Want to read the abstracts?
There are three ways to get them
Visit the ISTSS Website and download
the Session Abstract Book and
the Poster Abstract Book
Session
ook
Abstract B
lth:
Public Hea
mination
d
ledge Disse
y and Know
Technolog
Innovative
2016
,
12
–
10
vember 9
November
Trauma an
s, No
g Institute
Access the Itinerary Planner and see
which sessions you can’t afford to miss
Pre-Meetin
llas Hotel
Sheraton Da
as USA
Dallas, Tex
ided by
Jointly Prov
org
www.istss.
ol
ersity Scho
Boston Univ
and
for
of Medicine
nal Society
the Internatio s Studies
Stres
Traumatic
32nd Ann
ual Meetin
g
Download the Meeting App to your phone
and have them at your fingertips
With the app you can search by:
• Times so you can see everything offered
in that session
• Keywords
• Authors
Poster
Abstract
B
ook
Trauma an
d Public
Innovativ
Health:
e Techno
logy and
Novembe
Knowledg
r 10 –12,
e Dissem
ination
2016
ing
Pre-Meet
In
stitutes,
Sheraton
Novembe
Dallas Ho
r9
tel
Dallas, Te
xas USA
Jointly Prov
ided by
Boston Univ
ersity Sch
of Medicine
ool
the Internat and
ional Soc
iety for
Traumatic
Stress Stud
ies
www.istss.org
www.istss
.org
Itinerary Builder
13
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Exhibitor Directory
American Psychological Association
Department of Veterans Affairs
Dana Gittings
750 First Street, NE
Washington, DC 20002-4242
Tel: +1-202-218-3980
Fax: +1-202-336-6191
Email: [email protected]
Orlando Austin
1250 Poydras St.
Suite 1000
New Orleans, LA 70113
Tel: +1-225-274-5382
E-mail: [email protected]
American Psychological Association is the premier source
for information in psychology. APA delivers this information
through its expansive collection of books, journals,
newsletters, electronic products and its website, www.apa.org.
Center for the Study of Traumatic Stress
Holly Mash
USUHS
Dept. of Psychiatry
4301 Jones Bridge Rd.
Bethesda, MD 20814
Tel: +1-301-295-2969
Fax: +1-301-319-6965
E-mail: [email protected]
The Center for the Study of Traumatic Stress (CSTS), directed
by Robert Ursano, M.D., with Scientific Director Carol
Fullerton, Ph.D. is affiliated with the Department of Psychiatry
at the Unifromed Services University of the Health Sciences
in Bethesda, Maryland. The CSTS is internationally recognized
for research, education and consultation on the psychological
and behavioral effects of trauma and disaster on individuals,
families, communities and the workplace.
Cohen Veterans Network
Anthony Hassan
Sponsor
72 Cummings Point Rd.
Stanford, CT 06902
Tel: +1-203-569-0280
E-mail: [email protected]
The Cohen Veterans Network (CVN) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit
foundation whose mission is to improve the quality of life for
post-9/11 veterans and their families by focusing on improving
mental health outcomes. The goal of Cohen Veterans Network
is to build a network of free or low-cost outpatient mental
health clinics for veterans and their families in high-need
communities, in which trained clinicians deliver holistic
evidence-based care to treat mental health conditions.
Findaway
Fran Paez
31999 Aurora Rd.
Salon, OH 44139
Tel: +1-440-394-0619
Fax: +1-440-893-0809
Email: [email protected]
Findaway’s Therapeutic Playaway is a handheld all-in-one
audio player pre-loaded with topic specific guided imagery
audio programs for patients suffering from PTSD and most
mental health concerns. They are an adjuvant treatment
tool that works powerfully with other treatments without
competing with them. Therapeutic Playaways are a better
alternative to smart phones, where the bells and buzzes of
incoming messages can prematurely pull them from their
therapeutic meditative state and back to their worries.
Institute on Violence Abuse & Trauma
Bob Geffner
10065 Old Grove Rd
San Diego, CA 92131
Tel: +1-858-527-1860
E-mail: [email protected]
The Institute on Violence, Abuse & Trauma (IVAT) and the
Family Violence & Sexual Assault Institute (FVSAI) work
together as comprehensive resource, training and professional
services centers concerned with all aspects of violence,
abuse and trauma. IVAT/FVSAI bridge gaps and help improve
systems of care on local, national and global levels through
collaborations. IVAT/FVSAI offer professional training,
continuing education, certifications, publications and journals,
a bookstore, professional clinical and forensic services,
research, program evaluations, two annual international
summits, and think tanks.
MHA-NYC (Disaster Distress Helpline)
Christian Burgess
50 Broadway, 19th Floor
New York, NY 10004
Tel: +1-212-614-6346
Email: [email protected]
The national Disaster Distress Helpline (DDH) is a program
of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration that provides 24/7/365 crisis counseling and
support to anyone in the U.S./territories struggling with
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Exhibitor Directory
emotional distress or other mental health concerns related to
any natural or human-caused disaster. Calls (1-800-985-5990)
and texts (text “TalkWithUs” to 66746) are answered by
trained counselors from a network of crisis centers
across the country. For more information visit
http://disasterdistress.samhsa.gov
sional membership association we support the self-organization of a broad international network of passionate and skillful
SE practitioners who serve individuals in need and communities in crisis around the globe.
River Oaks Hospital
Chelsea Soobitsky
6501 N. Charles St.
Baltimore, MD 21204
Tel: +1-410-938-3133
E-mail: [email protected]
Lisa Lucas
1525 River Oaks Road West
New Orleans, LA 70123
Tel: +1-800-366-1740
Fax: +1-504-733-7020
Email: [email protected]
When outpatient and inpatient stabilization programs have
been unsuccessful in containing self-destructive symptoms,
individuals may require the intensive inpatient treatment
offered at The New Orleans Institute at River Oaks Hospital.
Since 1989, thousands of individuals from the U.S., Canada,
Europe and South America have received this specialized
care for trauma-based disorders (childhood or adult onset),
compulsive behaviors, eating disorders and post-traumatic
stress. Specialized treatment is also available for members of
the military and their families
The Trauma Disorders Program at
Sheppard Pratt
The Trauma Disorders Program, part of the Sheppard Pratt
Health System, is a nationally and internationally recognized
program for the treatment of individuals with trauma-related
conditions including dissociative disorders and other complex
post-traumatic conditions. It is comprised of a 22-bed
coed inpatient unit, an outpatient program, a postdoctoral
fellowship program, and research and consultation
components. Our inpatient program, has received referrals
from across the US and from Canada, and utilizes an intensive
multidisciplinary treatment approach through individual
therapy, milieu therapy, and process-oriented, experiential,
and psychoeducational group therapies to assist with recovery
and return to the community.
Routledge/Taylor & Francis
Caitlin O’Malley
530 Walnut St.
Suite 850
Philadelphia, PA 19106
Tel: +1-215-606-4341
Fax: +1-215-207-0048
E-mail: caitlin.o’[email protected]
VA National Center for PTSD
215 N. Main St.
White River Jct., VT 05009
Tel: +1-802-296-5132
Fax: +1-802-296-5135
Email: [email protected]
Routledge Journals, a division of Taylor & Francis, is a leading
publisher of Trauma and Stress research. Find our journals
online at www.tandfonline.com, and look at our entire
Trauma & Stress portfolio at http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/
catalogue/trauma.pdf.
Wiley
Somatic Experiencing Trauma Institute
Amber Rhodes
6685 Gunpark Dr., #210
Boulder, CO 80301
Tel: +1-303-652-4035
E-mail: [email protected]
The Foundation for Human Enrichment, serving the community through the Somatic Experiencing® Trauma Institute, is
dedicated to resolving trauma worldwide by providing stateof-the-art professional training and public education in Somatic Experiencing® (SE™). SE is a powerful psychobiological
method for addressing physical and emotional trauma, PTSD,
overwhelm, and stress related conditions. Through our profes-
www.istss.org
Daisy Guerrero
111 River Street
Hoboken, NJ 07080
Tel: +1-781-388-8313
E-mail: [email protected]
Sponsor
Wiley is a global provider of knowledge and knowledgeenabled services in areas of research, professional practice
and education. Developing digital education, learning,
assessment and certification, partnering with societies,
supporting researchers to communicate discoveries.
Our digital content, books and 1600 online journals build on a
200 year heritage of quality publishing.
Itinerary Builder
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Special Events/Meetings
ISTSS Special Interest Group Meetings
ISTSS Student Lunch Meeting
Thursday, November 10, 11:45 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Saturday, November 12, 11:45 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Friday, November 11, 11:45 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.
Chapparell, Hotel 38th Floor
Special Interest Groups (SIG) provide members with a forum
for communication and interaction about specific topic areas
related to traumatic stress and provides a means of personal
and professional involvement in the activities of the society.
See page XX for a listing of specific SIG meetings for each day.
All meeting participants are welcome to attend.
All student members and nonmembers are invited to attend
the student section meeting at the 32nd Annual ISTSS
conference on Friday, November 11. This lunch meeting
provides a great opportunity to meet and network with
fellow students and future colleagues, as well as leaders in
the field of traumatic stress studies from around the world.
The recipients of the three Student Section awards will be
announced.
ISTSS Awards
Thursday, November 10, 8:30 a.m.
Friday, November 11, 8:30 a.m.
Saturday, November 12, 8:30 a.m.
Dallas B/C, Conference Center First Floor
Help us recognize the recipients of this year’s ISTSS awards.
The awards will be given before the keynote addresses
on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. See a list of 2016 award
winners on page 60.
Welcome Reception with SIG Endorsed Poster
Presentations
Thursday, November 10, 6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Dallas B/C, Conference Center First Floor
Join us to welcome attendees to the ISTSS 32nd Annual
Meeting. A selection of the top posters will be presented,
organized by the Special Interest Groups. This will be a great
opportunity to talk with SIG Chairs and poster presenters
about the outstanding work happening in special interest
areas. Enjoy a discussion with presenters while hors d’oeuvres
are served alongside a cash bar.
See pages 147 – 150 for the list of posters being presented.
This year’s meeting will feature “SPEED-MEETING” – a format
based on the idea of speed-dating. Trauma experts will rotate
between tables and provide students with an incredible
opportunity to get to know the expert quickly, ask questions
and glean wisdom and guidance from those who have
successfully journeyed the same paths that students currently
travel. It is our hope that students will learn and grow from this
mini-mentorship exercise, feel more comfortable approaching
trauma experts (and others) at the meeting and generally feel
more a part of the ISTSS family.
Pre-registered students will receive lunch paid for by ISTSS.
The Internship and Postdoctoral Networking Fair will be
immediately following this lunch meeting. See you there!
Business Meeting
Friday, November 11, 6:45 p.m. – 7:45 p.m.
Dallas D3, Conference Center First Floor
All meeting participants are invited to attend the Annual
Business Meeting. Learn about the Society, ask questions and
make suggestions about ISTSS. In addition to meeting ISTSS
leadership, the travel grant recipients will be announced.
In Memoriam
ISTSS wishes to acknowledge members who have passed away this year.
Ellen Frey-Wouters, PhD LLB DRS, former UN Representative
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
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Membership Information
Join the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies
and become a member of the largest association dedicated
to the discovery and dissemination of knowledge about
policy, program and treatment initiatives that seek to reduce
traumatic stressors and their immediate and long-term
consequences. Take advantage of the reduced member
registration rate along with all the other benefits of being an
ISTSS member.
Join today using the secure online membership application at
www.istss.org.
ISTSS membership includes:
•
Peer-reviewed Journal of Traumatic Stress
•
Clinician Directory listing
•
Discounted ISTSS Annual Meeting rate
•
Preferred pricing for continuing education courses,
webinars and expert trainings
•
StressPoints e-Newsletter
•
Traumatic Stress e-NewsBrief
•
Access to Member’s Only Section with searchable
membership directory and diagnostic scales
•
Discounts on selected publications from Taylor and
Francis
•
Ability to join Special Interest Groups and Committees
Your ISTSS membership plays an important role in supporting
international trauma research and treatment. ISTSS
membership is based on a calendar year — January 1 through
December 31 — and dues are not prorated. Applicants joining
after October 1 will be paid through the following membership
year.
For 2017, regular membership in ISTSS is $225, which includes
both print and electronic versions of the Journal of Traumatic
Stress (JTS), or $205, which includes the electronic version of
JTS only. Early Career Professional membership is $130, which
includes both print and electronic versions of JTS, or $110,
which includes the electronic version of JTS only. Student
membership is $95, which includes both print and electronic
versions of JTS, or $75, which includes the electronic version
of JTS only.
Corresponding Membership
The Corresponding Membership is FREE to individuals who
reside in an African country.*
Corresponding Members will enjoy some of the great ISTSS
membership benefits including:
•
Access to Membership Directory on ISTSS website
•
Broadcast email announcements
•
StressPoints e-Newsletter
•
Ability to join Committees and Special Interest Groups
•
Opportunity to nominate (self or other) for ISTSS grants
and awards
•
Opportunity to receive ISTSS grants and awards
•
Option to submit names of ISTSS Regular Members for
consideration by the Nominations Committee to stand for
election to the Board of Directors
www.istss.org
* Corresponding Membership is valid January 1, 2017 December 31, 2017. Eligible individuals must not have a prior
connection to ISTSS or to the organizations that partners with
ISTSS (ALFEST, ASTSS, CPA TSS, DeGPT, ESTSS, JSTSS, SAPsi or
AsianSTSS).
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Internship & Postdoctoral Program Networking Fair
Friday, November 11, 1:45 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
Finding an internship or postdoctoral fellowship that features trauma specific training can be difficult. In an attempt to ease this
burden, the Student Section of ISTSS offers this session to provide an opportunity for students to talk with representatives of
various internship and/or postdoctoral fellowship programs who offer rotations or specializations in the clinical and/or research
aspects of working with trauma. The training programs have the opportunity to recruit potential interns and postdoctoral fellows,
while students have the opportunity to locate these programs, meet representatives, and ask any questions they have about the
experiences offered and the application process.
This networking event is coordinated by Sacha McBain, Student Section Chair, and Stephanie Wells & Jon Magnus Haga, Student
Section Vice Chairs.
*If there are sites you would like to see here in the future, please contact the Student Section leadership.
San Francisco VA Medical Center
Location: San Francisco, CA
Population: The Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Clinical
Team (PCT) at San Francisco VA Medical Center is one of
the largest in the nation with regard to clinical activity. Our
PCT specializes in the outpatient treatment of veterans
from all eras who have PTSD related to combat, combat
support, combat training, or military sexual trauma (MST)
in the course of active duty military service. We also treat
veterans whose primary mental health diagnosis is PTSD,
regardless of trauma type, and a significant proportion of
our patients have histories of complex trauma. We serve a
predominantly male population ranging in age from 18 to
90+ years, although the number of women accessing services
is increasing. Our population is quite diverse, with multiple
ethnicities (significant numbers of Filipino American veterans),
ages, sexual orientations and levels of socioeconomic status
represented. Veterans are not required to have served in a war
to be treated by the PCT.
Training level: Postdoctoral position (1 year), and predoctoral internship (1 year)
Emphasis: Postdoctoral position has 2 full-time tracks: PTSD
in Returning Veterans (100% PCT) and PTSD & Substance Use
Disorders (75% PCT, 25% SUPT). Internship follows a generalist
model, with PCT and SUPT available as 8-12 hour rotations.
Training opportunities: All of our trainees gain proficiency
in specialty evaluation, treatment planning, and treatment
engagement of veterans with PTSD, many with co-occurring
substance use disorders, mood disorders and/or chronic
pain. Using a phase-based approach to trauma recovery (i.e.,
evaluation, stabilization, exposure/uncovering, integration
and relapse prevention, maintenance), trainees learn to
provide both time-limited and longterm individual and group
psychotherapy.
and Seeking Safety, and there are opportunities to work in
an integrated mental health primary care setting as well as
through telemental health with veterans who live in remote
areas. Group psychotherapy is central to our treatment
approach.
Our trainees receive individual and group supervision by
psychology staff, and also attend a weekly multidisciplinary
seminar and clinical conference, which reviews the empirical
literature pertaining to a number of different topics relevant to
PTSD.
In addition to the training opportunities described above,
our postdoctoral fellows train psychiatry residents and
psychology trainees in the assessment of PTSD using the
Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS) and help oversee
our weekly multidisciplinary clinics. Postdoctoral fellows
also each supervise at least one junior psychology trainee
(intern or extern), and organize and preside over our weekly
multidisciplinary seminar and clinical conference.
Durham VA Medical Center Internship Program
& Postdoc Fellowship Program
Location: Durham, NC
Population: Women veterans, Veterans returning from
Afghanistan and Iraq, Veterans with serious mental illness
Emphasis: Trauma Recovery, Psychosocial Rehabilitation and
Recovery
Training opportunities: Internships and Fellowships
Contact: R Keith Shaw, [email protected]
Specialized training is available in motivational interviewing
(MI), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Prolonged
Exposure (PE), Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT), Cognitive
Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I), CBT for PTSD,
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Internship & Postdoctoral Program Networking Fair
UCSD/VA Psychology Internship Training
Program; VA San Diego Healthcare System/UCSD
Clinical Psychology Postdoctoral Residency
Program; VASDHS/UCSD Psychology Clinical
Research Postdoctoral Residency Program
The National Center for PTSD Clinical
Neurosciences Division and Yale University
School of Medicine: Advanced Fellowship in
Mental Illness Research and Treatment
Location: San Diego, CA
Location: VA Connecticut Healthcare System
(West Haven, CT)
Population: Veterans
Population: Veterans and their families
Emphasis: Combat-related trauma; military sexual trauma
Training level: Postdoctoral (two-year program)
Training opportunities: Internships and Postdoctoral
Fellowships
Emphasis: PTSD and/or substance use disorders
Contact: Carolyn Allard, PhD [email protected]; Brittany
Davis, PhD [email protected]
Tulane Dept of Psychiatry and Behavioral
Sciences Postdoc Research Fellowship
Location: New Orleans, LA
Population: All ages
Emphasis: The goal of the fellowship is to expand candidates
research skills with the intent of pursuing an independent
academic research career.
Training Opportunities: The Tulane Department of Psychiatry
and Behavioral Sciences has assembled an outstanding group
of clinical researchers with unique expertise in studying
stress and trauma from the infant/preschool period through
adulthood, neurobiology, genetics, forensics, psychotherapy
development, and other innovations in intervention.
Training opportunities: The Advanced Fellowship in
Mental Illness Research and Treatment is part of the Clinical
Neuroscience division of the National Center for PTSD at VA
Connecticut Health Care System and Yale University School
of Medicine Department of Psychiatry. It offers a two-year
term training designed to advance research and clinical
training among psychologists and physicians who would
like to embark on VA clinical or an academic career. Fellows
will work closely with research mentors from the NCPTSD
and Yale University and will conduct their clinical duties at
the West Haven VA Medical Center. Fellows will carry an
appointment at Yale University as postdoctoral associates and
will have full access to all Yale University resources to advance
their research and career. We offer one of the most advanced
and stimulation training environment for trainees in the field
of PTSD and substance use disorder. For several years, Yale
Department of Psychiatry ranks as the number one program in
the country in the treatment of addiction.
Contact: Ilan Harpaz-Rotem, PhD [email protected]
Contact: Michael Scheeringa, MD [email protected]
Momentous Institute
Location: Dallas, TX
Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical
Center (MEDVAMC)
Location: Houston, TX
Population: Diverse client population (SES, ethnicity, religion)
Training level: Predoctoral; One-year postdoctoral
Emphasis: Family systems perspective within a community
based setting
Emphasis: Trauma, Primary Care Mental Health, Serious
Mental Illness
Training Opportunities: Broad range of clinical and training
activities including an opportunity to learn more about
postmodern approaches, psychological testing with children
and adolescents, and providing supervision.
Contact: Ellen Tang, PhD, [email protected]
Contact: Garica Sanford, PhD,
[email protected]
Cherokee Health Systems, Clinical Postdoctoral
Program
Location: Knoxville, TN
Population: Youth 18 and under and their families
Emphasis: Complex traumatic stress in children who have
experienced chronic maltreatment; child welfare
Training opportunities: Clinical Child and Adolescent track,
APPIC member postdoctoral program
Contact: Kristin Dean, PhD;
[email protected]
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Internship & Postdoctoral Program Networking Fair
Cherokee Health Systems, Psychology
Internship Program
Centered Care and Cultural Transformation, Mental Health
Consult
Location: Knoxville and surrounding counties in East
Tennessee
Contact Persons: Predoctoral Internship: Sarah Turley, PhD,
Psychology Training Director; [email protected]
Population: All ages
Emphasis: Behavioral Health Consultation in primary care,
working with underserved populations with chronic traumatic
stress exposure
Training opportunities: Psychology Internship Program, APA
Accredited
Contact: Suzanne Bailey, PsyD;
[email protected]
Veterans Affairs Salt Lake City Health Care
System
Postdoctoral Residency, PTSD/Polytrauma: Tom Mullin,
PhD, Postdoctoral Residency Training Co-Director: Thomas.
[email protected]
Postdoctoral Residency, Health-related emphasis: Renn
Sweeney, PhD, Postdoctoral Fellowship Co-Director: Caroline.
[email protected]
STRONG STAR Consortium and the Consortium
to Alleviate PTSD at the University of Texas
Health Science Center at San Antonio
Location: San Antonio, Texas and Fort Hood, Texas
Location: Salt Lake City, UT
Population: Active Duty Service Members and Veterans
Population: Veterans
Emphasis: Trauma Psychology
Training Level: Predoctoral Internship and Postdoctoral
Fellowship
Training Opportunities: The STRONG STAR (South Texas
Research Organizing Network Guiding Studies on Trauma And
Resilience) Consortium and the Consortium to Alleviate PTSD
(CAP) are recruiting postdoctoral fellows to support funded
studies treating PTSD and comorbid disorders in active duty
military Service Members and Veterans. Fellows have the
opportunity to work on studies examining evidence-based
treatments for PTSD, insomnia, and nightmares, and receive
expert training and on-going supervision from leaders in the
field located across the country.
Emphasis: Predoctoral Internship: Generalist emphasis
including medical psychology, inpatient psychiatric unit,
mental health consult, neuropsychological assessment, and
outpatient mental health.
Postdoctoral Fellowship: 2 with a special emphasis on PTSD
and polytrauma; 1 with a geropsychology emphasis; 2 with
a health related emphasis to include Primary Care-Mental
Health Integration (PCMHI), Health Promotion and Disease
Prevention (HPDP), Office of Patient Centered Care and
Cultural Transformation, Mental Health Consult
Training opportunities: Predoctoral Internship: This full
time generalist internship is APA-accredited and committed
to facilitating the transition from student to professional
based on a developmental approach to clinical training
and supervision. Interns train in a variety of major rotations
including Inpatient Psychiatry, Inpatient Mental Health
Consultation, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, PTSD
Clinical Team, Geropsychology, Behavioral Health/Primary
Care, OEF/OIF/OND Post-Deployment Readjustment, and
Substance Abuse Treatment.
Postdoctoral Fellowship: These are full time postdoctoral
residencies are APA-accredited and is focused on training the
next generation of VA psychologists. PTSD/polytrauma fellows
split their time between the PTSD Clinic and the Polytrauma
Clinic where they learn advanced assessment of PTSD and TBI.
In addition, clinical interventions are emphasized to include
evidence-based treatments for PTSD. Fellows in the healthrelated fellowships sharpen skills and acumen in operating
in a variety of medical positions designed to train medical
psychologists operating in PCHMI, HPDP, Office of Patient
www.istss.org
Contact: [email protected]
VA Center for Integrated Healthcare/ Advanced
Fellowship in Mental Illness Research and
Treatment: Primary Care-Mental Health
Integration (PC-MHI)
Locations: Buffalo, NY and Syracuse, NY
Population: Adult military veterans, military service members,
eligible family members
Emphasis: PC-MHI research on population-based mental
health care for PTSD, depression, dementia, pain, substance
use disorders, and other common behavioral health
conditions.
Training Opportunities: 75% Mentored clinical research;
25% of time is protected for clinical rotations and supervision.
Attendance at weekly seminars is required. Other training
opportunities exist.
Contact: Laura O. Wray, PhD ([email protected]); Paul King,
PhD ([email protected])
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Internship & Postdoctoral Program Networking Fair
Center for Chronic Disease Outcomes Research
(CDDOR), a VA HSR&D Center of Innovation
at the Minneapolis VA Health Care System
(MVAHCS)
Location: Minneapolis, MN, USA
Population: US Military Veterans
Degree(s) offered: We offer a Postdoctoral Fellowship for
candidates with a PhD or MD/DO.
Emphasis: Candidates interested in post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD), substance use disorders, healthcare
disparities, implementation science, high value health care and
policy, biostatistics, research methodology, cancer prevention
and screening, chronic pain, and/or epidemiology may find
CCDOR a particularly good fit, but other candidates are also
encouraged to apply.
Training Opportunities: CCDOR is an interdisciplinary
research center located at the Minneapolis VA Medical
Center, and is affiliated with the University of Minnesota
Medical School and its School of Public Health. CCDOR
has several investigators with active PTSD focused research
programs. We are looking for Fellowship candidates who
have PhD’s in psychology, sociology, public health or related
areas, and MD/DO’s who are internal medicine, psychiatry,
or rehabilitation medicine physicians interested in a career
in academic medicine, government and policy, or private
health care systems. Fellows will participate in an intensive
mentored research experience, with training in grant and
manuscript writing, health services research, and advanced
research methods. Fellows have the opportunity to participate
in systematic reviews under the auspices of the Minneapolis
VA Evidence-based Synthesis Program. Physician fellows also
have the opportunity to complete an MPH in epidemiology or
health services research or an MS in clinical research through
the University of Minnesota School of Public Health.
Contact: Fellowship Co-Director, Diana Burgess at Diana.
[email protected] or the Associate Fellowship Director, Michele
Spoont at [email protected].
Brown Alpert Medical School Clinical
Psychology Training Consortium
Location: VA Medical Center, Providence RI
Population: Veterans
Emphasis: The primary goals of Brown’s Clinical Psychology
Training program are to produce psychologists who
demonstrate an advanced competency level with regard to
evidence-based practices within health service settings and
who function effectively as scientist-practitioners.
are considered part of the Adult track: 1) Trauma Recovery
Services (TRS) – the TRS fellowship focuses on providing
clinical care for veterans diagnosed with PTSD and co-morbid
disorders for military and non-military traumas. TRS also
offers a 4-month rotation for interns in the Consortium’s
pre-doctoral training program, 2) Post-Deployment and
Readjustment Program (PDRP), 3) Interprofessional Care,
with focus on PTSD & TBI (IPC) both the PDRP and the IPC
fellowships involve providing direct care to veterans from
recent deployments (Iraq & Afghanistan). *All fellowships
include 1 day per week of protected time for research
activities. Several opportunities exist for collaboration with VA
investigators on site.
Contact: Jennifer Lambert, PhD, [email protected]
or go to https://www.brown.edu/academics/medical/about/
departments/psychiatry-and-human-behavior/training/
clinical/ for more detailed descriptions of the Brown Alpert
Medical School Clinical Psychology Training Consortium,
including specific training opportunities.
VA Boston Psychology Internship and
Postdoctoral Fellowship Programs
Location: Boston Massachusetts (Three campuses, two in
Boston and the third in Brockton MA, 24 miles south)
Population: Male and female veterans of all ages and all
conflicts
Emphasis: VA Boston Healthcare offers multiple opportunities
at the internship and postdoctoral levels. The full spectrum
of traumatic exposure effects, including PTSD, are seen and
treated across multiple clinics. The Postdoctoral Program has
two PTSD fellowship positions that are shared between the
PTSD Clinical Team and Women’s Stress Disorder Treatment
Team.
Training opportunities: Internship and postdoctoral
fellowships. Multiply traumatized populations, typically with
2-3 comorbid disorders. Training in individual and group
therapy, including EBPs such as Cognitive Processing Therapy,
Prolonged Exposure Therapy, and Dialectical Behavior
Therapy. Please see our website for additional information:
http://www.boston.va.gov/psychologytraining.asp
Contacts: Internship Director: Risa Weisberg, Ph.D.
[email protected]
Postdoctoral Fellowship Director: Amy Silberbogen, Ph.D.
[email protected]
Training opportunities: The following clinical focused/APAAccredited postdoctoral fellowships are located at the Trauma
and Readjustment Clinic at Providence VA Medical Center and
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Internship & Postdoctoral Program Networking Fair
OAA Advanced Psychology Fellowship at the
VISN 17 Center of Excellence
National Crime Victims Research and Treatment
Center at MUSC
Location: Waco, Texas
Location: Charleston, SC
Population: Returning Veterans (post-9/11 veterans)
Population: Across the Lifespan (children, adolescents, adults)
Emphasis: PTSD, substance use disorders, reintegration issues,
suicidality, and primary care interventions/implementation
Emphasis: basic and translational traumatic stress research;
training in evidence-based trauma-focused treatments
Training Opportunities: Grantsmanship, publication,
developing independent line of research, database
management & analysis, specialty training in working with
veteran populations, and dedicated weekly didactic seminar
attended nationally by all OAA Advanced Fellows
Training Emphasis: NMH T32-funded Post-doctoral
fellowship
Contact: Carla Kmett Danielson, Ph.D., [email protected];
Dean Kilpatrick, Ph.D. [email protected]
Contact: Dr. Richard Seim ([email protected]) for more
information
Graduate Programs
Adler University Clinical Psychology Doctoral
Program
University of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Location: Colorado Springs, CO
Training Opportunities: Traumatic Stress Psychology
emphasis available
Training Opportunities: PhD in Clinical Psychology with an
emphasis in geropsychology or trauma. Terminal masters
degrees offered in clinical psychology and psychological
science.
Contact: Janna A Henning, J.D., Psy.D., F.T., B.C.E.T.S.
Contact: Amanda Devane, [email protected]
Silver School of Social Work at New York
University
University of Houston (Main Campus)
Location: Chicago, IL
Location: Main Campus: 1 Washington Square N, New York,
NY 10003
Population: About 1200 MSW students, which represents 2%
of the greater NYU community.
Emphasis: The mission of the Silver School of Social Work at
New York University is to educate professionals in a global
perspective for social work practice with individuals, families,
groups, and communities and to provide leadership in the
development of knowledge relevant to social work practice in
complex urban environments.
Training Opportunities: Lifelong Learning programs reach
professional communities in and beyond the New York region.
We provide advanced learning opportunities encompassing
theoretical and evidence-based practice models for social
work and related health professionals. Our programs are
designed to meet needs related to pressing social issues
impacting individuals, families, and communities, reflecting:
social and economic justice, human rights and values, and
anti-oppressive practice. All programs are developed and
presented in a manner consistent with core social work values,
including conduct and good moral character. All programs
are reviewed by social work consultants to assure compliance
with these standards.
Location: Houston, TX
Emphasis: PhD in Clinical Child Psychology, Clinical
Neuropsychology, and Clinical Psychology (adult)
Training Opportunities: Graduate students match with
faculty research mentors and are provided with a wide range
of clinical training opportunities including in-house clinics and
various sites across the Houston Metropolitan area.
Contact: http://www.uh.edu/class/psychology/clinical-psych/
University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign,
Kinesiology and Community Health
Location: Champaign, IL
Training Opportunities: Master of Public Health (MPH),
Master of Community Health, Doctor of Philosophy in
Community Health (PhD). Trauma training in the Transforming
Trauma and Mental Health Lab.
Contact: Robyn L. Gobin, Ph.D., [email protected]
Contact: NYU Silver School of Social Work, 212-998-5910
[email protected]
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Graduate Programs
University of Missouri - Kansas City
Location: Kansas City, MO
Training Opportunities: Clinical and Experimental
Psychology PhD
Contact: Joah Williams - Stress and Trauma Evaluation and
Prevention Science Lab [email protected] (816) 2351066
University of Tulsa Clinical Psychology
PhD Program
Location: Tulsa, OK
Contact: Chelsea Cogan, [email protected]
University of Utah Clinical Psychology PhD
Program
Location: Salt Lake City, UT
University of Toledo Clinical Psychology PhD
Program
Training Opportunities: Clinical Psychology; Child & Families
Track, Neuropsychology Track, and Behavioral Health tracks
Location: Toledo, Ohio
Contact: [email protected] and
[email protected]
Population: Our students can see Veterans at VA (including
the PTSD Clinic), student counseling center patients,
children’s hospital trauma-exposed youth, forensic inpatients,
community mental health center outpatients.
Emphasis: Scientist Practitioner Program, Generalist Program
Training Opportunities: We are a generalist program. We
also have a specialty in anxiety clinical and research training,
with Jon Elhai, Jason Levine, Matt Tull, Kim Gratz, Sarah
Francis and Peter Mezo specializing in anxiety disorders. For
trauma-related training, we have trauma clinical placements
mentioned above. For traumatic stress research, we have
Jon Elhai, and Matthew Tull whose research includes PTSD
expertise.
Contact: Sarah Francis, Director of Clinical Training:
http://psychology.utoledo.edu/showpage.asp?name=francis
www.istss.org
Charleston Consortium Psychology Internship
Location: Charleston, SC
Population: Across the Lifespan (children, adolescents, adults)
Training Level: Predoctoral Internship
Emphasis: Traumatic stress treatment in civilians and veterans,
community-based service delivery models
Training opportunities: VA PCT Clinic, Outpatient specialty
mental health clinic serving child and adult trauma victims,
community- and school-based clinics for trauma-exposed
youth and their families, primary-care based clinics
specializing in providing services to trauma-exposed patients
Contact: Daniel W. Smith, Ph.D., [email protected]; Dean
Kilpatrick, Ph.D. [email protected]
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Continuing Education
Educational Need
CME Course Director
The ISTSS Annual Meeting provides a forum for sharing
research, clinical strategies, public policy concerns and
theoretical formulations on trauma. It is an international
assembly of professionals and students representing an array
of disciplines including psychiatrists, psychologists, social
workers, nurses, counselors, researchers, administrators,
victim advocates, journalists, clergy and others with an interest
in the study and treatment of traumatic stress. Speakers
are strongly requested to avoid unnecessary jargon and to
make their work and its implication to the traumatic stress
field as accessible as possible to those who do not share
their particular perspective and type of scientific approach.
This is designed to facilitate increased understanding of
what different types of researchers (e.g., basic scientists,
clinical researchers) focusing on different types of traumatic
stressors (e.g., child maltreatment, disasters, terrorism, war)
using different research methods and perspectives (e.g.,
epidemiology, genetics, psychosocial, psychobiological) have
found as well as what the implications of their work are for
the traumatic stress field. Our aspirational goal is to establish
a jargon-free zone in which experts maximize communication
of their work, findings and implications in a way that facilitates
understanding and cross-fertilization among researchers,
clinicians and policy makers from other perspectives.
Danny Kaloupek, PhD, Boston University School of Medicine
Conference Goals
After participating in this activity, participants will be able to:
•
Discuss the use of innovative technologies to improve
treatment for trauma-related disorders
•
Identify new ways of disseminating knowledge related to
trauma and PTSD
•
Describe public health-related issues that help to better
understand trauma-related disorders and facilitate
treatment
Continuing Medical Education Accreditation
This activity has been planned and implemented in
accordance with the accreditation requirements and policies
of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education
(ACCME) through the joint providership of Boston University
School of Medicine and the International Society for Traumatic
Stress Studies. Boston University School of Medicine is
accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical
education for physicians.
Credit Designation
Boston University School of Medicine designates this live
activity for a maximum of 28.5 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™.
Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with
the extent of their participation in the activity.
Note: CME includes author-attended poster sessions.
www.istss.org
DISCLAIMER: THESE MATERIALS AND ALL OTHER
MATERIALS PROVIDED IN CONJUNCTION WITH CME
ACTIVITIES ARE INTENDED SOLELY FOR PURPOSES OF
SUPPLEMENTING CME PROGRAMS FOR QUALIFIED HEALTH
CARE PROFESSIONALS. ANYONE USING THE MATERIALS
ASSUMES FULL RESPONSIBILITY AND ALL RISK FOR THEIR
APPROPRIATE USE. TRUSTEES OF BOSTON UNIVERSITY MAKE
NO WARRANTIES OR REPRESENTATIONS WHATSOEVER
REGARDING THE ACCURACY, COMPLETENESS, CURETTES,
NO INFRINGEMENT, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE OF THE MATERIALS. IN NO EVENT
WILL TRUSTEES OF BOSTON UNIVERSITY BE LIABLE TO
ANYONE FOR ANY DECISION MADE OR ACTION TAKEN IN
RELIANCE ON THE MATERIALS. IN NO EVENT SHOULD THE
INFORMATION IN THE MATERIALS BE USED AS A SUBSTITUTE
FOR PROFESSIONAL CARE.
Continuing Education Credit (non-MD)
The ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting is co-sponsored by the
International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies and The
Institute for Continuing Education.
Continuing education credit is offered on a session by session
basis with full attendance required for attended sessions.
Application forms and CE packets will be available on site.
Types of CE credit are listed below.
The program offers a total of 26.5 credit hours. If you have
questions regarding continuing education, the program,
learning objectives, or grievance issues, contact The Institute
by phone, +1-800-557-1950; or email, [email protected].
Continuing education verification is mailed to participants
within 8 weeks of completing the online submission.
Continuing education credit is offered in the following
disciplines for attendees who are licensed/certified by United
States’ boards. The Institute for Continuing Education holds
no provider status with licensing/certification boards in
Canada or other countries. It is the responsibility of attendees
who make application for CE credit and who hold licensure/
certification with boards in countries other than the United
States to determine if credit issued by an approved provider of
a licensure/certification Board in the United States will meet
their board’s regulations.
Psychology: The Institute for Continuing Education is
approved as a provider by the American Psychological
Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for
psychologists. The Institute for Continuing Education
maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
All clinical sessions are eligible for CE credit for psychology
credit.
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Continuing Education
Counseling: Texas Board of Examiners of Professional
Counselors, provider 2183. Note: NBCC credit is not offered
for this conference.
Social Work: The Institute for Continuing Education is
approved as a provider for continuing education by the
Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB), through the
Approved Continuing Education Program (ACE). Licensed
social workers should contact their individual state jurisdiction
to review current continuing education requirements for
licensure renewal. The Institute for Continuing Education
maintains responsibility for the program. ASWB Provider No.
1007.
•
Illinois Dept. of Professional Regulation: Social Work
License: 159-000606.
•
Ohio Board of Counselor/Social Work: Provider No. RCS
030001.
•
Florida Provider: Department of Health, Div. of
Counseling, Social Work, Marriage/Family Therapy.
BAP #255.
•
New York SED: New York Board Social Work Provider
0025.
Continuing Education Registration and
Requirements for The Institute for Continuing
Education
You may not register for credits after November 16.
Continuing education credit will be awarded on a session-bysession basis, with full attendance required for each session
attended. To receive continuing education credit, attendees
must pay the CE fee, sign in/sign out daily, complete the
continuing education evaluation packet, and complete the
online submission. Stop by the continuing education desk
before attending any sessions to receive your packet and to
sign in/sign out daily. It is the responsibility of conference
attendees who hold licensure with boards to contact their
individual licensing jurisdiction to review current continuing
education requirements for licensure renewal. The following
events/presentations are not available for continuing
education credits: poster sessions*, awards ceremony/
business meeting, internship and postdoctoral networking fair,
student lunch, films, town hall meeting and special interest
group meetings.
Note: *Author-attended poster sessions are available for
CME only.
Marriage/Family Therapy: Texas Board Marriage/Family
Therapy, Provider 177.
Nursing: The Institute for Continuing Education is accredited
as a provider of continuing education in nursing by the
California Board of Nursing, Provider No. CEP 12646. Nurses
should contact their state board to determine if approval
of this program through the California Board of Nursing is
acceptable for continuing education in their state
Note: CE credit is offered only through United States state
licensing/certification boards. The Institute for Continuing
Education holds no provider status with Canadian Licensing/
Boards Certification.
Commercial Support: The institute received no commercial
support for its participation in this event.
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Program Committee Disclosures
Disclosure Policy
The University of Boston School of Medicine requires faculty and members of the planning committee to disclose whether or
not they have any relevant commercial relationships or if they will be discussing unlabeled and/or investigational uses of any
products, pharmaceuticals, or medical devices. This must be made known in advance to the audience in accordance with the
ACCME Standards of Commercial Support guidelines.
Program Committee Disclosures
The following program committee members have indicated that they have financial relationships to disclose. They have agreed
to disclose this to participants. All other committee members have completed financial disclosure forms and had no financial
relationships to report.
First
Last
Disclosure
Filip
Arnberg
Substitute Board Member, With No Monetary Compensation Involved, In A Minor And
Local Mental Health Care Service Provider. Minor As In Staff < 5 Persons And Turnover
<500,000USD; Local As In Situated, And Providing Services To Individuals, In Stockholm, Sweden.
Marcel
Bonn-Miller
Consultant, Tilray (Canada)
Joanne
Davis
Book Published Through Springer
Grete
Dyb
Shares In A Medical Institute Delivering Clinical Services.
Julian
Ford
Co-Owner, Advanced Trauma Solutions, Inc. Grant PI, SAMHSA National Child Traumatic Stress Network Grant PI, National Institute Of Justice
Melanie
Harned
National Institutes Of Health (Grant/Research Support), Behavioral Tech, LLC (Employee And Trainer/Consultant)
Hellen
Hornsveld
EMDR Consultant
Yoshiharu
Kim
Honorarium For Lectures From Pharmaceutical Companies, Under The Approval Of
The COI Commitee Of The National Center Of Neurology And Psychiatry, Japan.
David
Kolko
Grant/Research Support Trainer In AF-CBT
Eric
Kuhn
Otsuka America Pharmaceutical - Completed A Web-Based Survey For A Small Fee In
November 2014. No Ongoing Commercial Relationship.
Gregory
Leskin
Spouse, Clinical Neuropsychology Staff For Executive Mental Health Inc, (For Profit
Company)
Richard
Meiser-Stedman
I Receive Payment For Training People In The Delivery Of Cognitive Therapy For PTSD
In Youth.
David
Riggs
Own Stock Directly And Through Mutual Funds In Health Care Companies
Neil
Roberts
Grant And Grant Pending: Funding Received To Conduct A Phase II RCT Of A Guided
Self Help Programme For PTSD. Pending Grant To Apply For Funding For A Phase III
RCT Of The Programme.
Ingo
Schäfer
Hamburg Center For Psychotraumatology, Owner John Wiley & Sons, Author
Soraya
Seedat
Discovery Foundation Grants Selection Committee
Stefanie
Smith
Owner, Private Practice
Regina
Steil
I Am Receiving Funding By The German Ministry Of Of Education And Science For
Running Rcts On PTSD. I Teach In Workshops On The Treatment Of PTSD And Give
Supervision To Other Therapists.
Andreas
Ströhle
Pfizer: Educational Grant
Steven
Szabo
Advisory Board/Consultant: Otsuka Pharmaceutical
Karin
Thompson
Author, New Harbinger
Gerrit
Van Wyk
Private Practice As A Psychologist. Director And Owner Of Traumaline Pty Ltd T/A
Traumaclinic
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Faculty Disclosures
The following faculty indicated that they have financial relationships to disclose. They have agreed to disclose this to participants.
All other named faculty in this program have completed financial disclosure forms and had no financial relationships to report.
First
Last
Disclosure
Kimberly
Babson
Insys, consultant
Christal
Badour
National Academy of Sciences, commissioned authorship
Emma
Barrett
Australian American Fulbright Commission
Charles
Benight
BlueSun, Inc.
Elisabeth
Binder
Böhringer Ingelheim - research grant
Margaret
Blaustein
Guilford Publications, author / royalties
John
Boyle
ICF International, employee
Ruby
Charak
Organization: UNICEF and University of Amsterdam; Role: Statistical Consultant
Judith
Cohen
Research grant funding, NICHD
Beth
Cohen
Gilead Sciences- spouse is employee, joint stockholders
Joanne
Davis
Springer Publishing, Author
Wissam
El-Hage
Lundbeck, consultant, speaker
Timothy
Elliott
Financial support from the Department of Veterans Affairs VISN 17 Center of Excellence for
Research on Returning War Veterans
Anthony
Feinstein
Sanofi-Genzyme: consultant
Julian
Ford
Advanced Trauma Solutions, Inc., Co-owner
Adam
Gonzalez
NIOSH/CDC P.I.
Cassidy
Gutner
NIMH Grant
Mandy
Habib
SPARCS (Structured Psychotherapy for Adolescents Responding to Chronic Stress):
Developer, lead trainer and consultant
Julia
Hoffman
Lyra Health, Consultant & Stockholder
Richard
Kagan
Royalties, Routledge Press and W.W. Norton (author)
Toshiko
Kamo
Eli Lilly and Company
Julie
Kaplow
PCBD Checklist, UCLA Office of Intellectual Property, Co-author
Ronald
Kessler
Sanofi Aventis (research support)
Laurel
Kiser
SAMHSA, grantee
Ihori
Kobayashi
Merck and Co, Research grant support
Meghan
Marsac
Cellie Coping Kit, Co-Inventor Eligible for Royalties
Thomas
Mellman
Merck, grant support, speakers bureau
Sandra
Morissette
VA Rehabiliation Research and Development, Co-Investigator on grant
Lisa
Najavits
Treatment Innovations, Director
Agnes
Nocon
GlaxoSmithKline
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Faculty Disclosures
First
Last
Disclosure
Robert
Pietrzak
Scientific Consultant, Cogstate Ltd.
Amanda
Raines
Department of Defense, Military Suicide Research Consortium, Research Grant
Sheila
Rauch
American Foundation of Suicide Prevention
Neil
Roberts
Cardiff University - royalties from future commercial earnings from a web based treatment
programme
Barbara
Rothbaum
Virtually Better, Inc (VBI), part-owner
Camilo
Ruggero
eHealth Analytics, Manager
Josef
Ruzek
BlueSun Inc, Board of Directors, part owner
Matthew
Sanders
Founder of the Triple P Positive Parenting Program
Glenn
Saxe
Trauma Systems Therapy for Children and Teens, Second Edition, Author
Julia
Schellong
Grant of the German Ministery of Defence
M. Katherine
Shear
Guilford Press, contract to write a book on grief.
Gregory
Sullivan
Tonix Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Employee
Alyson
Zalta
NIMH, Grant recipient
Ann
Rasmusson
Scientific Advisory Board for Resilience Therapeutics
Sudie
Back
Oxford University Press, royalties
Murray
Raskind
Takeda Pharmaceutical, consultant (adjudication committee) Pfizer Pharmaceutical,
consultant (data safety board) Takeda Pharm,consultant, (adjudication committee)
Jenni
Schaefer
McGraw-Hill, Author Hazelden/Harvard Health Publications, Author Eating Recovery Center,
National Recovery Advocate
Marcel
Bonn-Miller
CW Botanicals - Consultant Insys Therapeutics - Consultant Tilray - Consultant Zynerba
Pharmaceuticals - Consultant
Lori
Davis
Merck research funding Otsuka consultant Allergan/Actavis research funding Tonix consultant
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Unlabeled/Investigation Uses of Products or Devices
The following faculty indicated that they plan to discuss unlabeled or investigational uses of products or devices. They have
agreed to disclose this to participants. All other faculty named in this program have completed content validation forms and
indicated they would not be discussing unlabeled or investigational uses of any products or devices.
Marc
Legrand
813: repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation, device used for stimulation of neurons
(used in human clinical trials)
Royce
Lee
I will describe the use of intranasally administered corticotrophin releasing hormone for
experimental purposes. The control number is 1105.
Nicole
Montera
756 Our presentation involves a phone application that we developed ourselves and testing
the validity of it.
Megan
Moran-Santa Maria
Oxytocin 299 Does Oxytocin Modulate Functional Brain Connectivity in Trauma Exposed
Individuals? 950 Childhood Trauma Alters the Effects of Oxytocin on Amygdala Reactivity to
Fear in Individuals with PTSD
Laura
Nawijn
Control nr. 830 Intranasal Oxytocin Administration Improves Neural Sensitivity for Social
Reward in Patients with PTSD. Syntocinon (oxytocin) nasal spray is used for other purpose
than approved by the FDA
Mathew
Hoskins
I will present evidence for the use of MDMA-assisted psychological therapy to treat resistant
PTSD. Control number 1289
Miranda
Olff
Oxyotcin/Syntocinon is not registered for traumatic stress reactions
Melissa
Peskin
1307 The Relationship between Increased Self-Worth and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
(PTSD) Symptom Improvement during Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy with a Cognitive
Enhancer. This study involved the use of D-Cycloserine prior to Virtual Reality Exposure
Therapy, to examine whether D-Cycloserine facilitated extinction.
Mirjam
Van Zuiden
949: oxytocin as chemoprophylaxis for PTSD
Julianne
Flanagan
This symposium, and my presentation within it, focuses on off-label use of the medication
Oxytocin (also known as Pitocin). Oxytocin is FDA approved for women in childbirth, but is
investigational for the use of mental health treatment. 948 Augmenting Prolonged Exposure Therapy for PTSD with Intranasal Oxytocin: Safety, Feasibility, and Acceptability Sym
118 Translational Perspectives on the Clinical Application of Oxytocin among Individuals with
PTSD
Nancy
Bernardy
I will discuss the use of prazosin to treat PTSD-related nightmares, an off-label use of that
agent.
Ann
Rasmusson
There are only two medications (and just one class of medications) currently FDA approved
for PTSD; these are efficacious in only about half of individuals treated or less; thus will be
discussing possible novel therapeutics based on scientific evidence regarding individual and
subpopulation based differences in the multiple and interacting underlying pathophysiological mechanisms that impact PTSD symptoms, risk, recovery. I will make it clear that any
potential novel therapeutics or currently prescribed medications for symptoms of PTSD are
off-label or not fully investigated yet.
Sudie
Back
Data on the investigational use of N-acetylcysteine and oxytocin will be presented.
Murray
Raskind
Prazosin is FDA approved for hypertension and has been used for decades as an inexpensive and safe generic drug for benign prostatic hypertrophy urinary symptoms. It has been
demonstrated effective in placebo controlled trials for trauma nightmares and other PTSD
symptoms, and is recommended in the VA/DoD PTSD Treatment Guidelines for PTSD trauma
nightmares.
Jenni
Schaefer
I will discuss the use of olanzapine in my recovery from anorexia nervosa (binge/purge)
type.
Marcel
Bonn-Miller
Medical cannabis is not approved by the FDA, but the presentation will be discussing its use
among individuals with PTSD
Lori
Davis
Asenapine for PTSD for control number 1450
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Potential for Distress
Abstract Title
Session Type Name
Session Date, Time
and Room
Participant Distress Explanation
Systematic Delivery of Exposure,
Cognitive, and Behavioral Treatments
for PTSD with a 16-Week Manualized
Group Protocol
PMI #3
November 9, 2016
8:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
Dallas A3
Some details of traumas as examples are likely
to be shared.
Ethics for the International Trauma
Specialists
PMI #7
November 9, 2016
1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Dallas A2
Given examples can be moderately distressing
to the audience
Working with PTSD in Refugees and
Asylum Seekers
PMI #11
November 9,2016
1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Dallas D3
Video role plays of therapy including some
descriptions of torture
Responding to Terror Attacks: What are
the Right Ways to Act?
Keynote Panel
November 9, 2016
6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Dallas B/C
Presentation related to recent terror attacks
and personal experiences of terror may be
distressing
Why They Fight: Evidence from the Field
Concurrent Session One
Symposium
November 10, 2016
10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
San Antonio
Ballroom B
I will be talking about political violence,
including rape and torture. No distressing
pictures or media will be shown but there will
be pictures from front positions in Iraq.
Trauma-informed Policing with Communities of Color—Learning from the
Dallas Experience
Concurrent Session Two
Invited Panel
November 10, 2016
1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
San Antonio B
Some summary of the shooting both
descriptively and through audio-visual aids
(news coverage)
Structural Alterations in the Brain and
their Associations with Psychological
and Psychosocial Characteristics in
Sexual Assault Victims
Concurrent Session Two
Symposium
November 10, 2016
1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Houston Ballroom B
Discussing sexual violence might trigger
painful memories and / or feelings of
inconvenience.
On-Line Intervention for Veterans Using
Gamelike Technology
Concurrent Session Three
Paper Presentation
November 10, 2016
1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Houston Ballroom B
War-related trauma types will be explained
and slides of moderate graphic detail will be
presented
The Challenge and Opportunity of
Treatment of Children and Caregivers
When Both Have Traumatic Stress
Concurrent Session
Three
Workshop
November 10, 2016
2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Dallas A3
Workshop will involve active discussion and
application of discussed content to case
material. Sufficient history and description
of symptoms will be provided to allow
engagement in clinical material.
Early Interventions Following Terrorist
Attacks: From the Emergency Room to
the Living Room
Concurrent Session Three
Workshop
November 10, 2016
2:45 PM - 4:00 PM
San Antonio
Ballroom B
Descriptions and role plays regarding
Emergency Room symptoms and
interventions
Is a History of Interpersonal Violence
Associated with Emotional Modulation
of Pain?
Author
Attended Poster
Session One
November 10, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
A photo depicting human injury will be
displayed, to provide an example of the
unpleasant photo category implemented in
the ECON paradigm.
Developing Culturally and Trauma
Competent Mental Health Graduate
Students: Case Study in Latina America
Author Attended Poster
Session One
November 10, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
Possible case studies of children with specific
trauma histories may be upsetting.
Circumstances Preceding Suicide in
US Soldiers: A Qualitative Analysis of
Narrative Data
Author Attended Poster
Session One
November 10, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
Suicide narrative data
The Role of Current and Past Intimate
Partner Violence on Depression among
Women
Author Attended Poster
Session One
November 10, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
The focus on intimate partner violence and
chronic illness through HIV may insight
distress in some audience members.
Sexual Identity and Contextual Features
of Sexual Assault Experiences are
Associated with Trauma Symptoms
Author Attended Poster
Session One
November 10, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 PM
Grand Hall
The material will be on women’s experiences
of rape which can be distressing for some
people.
www.istss.org
Itinerary Builder
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Potential for Distress
Abstract Title
Session Type Name
Session Date, Time
and Room
Participant Distress Explanation
Fifteen Years after 9/11: What Predicts
Disrupted Inflammatory Functioning in
World Trade Center Responders?
Author Attended Poster
Session One
November 10, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
The presentation will include photos and
brief descriptions of the World Trade Center
disaster.
Culturally-Tailored Treatment for
Hispanic Victims of Interpersonal
Violence Using Group Cognitive
Processing Therapy in a CommunityBased Setting
Author Attended Poster
Session One
November 10, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
This poster presentation describes services
provided to individuals who have experienced
interpersonal violence.
High % of Posttraumatic Stress in South
African College Students
Author Attended Poster
Session One
November 10, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
We describe a very high level of PTSD in college student populations, often from rape for
women.
Restoring Emotional, Sexual, and
Physical Empowerment through CBT
& Trauma-sensitive Care (RESPECT): A
Chronic Pelvic Pain Intervention
Author Attended Poster
Session One
November 10, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
We will describe some of the invasive medical
techniques implemented by physical therapy
providers.
Effects of Intimate Partner Violence,
Mental Health, and Social Support on
Perinatal Health
Concurrent Session Five
Paper Presentation
November 11, 2016
10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Houston Ballroom C
The study examines effects of intimate
partner violence on pregnant women, which
may be distressing for audience members
with histories of IPV-exposure or pregnancy
trauma.
Addressing Perpetration and Moral
Injury in Cognitive Processing Therapy
Concurrent Session Six
Workshop
November 11, 2016
1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Dallas D2
Participants may be exposed to deidentified
case examples of acts of perpetration and
incidents of violence in the context of this
workshop. It can be distressing to hear about
case examples of perpetration as with any
trauma details.
Through the Door: Complex Symptom
Presentations of a New Generation of
Veterans
Concurrent Session Seven
Case Study
November 11, 2016
2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Dallas D2
Some material related to the individual service
members’ experiences is graphic but integral
to understanding
The Prevalence of Sexual Revictimization: A Meta-Analytic Review
Concurrent Session Seven
Paper Presentation
November 11, 2016
2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Houston Ballroom C
This presentation is on sexual victimization,
which may be disturbing for survivors of this
type of trauma. Our presentation will be done
in a professional way, and the title of the
presentation should warn participants prior to
their attendance.
Getting the Word Out on Complex
Concurrent Session Eight
Trauma: Use of Multimedia Resources
Multi-Media
to Support Education and Awareness for
Youth and Families and Across Systems
November 11, 2016
4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Dallas A3
The film depicts a child exposed to family
violence and a teenage girl as a victim of
assault.These scenes are only a few seconds
and neither shows explicit detail. But it is
possible that these scenes could be upsetting
or triggering to some participants
Aspects of Social Support, Self-blame,
and PTSD: A Mediation Model in Female
and Male Sexual Assault Survivors
Author Attended Poster
Session Two
November 11, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
Brief descriptions of different types of sexual
experiences endorsed
Effects of Gender and Sexual Orientation in the Context of Intimate Partner
Violence
Author
Attended Poster
Session Two
November 11, 2016
5:30 PM - 6:30 PM
Grand Hall
Descriptions of IPV episode; pictures of scars
Zika in the Americas: Media Potrayal of
Female Trauma
Author Attended Poster
Session Two
November 11, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
Discussion about abortion, factual
information about epidemic, effects of Zika
virus on newborn health
www.istss.org
Itinerary Builder
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Potential for Distress
Abstract Title
Session Type Name
Session Date, Time
and Room
Participant Distress Explanation
Prevention of Trauma-related Disorders
Stigma Through the Analysis of the Labelling Processes’ and Cultural Assumptions’ Effects on Diagnosis, Treatment,
Healing, and Patients’ Compliance.
Author Attended Poster
Session Two
November 11, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
Hangouts with suggestions and exercises
about a cultural sensitive approach with cultural diverse patients
Culturally Congruent Strategies for the
Successful Delivery of Massed PE with
Active Duty Military Personnel
Author Attended Poster
Session Two
November 11, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
Information related to traumas worked on in
context of Prolonged Exposure Therapy
The Relationship between Increased
Self-Worth and Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder (PTSD) Symptom Improvement
during Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy
with a Cognitive Enhancer
Author Attended Poster
Session Two
November 11, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
PTSD due to 9/11
Exploring Military Sexual Trauma Among
Male Veterans.
Author Attended Poster
Session Two
November 11, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
Sexual trauma account
Legacy of Childhood Victimization:
Indirect Effects on Adult Mental Health
through Re-victimization
Author Attended Poster
Session Two
November 11, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
The study examines the prevalence of chronic
re-victimization among persons with a
history of childhood victimization, which may
be distressing to audience members with
histories of victimization.
“But Once Again – A Woman in a
Man’s World:” An Analysis of Emergent
Themes from Interviews with Women
Veterans Who Had Deployed to Iraq or
Afghanistan.
Author Attended Poster
Session Two
November 11, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
This is a qualitative study that involved some
reporting of sexual trauma. While none of
the interviews are explicit or graphic in their
descriptions, they still may serve as triggers
to individuals who had experienced similar
traumas.
A Psychiatric Profile of Survivors of
Intimate Partner Violence and Sex
Trafficking: Findings from A Pilot CoLocated Model of Psychiatric Care in
the South Bronx
Author Attended Poster
Session Two
November 11, 2016
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Grand Hall
This poster presents a statistical description of
a clinical population of survivors of intimate
partner violence and sex trafficking. This
population is high-risk and issues such as
suicidality will be included.
Elder Asylum Seekers and Refugees
Seeking Treatment
Concurrent Session Nine
Paper Presentation
November 12, 2016
10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Houston Ballroom B
Overview of experiences of violence, loss,
torture
Moral Injury and the Justice-Involved
Veteran
Concurrent Session Ten
Symposium
November 12, 2016
1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Dallas D2
Quotes of moral injuries from United States
veterans
Implementing Technology in
Supervision and Consultation for
Torture Rehabilitation Programs and
Practitioners: Expanding Efforts for
Evidence-Based Interventions and
Culturally Responsive Care
Concurrent Session Ten
Workshop
November 12, 2016
1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Dallas A2
Brief descriptions of torture treatment settings
Implication of NOTCH1 Gene in
Comorbid Anxiety and Depression
Symptoms in a Sample of Sexual Abuse
Victims
Concurrent Session
Eleven
Paper Presentation
November 12, 2016
2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Houston Ballroom C
The topic of this study is sexual abuse, which
may be distressing for sexual abuse survivors
www.istss.org
Itinerary Builder
32
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Keynote Panel
Wednesday, November 9, 6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Dallas B/C
Responding to Terror Attacks: What are the Right Ways to Act?
Moderator: Grete Dyb, MD, PhD,
Norwegian Center of Violence And Traumatic
Stress Studies, Oslo, Norway
Panelists:Bruce Shapiro,
Dart Center for Journalism & Trauma, USA
Chris Brewin, PhD,
University College London, United Kingdom
Tuva Svendsen, Medical Student,
The Arctic University of Tromsø,
Tromsø, Norway
Philippe Pirard, MD, PhD,
National Institute of Public Health,
Saint-Maurice Cedex, France
Melissa Brymer, PhD, PsyD,
National Center for Child Traumatic Stress at
UCLA, Los Angeles, California USAA
Robert Pynoos, MD, MPH,
National Center for Child Traumatic Stress,
University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA)
and UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles,
California, USA
Primary Keyword: Prevent
Secondary Keyword: Acute-Journalism-Pub
Health-Terror
Population Type: Lifespan
Presentation Level: I
Region: Global
Tuva Svendsen is a medical student at the Arctic University
of Norway. In July 2011 she survived the Utøya terror attack
where 69 young people attending a summer camp were killed
by a single perpetrator. Sharing her personal experiences in
fighting her way back to a normal life gives a unique insight in
the user perspective of trauma outreach programs.
Last year`s attack in Paris challenged the organization
of medical and psychological outreach to victims and an
epidemiologic study showed a high proportion of traumatized
civilians with unmet needs. Philippe Pirard and co-authors
Thierry Baubet, Stéphanie Vandentorren and Yvon Motreff
therefore concluded that we need to enlarge the scope of the
population to be contacted and ensure more structured early
outreach through novel initiatives to reach exposed persons
on web-based platforms.
Robert Pynoos and Melissa Brymer will describe how the
National Child Traumatic Stress Network has collaborated with
partners to respond to the needs of children and families after
terrorist attacks worldwide. Future directions for response
and recovery programs for children, adolescents, and families
after terrorism will be discussed and recommendations for
expanding services for underserved populations and for
addressing different cultures.
.
Since the attacks on the U.S. in 2001 and the Madrid train
bombing in 2004, there have been an increasing number of
terrorist incidents around the world. Professionals in the field
of traumatic stress have a particular responsibility to support
health authorities in developing and implementing the best
strategies in acute crisis and the aftermath of terror. How do
we meet these challenges? Panelists with experiences from
terror attacks across the world present suggestions for future
responses.
Based on the worldwide work of the Dart Center for
Journalism and Trauma, Bruce Shapiro will discuss the role of
media in resilience, recovery and social policy following largescale atrocity and explore ways for important knowledge
from the trauma field to be communicated more effectively
through news media.
Drawing on his experiences after the 2005 London bombings,
Chris Brewin will emphasize the difficulty in identifying and
following up survivors after incidents involving dispersed
populations, such as transport incidents and attacks on public
gatherings. He will discuss strategies for ensuring longer term
mental health needs are met.
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Keynote Address
Thursday, November 10, 8:30 a.m. – 9:50 a.m.
Dallas B/C
Note: The Keynote Address will be preceded by a brief ISTSS Awards Presentation
The Epidemiology of Trauma and PTSD
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Pub Health
Chronic-Complex-Global-Prevent
Adult
A
Global
Ronald C. Kessler, PhD
Harvard Medical School, Boston Massachusetts, USA
This presentation will provide an overview of results from
the World Health Organization’s World Mental Health (WMH)
Surveys on the epidemiology of trauma and PTSD. The WMH
Surveys are a coordinated series of mental health needs
assessment surveys carried out in representative national and
regional household surveys to support mental health policy
planning efforts in countries throughout the world. WMH
surveys have been completed to date in 25 countries in the
America, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia, and the Pacific.
Each WMH survey asks respondents about lifetime prevalence,
age-of-onset, and course of a wide range of common mental
and substance disorders. PTSD is one of these disorders. WMH
respondents are also asked about lifetime history of exposure
to a wide range of traumas. The presentation will focus on the
distribution and clustering of trauma exposure; differential
risk of PTSD onset and persistence across trauma types as a
joint function of age of exposure and prior trauma history; and
the role of temporally prior mental and substance disorders
in predicting trauma exposure, risk of PTSD after trauma
exposure, and course of PTSD after onset. Clinical and public
health implications of results will be pointed out throughout
the presentation.
Dr. Kessler’s research deals broadly with the social
determinants of mental health and illness as studied from an
epidemiological perspective. He is the author of over 600
publications and the recipient of many awards for his research,
including the Senior Scientist and MERIT awards from the
National Institute of Mental Health. He has been rated as
the most widely cited researcher in the world in the field of
psychiatry for each of the past fifteen years and is a member
of both the Institute of Medicine and the National Academy of
Sciences.
www.istss.org
Dr. Kessler is the Principal Investigator of
the US National Comorbidity Survey, the
first nationally representative survey of
the prevalence and correlates of mental
disorders in the U.S., and a Co-Director
of the World Health Organization’s World
Mental Health Survey Initiative, a series of
comparative community epidemiological
surveys of the prevalence and correlates of mental disorders
and treatment for these disorders in 26 countries around the
world. In addition to his epidemiological studies, Kessler is
involved in evaluating a number of innovative programs for
the prevention and treatment of mental illness in high-risk
segments of the population. Finally, Dr. Kessler is the Principal
Investigator of the Harvard Medical School site for STARRSLS, a research program funded by the Department of Defense
to study risk and protective factors for suicide among Army
personnel.
Dr. Kessler earned his PhD in sociology from New York
University in 1975. He completed a postdoctoral fellowship
in psychiatric epidemiology at the University of Wisconsin
before joining the faculty at the University of Michigan in 1979.
He was a Professor of Sociology and a Program Director at
Michigan’s Institute for Social Research at the time he took his
current position at Harvard Medical School in 1994.
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Keynote Address
Friday, November 11, 8:30 a.m. – 9:50 a.m.
Dallas B/C
Note: The Keynote Address will be preceded by a brief ISTSS Awards Presentation
Epigenetic Regulation of Stress Genes and Their Role in Stress-Related Psychiatric Disorders:
FKBP5 as an Example
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Bio Med
Gen/Int-Genetic
Lifespan
M
Global
Elisabeth Binder, MD, PhD
Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Stress responses and related outcomes vary markedly across
individuals. Elucidating the molecular underpinnings of this
variability is of great relevance for developing individualized
prevention strategies and treatments for stress-related
disorders. An important modulator of stress responses is
FKBP5. FKBP5 acts as a co-chaperone that modulates not
only glucocorticoid receptor activity in response to stressors
but also a multitude of other cellular processes in both the
brain and periphery. Notably, the FKBP5 gene is regulated
via complex interactions among environmental stressors,
FKBP5 genetic variants, and epigenetic modifications of
glucocorticoid-responsive genomic sites. These interactions
can result in FKBP5 disinhibition that has been shown to
contribute to a number of aberrant phenotypes in both
rodents and humans and possibly contributes to both
behavioural and medical symptoms associated with stress
exposure. Consequently, FKBP5 blockade may hold promise
as a treatment intervention for stress-related disorders,
and recently developed selective FKBP5 blockers show
encouraging results. Although risk for stress-related disorders
is conferred by multiple environmental and genetic factors,
the findings related to FKBP5 illustrate how a deeper
understanding of the molecular and systemic mechanisms
underlying specific gene-environment interactions may
provide insights into the pathogenesis of stress-related
disorders.
www.istss.org
Dr. Binder has studied Medicine at
the University of Vienna, Austria and
Neuroscience at Emory University in
Atlanta, GA, USA. Following a postdoctoral
training at the Max-Planck Institute of
Psychiatry in Munich, Germany, she
returned to Emory University as an Assistant
Professor in the Departments of Psychiatry and Behavioral
Sciences and Human Genetics. In 2007, she was appointed as
research group leader at the Max-Planck Institute of Psychiatry
within the Minerva Program of the Max-Planck Society.
Since August 2013, Elisabeth Binder is the director of the
Department of Translational Research in Psychiatry at the MaxPlanck Institute of Psychiatry. She also holds an appointment
as an Associate Professor in the Dept. of Psychiatry and
Behavioral Sciences at Emory University School of Medicine.
Her main research interests are the identification of molecular
moderators of the response to environmental factors, with a
focus on early trauma and gene x environment interactions.
She studies how such factors influence trajectories to
psychiatric disease or well-being to ultimately use this
information for novel prevention and treatment strategies.
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Keynote Address
Saturday, November 12, 8:30 a.m. – 9:50 a.m.
Dallas B/C
Note: The Keynote Address will be preceded by a brief ISTSS Awards Presentation
Supporting Vast Numbers of People in Communities Affected by Adversity: Lessons Learned
(So Far)
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Pub Health
Commun-Nat/Dis-Civil/War-Care
Lifespan
A
Global
Mark van Ommeren, PhD
World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
Following exposure to violence, disaster, or other adversity,
rates of mental health problems and non-pathological distress
increase. At the same time, most people in countries affected
by adversity do not have access to appropriate mental health
support. Despite insufficient numbers of (a) mental health
specialists (b) non-specialists working for mental health, and
(c) public mental health practitioners, this area of public health
has much momentum.
This presentation will seek to cover the World Health
Organization (WHO)’s approach to addressing vast mental
health needs in emergency-affected countries. It will
emphasize 4 aspects: (a) mental health system building (as
described in WHO (2013) Building back Better: Sustainable
Mental Health Care after Emergencies), (b) clinical
interventions integrated into general health services (as
described in the WHO & UNHCR (2015) mhGAP Humanitarian
Intervention Guide: Clinical Management of Mental,
Neurological and Substance Use Disorders in Humanitarian
Emergencies, (c) social interventions that can reach large
numbers of people with the aim to create a supportive
recovery environment (as described in the Inter-Agency
Standing Committee (IASC, 2007) Guidelines on Mental Health
and Psychosocial Support in Emergency Settings), and (d)
scalable (low resource-intensity) psychological interventions,
as currently developed and tested by WHO and many partners.
The presentation includes both country and normative
examples with lessons learned and relearned (such as “training
without supervision is entertainment” and “in public health,
less is often more”).
Dr. van Ommeren is Public Mental Health
Adviser in the Department of Mental Health
and Substance Abuse at the World Health
Organization (WHO). He functions in WHO
as the global focal point for mental health
and psychosocial support in emergencies.
This position includes advising and
supporting all relevant agencies in providing the best possible
social and mental health supports to people affected by war
and other disasters. He has played a key role in initiating
and drafting the most popular documents currently used in
emergencies worldwide.
He was initiator and co-chair of the Inter-Agency Standing
Committee (IASC) Task Force for Mental Health and
Psychosocial Support in Emergency Settings, representing
guidelines for emergencies written and endorsed at head-ofagency level by 27 agencies representing key UN agencies,
the Red Cross/Red Crescent movement and leading nongovernmental organizations.
He also led the drafting of the mental health standard in the
Sphere Handbook (2004, 2011), which is worldwide the most
widely used guide in emergencies across disciplines.
He has a particular interest in action related to “building back
better”, that is converting short-term emergency-related
interest in mental health into momentum for long-term
improvement, as described in Building Back Better: Sustainable
Mental Health Care after Emergencies (WHO, 2013).
He is also a member of the WHO mhGAP team where he is
the focal point for psychological interventions as well as for
depression, trauma and loss. His recent work focuses on
the development and testing of simplified “low-intensity”
psychological interventions to be used in communities affected
by adversity.
He was the recipient of the 2002 ISTSS Chaim Danieli Young
Professional Award for excellence in service or research in the
field of traumatic stress. He regularly co-authors articles in
leading public health journals (h-index is 36 in Google scholar).
www.istss.org
Itinerary Builder
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Master Clinician
Thursday, November 10, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
San Antonio A
Competent Parenting: The Key to Preventing Social, Emotional and Behavioural Problems in
Children of Trauma Related Adversity
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Practice
CPA-Fam/Int
Lifespan
M
Global
Matthew Sanders, PhD
University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
There is nothing more important in promoting the healthy
development and wellbeing of children than the quality
of parenting a child receives regardless of their life
circumstances. Competent parenting is the key to preventing
child social, emotional and behavioural problems because it
provides a common pathway to confident, resilient and skilled
children. From single-subject research in the early 1980s that
investigated individually administered parenting programs to a
widely disseminated public health approach that has impacted
millions of families worldwide, Triple P has evolved an array
of evidence-based interventions designed to overcome a
diverse range of clinical problems affecting families every
day. This need for flexibility has inspired the more recent
innovation work investigating how the Triple P system can be
applied to trauma related adversity. The difficulties faced and
lessons learned through implementing a large-scale evidencebased parenting program across diverse communities will be
discussed.
Professor Sanders is a Professor of Clinical
Psychology and Director of the Parenting
and Family Support Centre at the University
of Queensland. He is also a consulting
Professor at The University of Manchester, a
visiting Professor at the University of South
Carolina, and holds adjunct Professorships
at Glasgow Caledonian University and The University of
Auckland. As the founder of the Triple P-Positive Parenting
Program, Professor Sanders is considered a world leader in the
development, implementation, evaluation and dissemination
of population-based approaches to parenting and family
interventions. Professor Sanders is recognised as the global
leader in the field of evidence-based parenting intervention
and one of The University of Queensland’s Innovation
champions. Professor Sanders’ Triple P system is currently in
use across 25 countries, has over 68,000 practitioners trained
to deliver it, and some 7 million families are estimated to have
benefited from Triple P.
Professor Sanders’ work has been widely recognised by his
peers as reflected a number of prestigious awards. In 2007,
he received the Australian Psychological Society’s President’s
Award for Distinguished Contribution to Psychology and in
2004 he received an International Collaborative Prevention
Science award from the Society for Prevention Research
in the US. In 2007 he received a Trailblazers Award from
the Parenting and Families Special Interest Group in the
Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Therapy and in
2008 was became a fellow of the New Zealand Psychological
Society. Professor Sanders has also won a Distinguished
Career Award from the Australian Association for Cognitive
Behaviour therapy, was named Honorary President of the
Canadian Psychological Association (2009), and Queenslander
of the Year (2007).
www.istss.org
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37
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Master Clinician
Friday, November 11, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Dallas B/C
Compassion Focused Therapy: Is Compassion an Antidote to Shame and an Effective
Treatment of Complex PTSD?
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Practice
Complex
Adult
M
Global
Deborah L. Lee, PhD
Berkshire Traumatic Stress Service, Berkshire, United Kingdom
Those who have been repeatedly traumatised at the hands
of others have many challenges to face as they discover a
life without trauma and learn how to live in a mind that can
flourish. Predominant issues of self-blame, self-loathing, lack
of trust, interpersonal difficulties and struggles to regulate
threat based emotions are prevalent in therapy.
Effective treatments of interpersonal trauma suggest phasedbased approaches for Complex PTSD (Cloitre, 2010), yet the
precise ingredients of the phases are still up for debate. Key
struggles for clients are to discover that their lives are not of
their making or their fault and that can take responsibility to
act and feel differently.
Can compassion help you discover what you don’t know and
help you feel what you have never felt?
This masterclass explores the use of compassion focused
therapy offers clients the psychoeducation to discover their
lives are not their fault and the brain training exercises to
help them develop the capacity to feel emotionally safe with
and connected to others. Perhaps this could offer a vital
precursor to change the emotional context of minds and allow
clients to think differently about their traumatic experiences
in a way that allows them to hold themselves in mind with
kindness, understanding, wisdom and courage.
Compassion focused therapy was developed by Gilbert and
his colleagues (Gilbert, 2005, 2009). The explicit goal is to
develop, access and stimulate positive effect associated with
self-soothing in the mind and body of the patient in order to
promote an inner sense of psychological safeness (Gilbert,
2005)
capacity to self-soothe to those who feel deeply ashamed
about who they are and what they have been through.
Dr. Lee is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist,
Head of Berkshire Traumatic Stress Service
and South Central Veterans Service.
She is also an honorary Senior Lecturer
at University College London. She is a
board member of the Compassionate
Mind Foundation and author of the
Compassionate-Mind Guide to Recovering from Trauma and
PTSD: Using Compassion-Focused Therapy to Overcome
Flashbacks, Shame, Guilt, and Fear (2013). New Harbinger,
New York.
Dr Lee has worked in the field of trauma for 24 years and
specialises in the treatment of PTSD and complex Trauma.
Her particular area of clinical and research interest is in
shame based PTSD and self-criticism. She has developed the
use of compassion - based treatments including the use of
compassionate imagery in shame based flashbacks to enhance
clinical practice in this field. She has pioneered the use of
developing compassionate resilience as part of a phased
based treatment approach to complex PTSD. She has widely
contributed to the dissemination of her clinical knowledge
through writing and delivering over 100 clinical workshops
and talks in North America and Europe.
The therapeutic work presented in this talk can be considered
as part of phase 2, as compassionate resilience enhances
affect regulation, interpersonal functioning, problem-solving
and the ability to hold trauma memories with a caring
compassionate mind. Compassionate resilience enhances
feelings of self-soothing and safeness in these memories
and reduces self-critical maintenance cycles by developing
compassionate self- talk. It helps the development of the
www.istss.org
Itinerary Builder
38
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Master Clinician
Saturday, November 12, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Dallas B/C
Treating PTSD through the Internet – Efficacy, Treatment Principles and Challenges of the
Virtual Therapeutic Relationship with the PTSD Patients
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Clin Res
Clin Res-Global-Media-Tech
Lifespan
M
Global
Christine Knaevelsrud, PhD
Free University of Berlin, Berlin, Germany
Meta-analyses show consistent evidence and large effect
sizes of for trauma-focused therapies. However, these are not
widely applied in clinical practice. Moreover, only a minority
of traumatized individuals who experience symptoms of PTSD
are in touch with the health care system and only around one
in five patients seeks psychological treatment due to fear of
stigmatization, embarrassment, judgment or exclusion or
negative beliefs about mental health care services. Above
all, there is a pronounced lack of psychotherapy supply for
PTSD, with long waiting times and inadequate psychotherapy
infrastructure. This disparity of need for psychotherapy and
supply is crucial, and alternative means of providing access
to treatment are needed. Web-based psychotherapeutic
interventions may help to improve access to mental health
care for individuals with PTSD through being independent
of seeing a therapist face-to-face and through being easily
accessible, low-threshold and visually anonymous. Metaanalytical evidence shows that cognitive and behavioral
intervention techniques for PTSD can be successfully applied
through the Internet. The presentation will describe how
current evidence-based treatment approaches can be
transferred to the Internet (i.e. through writing assignments,
video/ audio vignettes or interactive training) and describe
specific moderators that are associated with better
outcomes (i.e. duration of treatment, guided versus unguided
interventions). The virtual therapeutic relationship with PTSD
patients who regularly show difficulties with interpersonal
trust and relationships will be specifically discussed.
www.istss.org
Dr. Knaevelsrud is a full professor for
Clinical Psychological Intervention at
the Freie University Berlin and trained
psychotherapist. She completed her
studies in psychology at the University of
Amsterdam, Netherlands and New York
University, USA and obtained her PhD at
the University of Zurich, Switzerland. During the last decade,
she also served as the scientific director of the Treatment
Center for Torture Victims Berlin. She is Vice President of the
German Society for Traumatic Stress Studies. Dr. Knaevelsrud’s
clinical and research interests are focused on web-based
interventions. She conducted several treatment trials on
internet-based cognitive-behavioral treatments for PTSD,
Complicated Grief and Depression. Her current work focuses
on improving access to evidence-based intervention in
regions of war and violent conflicts. Further research interests
include psychological risk factors for PTSD such as attention
biases, transgenerational transmission and revictimization. Itinerary Builder
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Master Methodologist
Thursday, November 10, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
San Antonio A
Planning a Large Scale Population Survey: Choices and Consequences
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Tech
Acc/Inj-Nat/Dis
N/A
M
N/A
John M. Boyle, PhD
ICF International, Rockville, Maryland, USA
We have conducted population based assessments of trauma
and trauma-related disorders, both in the general public and
in sub-populations at greater risk to trauma, for decades.
Some populations at greater risk of traumatic events,
including active duty military, veterans, first responders, some
adjudicated crime victims, among others, can be identified
and sampled from databases. However, traumatic events
including crime, war, other forms of violence, natural disasters,
fires, flooding, vehicular crashes and other accidents, occur
throughout the general population. Hence, many studies
of trauma begin with general population sampling frames
from which cross-sectional or longitudinal, retrospective or
prospective assessments of trauma, trauma-related disorders,
their correlates and the mediators can be conducted. The
ISTSS meeting is an ideal platform to reflect on the promise
of innovative technology and methodology in improving our
measurement of trauma and trauma-related disorders. Mobile
data collection may allow us to develop real time measures of
conditions and reactions to natural (and man-made) disasters.
Web-based panels may permit us to measure changes in
symptom pattern, health outcomes and recovery from trauma
on a much more detailed basis.
Dr. Boyle has served as the project director
on hundreds of projects over the course of
his 35-year career, having directed public
health surveys for Federal, State, and local
government; universities; nonprofits; and
commercial organizations. As the leader of
ICF’s Survey Research Practice, he provides
oversight and leadership to ICF’s public health surveys for
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
other Federal and State clients, and the commercial sector.
Before coming to ICF, Dr. Boyle spent 25 years directing the
government, health, and social research division of Abt SRBI
(formerly Schulman, Ronca & Bucuvalas, Inc.). He previously
directed the government research division of Louis Harris and
Associates for 7 years.
Dr. Boyle directed some of the earliest telephone surveys of
general populations to estimate the prevalence of intimate
partner violence, including spousal violence, rape, other forms
of sexual assault and stalking. In the areas of family violence
or domestic violence, he designed and directed the Second
National Family Violence Survey for Drs. Murray Straus and
Richard Gelles in December 1985. This was the first national
survey of domestic violence to be conducted by telephone.
A total of 6,002 telephone interviews were conducted with a
national sample of adults concerning spousal and parent-child
violence.
He has also directed some of the most important surveys
of rape and sexual assault. He directed the survey of Sexual
Assault in South Carolina for Dr. Dean Kilpatrick and the
Medical University of South Carolina. This survey was
conducted by telephone among a county-wide crosssection of 2,000 adult women in 1983. This methodology
was subsequently applied in the National Survey of Women
– Risk Factors for Substance Abuse: A Longitudinal Study for
the Medical University of South Carolina under grant to the
Department of Health and Human Services. A national sample
of 4,000 women were interviewed in 1989 and re-interviewed
in 1990 and 1991 about their experience with sexual assault,
other forms of violence and traumatic events, substance
use and/or abuse; and indicators of psychological distress
including past and current PTSD. The findings of this study
were widely publicized under the title Rape in America.
www.istss.org
Itinerary Builder
40
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Master Methodologist
Friday, November 11, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Dallas B/C
The Ultimate Skinner Box: Virtual Reality as a Tool for the Prevention, Assessment and
Treatment of PTSD
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Tech
Clin Res
Adult
M
Global
Albert “Skip” Rizzo, PhD
University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA
Virtual reality (VR) has undergone a transition in the past 20
years that has taken it from the realm of expensive toy and
into that of functional technology. Revolutionary advances in
the underlying VR enabling technologies have now driven a
renewed public enchantment with the medium as a new source
of entertainment. However, VR is not limited to the domain
of fun and games. VR technology provides an ideal method
for creating controlled stimulus environments. Stimuli can
be systematically delivered within realistic simulations of real
world contexts that allow for exquisite timing and control of
stimulus load/complexity, all of which can be manipulated in
a dynamic fashion contingent on the responses of the client/
research participant. Within such VR simulations, human
performance can be digitally captured in real time to support
a rich and precise analysis of relevant responses. In this regard,
VR can be seen as the “ultimate Skinner Box” for conducting
human research and for providing clinical care. Thus, in spite
of the early limitations of the technology, a large scientific
literature has emerged over the last 2 decades demonstrating
the added value that is accrued with the use of VR to address a
wide range of clinical health conditions. There is also evidence
that many clinicians have come to recognize VRs potential for
creating tools that can amplify and extend their capacity to
deliver evidence-based care. This can be seen in the results
from a survey where expert clinicians were queried as to what
interventions they predicted would increase in the next decade
(Norcross, 2012); VR ranked 4th out of 45 options with other
computer-supported methods occupying 4 out of the top 5
rankings. This presentation will describe VR efforts that are now
generating research that is having an impact on the prevention,
assessment and treatment of PTSD. After a brief introduction to
the technology, I will cover the use of VR to deliver prolonged
exposure for the treatment of PTSD and describe studies that
aim to assess PTSD by recording the physiological reactivity of
users interacting with VR stimuli. Applications that leverage VR
to immerse service members within interactive, story-based
simulations for teaching emotional coping and resilience prior
to a military deployment will then be presented. The talk will
conclude with a discussion of the use of AI Virtual Humans that
serve the role of digital standardized patients for clinical training
and as health care support coaches.
www.istss.org
Dr. Rizzo received his Ph.D. in Clinical
Psychology from SUNY-Binghamton. He
is the Director for Medical Virtual Reality
at the University of Southern California
Institute for Creative Technologies and has
Research Professor appointments with the
USC Dept. of Psychiatry and Behavioral
Sciences, and at the USC Davis School of Gerontology. Dr.
Rizzo conducts research on the design, development and
evaluation of Virtual Reality (VR) systems targeting the areas
of clinical assessment, treatment and rehabilitation. This work
spans the domains of psychological, cognitive and motor
functioning in both healthy and clinical populations. In the
psychological domain, the Virtual Iraq/Afghanistan project has
focused on the creation of a VR prolonged exposure therapy
application for combat and military sexual trauma-related
PTSD with OIF/OEF service members and veterans. This
system has now being retooled for a stress resilience/coping
strategy-training application for use at prior to a combat
deployment. His cognitive work has addressed the use of VR
applications to test and train attention, memory, visuospatial
abilities and executive function. In the motor domain, he
has developed VR Game systems to address rehabilitation
post stroke and Traumatic Brain Injury. He is also involved
with ICT collaborators in the creation of artificially intelligent
virtual human patients that clinicians can use to practice skills
required for challenging clinical interviews and diagnostic
assessments (sexual assault, resistant patients, etc.) and for
creating online virtual human healthcare guides for breaking
down barriers to care in psychological health and TBI. In spite
of the diversity of these areas of research and development,
the common thread that drives all of these applications
involves the study of how VR simulation technology can
be usefully applied to serve the needs of clinical users in a
manner that goes beyond what is available with traditional
20th Century tools and methods.
YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/
playlist?list=UUQrbzaW3x9wWoZPl4-l4GSA&feature=plcp
MedVR Lab: http://medvr.ict.usc.edu/
Itinerary Builder
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Master Methodologist
Saturday, November 12, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Dallas B/C
Spotify Mental-health for Depression and Anxiety: Personalise, Engage & Connect
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Clin Res
Anx-Pub Health-Res Meth-Tech
Lifespan
M
Industrialized
Heleen Riper, PhD
Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
The digitalisation of the treatment of mental disorders such
as depression and anxiety has gained momentum over the
last two decades. Riper and colleagues have shown with
ample studies that online prevention and treatment, for
example by means of cognitive behavioural therapy, can be
(cost) effective. However, ample challenges remain, such
as to assess for whom digital treatments work or not, how
they work and whether they can work even better than faceto-face therapies. eMental-health, including mobile health,
has led to numerous innovations but its implementation in
routine care appears still limited. One could argue that this is
due to a question of time as it takes a long time to implement
innovations in routine care. Under the umbrella of an ‘agile
science’ approach Riper will explore how a different line of
reasoning, namely that we need not only to innovate our
treatments but our scientific methods for the development
(‘co-creation’), evaluation (‘beyond RCT’s only’) and
implementation (‘evidence-based implementation strategies’)
of digital interventions as well. The application of mobile
devices that support virtual and augmented realities, sensors,
and gaming will become an integral component of studying
and providing these interventions. These enable a more
personalized approach of depression and anxiety by patients
and therapists alike. Riper will discuss these innovations by
beyond state of the art anxiety research, specifically related
to stress and stress related disorders including routine care
examples as well.
www.istss.org
Over the past 15 years, her research focus
has been on the development, evaluation
and implementation of innovative eMentalHealth interventions for common mental
disorders from prevention to treatment.
The scope of her current research activities
includes the use of mobile health, and
combined online and face to face (‘blended’) treatments for
depression and anxiety. New methodological challenges
include the development and evaluation of mobile ecological
momentary assessments and interventions (EMA/EMI),
serious gaming and predictive modeling. She has opted for an
international perspective and collaboration throughout her
academic career and acted as Principal Investigator of over 15
large scale European Union projects and reviewer for Research
Funding Organizations globally. She has have published over
120 international peer-reviewed papers and book chapters
within the eMental-health domain. In 2013 Heleen Riper (co)
founded the Journal of Internet Interventions (published
by Elsevier) and in 2014 she became President of the
International Society for Research on Internet Interventions
(ISRII) for which she now acts as Past-President.
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Invited Presentation
Thursday, November 10, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Dallas B/C
Symposium
How Novel Technology may Support a Public Health Approach to Trauma and Its
Consequences around the World
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Global
Global-Pub Health-Tech
Lifespan
M
Global
Chair: Miranda Olff1
Josef I. Ruzek, PhD2; Brian J. Hall, PhD3; Samuel M.Y. Ho, PhD, PsyD4; Nancy Kassam-Adams, PhD5
1
Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
²VA Palo Alto Health Care System, National Center for PTSD/Stanford University, Menlo Park, California, USA
³University of Macau, Taipa, Macau (SAR), China
⁴City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China
5
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Around the world, millions of adults, as well as children each
year, experience potentially traumatic events. Especially when
events happen on a large scale such as in the case of disasters,
migration or highly prevalent events, clinical resources may
be limited. The growth of phone and mobile access does
enable opportunities for electronic mental health (eMental
Health) interventions. We can also more easily address
specific contexts and for diverse cultures. However, with all
the potential there is for a big step forward towards efficient
mental health approaches the biggest challenge may be to
provide evidence-based resources that are culturally-relevant,
and truly accessible. In this symposium, we discuss how novel
technologies may support our public health goals.
Dr. Ruzek will present on the mobile technology applications
developed at the National Center for PTSD and explore issues
related to expanding their reach to trauma survivors in lessresourced communities with limited access to mental health
services.
www.istss.org
Dr. Hall will discuss how eMental Health intervention may
help populations in need, such as the millions of migrant
workers in China who typically face substantial barriers to
obtain classical mental health services.
Dr. Ho will share with us how to promote post-disaster
management in China e.g. by hotlines, mobile apps and
e-mental health tools. He will focus on current e-mental
health approaches (‘hope stories’) aimed at increasing hope in
children – an important predictor of resilience.
Dr. Kassam-Adams will share how to reach large numbers of
children and families by eHealth tools e.g. via gamified and
interactive features. She will update us with recent research,
lessons learned regarding practical development processes
and dissemination models.
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Invited Presentation
Invited Presentation
Thursday, November 10
10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Houston C
Thursday, November 10
1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Dallas B/C
Symposium
Panel
Gun Violence and Its Impact on Society
The Refugee Situation in the World:
a Humanitarian Emergency
Primary Keyword:
Community-based Programs
Secondary Keyword:
Comm/Vio
Population Type:
Lifespan
Presentation Level:
M
Region:Global
Chair: Justin Kenardy, PhD1; Carolyn Greene, PhD2
Discussant: James Shultz, PhD3
Siri Thoresen, PhD4; Bradley C. Stolbach, PhD5; Heather
Littleton, PhD6
1
University of Queensland, Herston, Queensland, Australia
2
VA Office of Mental Health Services, San Francisco, California,
USA
3
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, Florida,
USA
4
Norwegian Center for Violence and Traumatic Stress Studies,
Oslo, Norway
5
University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA
6
East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, USA
Gun violence has become an all too common experience.
This is at a level where the frequency of mass gun violence
has meant that it becomes "yesterday's news" relatively swiftly
and also chronic urban gun violence that is so routine that
it does not even make the news. This special symposium
aims to highlight the often under-recognized impacts of
gun violence on the community. Speakers will report on
aspects of gun violence impact. Siri Thoresen will explore
community responses to the 2011 attack in Norway. Heather
Littleton will discuss Lessons learned from a study of victims
of the Virginia Tech campus shooting. Bradley Stolbach will
address the effects of gun violence in Chicago's youth. Finally
James Schultz will provide a summary and implications of the
symposium.
www.istss.org
Primary Keyword: Global
Secondary Keyword: Health-Refugee-Social-Civil/
War
Population Type: N/A
Presentation Level: I
Region: Global
Moderator: Tanja Michael, PhD1
Adib Essali, MD2; Kerry Young, PhD3; Jutta Lindert, PhD,
MPH, MA4; Belinda Liddell, PhD5; Mark van Ommeren, PhD6
1
Saarland University, Saarbruecken, Germany
²Waikato District Health Board, Thames, Auckland, New
Zealand
³Central and North West London NHS Foundation Trust,
London, United Kingdom
4
University of Emden, Emden, Germany
5
University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales,
Australia
6
World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
Although providing refuge to people fleeing persecution, war
or hunger is considered the hallmark of civilization, many
high-income countries shy away from their humanitarian
responsibilities. Refugees – already exposed to danger in
their home country – face often perilous situations during
their flight and meet difficult living conditions in their
country of arrival. In the panel, five distinguished scholarclinicians will exchange views on which mental health and
psychosocial support measures are most needed and how
to build structures to provide them: Dr. Adib Essali (Waikato
District Health Board, NZ) has profound knowledge on the
psychological consequences of the violence in Syria and
the Middle East; Dr. Kerry Young (Forced Migration Trauma
Service, UK) is an expert on treatment approaches for
refugees; Dr. Jutta Lindert (Professor of Public Health, DE) is a
former head of a refugee camp and expert on the impact of
violence on mental health; Dr. Belinda Liddell (Refugee Trauma
and Recovery Program, UNSW Australia) has worked with a
variety of refugee and post-conflict populations; Dr. Mark van
Ommeren (Public Mental Health Adviser at WHO) functions as
global focal point for mental health and psychosocial support
in emergencies as well as for interventions for trauma and
loss. Dr. Tanja Michael will be moderating this session.
Itinerary Builder
44
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Invited Presentation
Invited Presentation
Thursday, November 10
1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
San Antonio B
Friday, November 11
10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Dallas B/C
Panel
Symposium
Trauma-informed Policing with
Communities of Color—Learning from the
Dallas Experience
Moving from Research to Practice to Meet
the Needs of Trauma-exposed Populations
across the Globe
Primary Keyword:
Social Issues – Public Policy
Secondary Keyword:
Comm/Vio, Cul/Div,
Journalism, Pub Health
Population Type:
Lifespan
Presentation Level:
I
Region:Industrialized
Primary Keyword: Train/Ed/Dis
Secondary Keyword: Clin Res-Practice-Comm/
Int-Cul Div
Population Type: Prof
Presentation Level: I
Region: Global
Moderator: Amy Williams, PhD1
Michael Foreman, MD2; Tara Galovski, PhD3; Sargeant
Demetrick Pennie, MA4; Brenda Richardson-Rowe, PhD,
LPC-S5; Ann Marie Warren, PhD, ABBP-Rp2
1
Steven A Cohen Military Family Clinic at Metrocare, Addison,
Texas, USA
2
Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, Texas, USA
3
Women’s Health Sciences Division, VA National Center for
PTSD, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
4
Dallas Fallen Officer Foundation, Texas Fallen Officer, Dallas
PD, Dallas, Texas, USA
5
Harmony Counseling Center, Dallas, Texas, USA
Chair: Tine K. Jensen, PhD1
Discussant: Paula P. Schnurr, PhD2
Benjamin E. Saunders, PhD3; Joan Cook, PhD4; Ane-Marthe
Solheim Skar, PhD5; Debra Kaysen, PhD, ABPP6
1
Norwegian Centre for Violence and Traumatic Stress Studies,
Oslo, Norway
2
National Center for PTSD, White River Junction, Vermont, USA
3
Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South
Carolina, USA
4
Yale School of Medicine, West Haven, Connecticut, USA
5
University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
6
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA
On July 17, 2016, a 25 year old African American man
ambushed and fired upon a group of police officers in Dallas,
Texas, killing 5 officers and injuring 9 others. The shooting
happened at the end of a Black Lives Matter-organized
protest involving police killings. This panel includes varying
perspectives on the impact of that event in the immediate
aftermath and how we can contextualize it within the current
issues facing law enforcement. Panelists will be invited to
share their opinions on how we can respond most effectively
as a community and how we can help reduce violence in the
future.
Many effective practices have been developed, tested, and are
now being disseminated and implemented in services around
the world. Meaningful dissemination and implementation
require attention to organizational, leadership, and therapist
factors. In this symposium, the presenters will present data
and experiences from four large-scale implementation efforts
to integrate the adoption of evidence-based mental health
interventions in usual care contexts. The presentations cover
different settings such as community service agencies and
mental health clinics, both child and adult target populations,
different interventions that were implemented, including
Cognitive Processing Therapy, Prolonged Exposure and
Trauma-Focused CBT. The implementation projects were
conducted in high and low resource countries. Together the
studies show that implementing evidence-based practice in
usual care organizations is possible, but requires activities
targeting multiple levels of the service system so that critical
barriers are addressed.
www.istss.org
Itinerary Builder
45
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Invited Presentation
Invited Presentation
Friday, November 11
2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Houston A
Friday, November 11
4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Dallas B/C
Panel
Panel
The PTSD Definition in DSM-5 and ICD-11:
Evolution or Devolution?
ISTSS Treatment Guidelines
Primary Keyword:
Assess Dx
Secondary Keyword:
Assess Dx
Population Type:
Adult
Presentation Level:
I
Region:Global
Moderator: Meaghan O’Donnell, PhD1
Dean Kilpatrick, PhD2; Andreas Maercker, PhD, MD3; Charles
Hoge, MD4
1
Phoenix Australia: Centre for Posttraumatic Mental Health:
The University of Melbourne, Carlton, Victoria, Australia
2
Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South
Carolina, USA
3
University of Zurich, Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
4
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research/US Army, Bethesda,
Maryland, USA
The diagnostic definition of PTSD has important implications
for clinical practice, research, service eligibility, and
compensation. Few would argue that the DSM-IV and ICD10 diagnostic formulations for PTSD were perfect, and many
aspects of both diagnoses received criticism. However, the
DSM-IV and ICD-10 PTSD diagnoses guided clinical and
research practice for years. In an attempt to address apparent
problems with these definitions, the DSM-IV diagnostic
criteria for PTSD were revised in 2013 with the publication of
DSM-5, and more substantial definitional changes have been
proposed for ICD-11. These revisions in the PTSD diagnosis
have generated considerable attention, as well as high profile
debates in the academic literature. This panel discussion will
examine the DSM-5 and proposed ICD-11 changes to the
PTSD diagnosis from several perspectives. Particular emphasis
will be placed on whether the DSM-5 and proposed ICD-11
revisions are well-justified clinically and scientifically, and
whether they represent evolutionary improvements as some
experts maintain, or whether they may not have improved the
DSM-IV or ICD-10 diagnoses and actually set the field back,
as other experts have suggested. Importantly the panel will
discuss future directions and ideas for ways forward.
www.istss.org
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Clin Res
Clin Res-Practice-Res Meth
Lifespan
I
Global
Moderator: Jonathan Ian Bisson, MD1
Marylene Cloitre, PhD2; Lutz Goldbeck, PhD3; Catrin
Elisabeth Lewis, PhD1; Neil Patrick Roberts, DPsych(Clin)4
1
Cardiff University School of Medicine, Cardiff, Wales, United
Kingdom
2
National Center for PTSD-Dissemination and Training Division,
Menlo Park, California, USA
3
University Ulm, Ulm, Germany
4
Cardiff and Vale University Health Board, Cardiff, Wales,
United Kingdom
The ISTSS Guidelines Committee is currently developing
updated Treatment Guidelines for PTSD informed by the
research evidence base. The Committee includes experts from
various professional backgrounds and areas of the world,
including members with considerable systematic review and
guideline development expertise. The ISTSS membership
and key stakeholders are being consulted at all stages of
the development process. A consumer (especially PTSD
sufferer/ex-PTSD sufferer) perspective is being gathered
through a consumer reference group. There is also a
practitioner reference group comprising practitioners from
different professional backgrounds who are not working
in the trauma field. The Committee is liaising closely with
the ISTSS Board, which is planning the dissemination of the
treatment guidelines. The panel comprises members of the
Committee who will provide an overview of the methodology
being employed, the progress to date and next steps, before
engaging in discussion with those attending.
Itinerary Builder
46
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Invited Presentation
Invited Presentation
Saturday, November 12
10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Dallas B/C
Saturday, November 12
4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Dallas B/C
Symposium
Closing Panel
Sleep and Nightmares in PTSD:
Advances in Neuroscience and Treatment
What I Have Changed My Mind About and Why
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Clin Res
Bio/Int-Sleep
Adult
M
Global
Chair: Murray Raskind, MD1
Discussant: Elaine Peskind, MD2
Anne Germain, PhD3; Thomas Mellman, MD4; Richard Ross,
MD, PhD5; Murray Raskind, MD1
1
VA Northwest Network (VISN 20) Mental Illness Research,
Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC), Seattle Washington,
USA
2
University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle,
Washington, USA
3
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
4
Howard University College of Medicine, Washington, District
of Columbia, USA
5
Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center (116 MHC),
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Sleep disturbance and nightmares are distressing clinical
symptoms central to PTSD that often are resistant to
commonly used psychotherapies and or pharmacotherapies.
In turn, sleep impairment can also adversely affect the neural
circuits underlying resilience to trauma and can contribute to
adverse general health outcomes in PTSD. This symposium
brings together clinical investigators with extensive research
experience addressing both the neuroscience and treatment
of those critically important nocturnal PTSD symptoms.
Moderator: Paula P. Schnurr, PhD1
Lucy Berliner, MSW2; Josef I. Ruzek, PhD3; Dean Kilpatrick,
PhD4; Richard Bryant, PhD5; Skip Rizzo, PhD6
1
National Center for PTSD, White River Junction, Vermont, USA
2
University of Washington/Harborview Medical Center, Seattle,
Washington, USA
3
VA Palo Alto Health Care System, National Center for PTSD/
Stanford University, Menlo Park, California, USA
4
Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South
Carolina, USA
5
University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales,
Australia
6
University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA
As the field of traumatic stress studies has evolved, we have
learned many things that have caused us to change our
minds—about the nature of traumatic exposure, its effects,
and how these effects can be treated. This session brings
together a group of leaders who have worked on issues that
include population and global health, as well as technology,
to discuss how and why they have changed previously held
beliefs in light of experience and empirical evidence. The goal
of the session is to illustrate the factors that have led to the
changes and to discuss how the current state of knowledge
continues to evolve.
Recent neuroscience research findings on the effects of sleep
deprivation on extinction learning and recall, and on increased
autonomic arousal and immune activity in an urban minority
sample with highly prevalent hypervigilant sleep fears and
PTSD will be presented. The symposium also will address
steps toward a “precision treatment” of nightmares and sleep
disturbance. Data will be presented supporting: pretreatment
blood pressure may be a useful “biomarker” for predicting
response of trauma nightmares and sleep disturbance to
prazosin in combat PTSD; clinical severity and demographic
characteristics may influence nightmare response to imagery
rehearsal therapy in Veterans; a brief behavioral treatment
normalizes neural responses to threat in chronic insomnia;
and alternative cognitive strategies along with behavioral
modifications targeting the disruptive effects of nocturnal
vigilance on sleep.
www.istss.org
Itinerary Builder
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Ethics-related Presentations
Pre-Meeting Institute
Wednesday, November 9
8:30 a.m. – Noon
Dallas A2
PMI #2
Keeping Traumatic Stress Patients’
Electronic Data and Communication Private
and Secure: Ethical and Legal Issues, and
Applied Software Applications
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Tech
Practice-Ethics
N/A
I
Global
Jon Elhai, PhD
University of Toledo, Toledo, Ohio, USA
In recent years, mental health professionals have increasingly
incorporated information technology into patient care,
including the use of smartphones, tablets and laptops for
electronic communication, psychological assessment,
homework assignment completion and record keeping.
Yet weaknesses exist in these technologies that can put
patient privacy at risk. This issue is especially salient when
working with traumatic stress patients, given the sensitive
nature of the narrative discussion that happens in traumafocused psychotherapy (e.g., exposure interventions). In
this workshop, issues of ethics, privacy and security of such
technology will be discussed in regard to the treatment of
traumatic stress patients. Common vulnerabilities empirically
found with electronic privacy among mental health clinicians
will be detailed. HIPAA regulations related to electronic
security will be discussed. An introduction to the concept of
“encryption” and its application to traumatic stress practice
will be emphasized. I will also explain the relevance of social
psychological theory on protection motivation to explaining
the successful adoption of electronic security practices.
Discussion and details are offered on free, easy to use software
application solutions for securing patient communication and
records. Also discussed are such issues as using encrypted
wireless networks, secure email, encrypted messaging and
video conferencing, privacy on social networks, and others.
For non-technologically savvy users, this discussion will likely
be unfamiliar; though the information will be presented in very
basic, non-technical terms. Even for advanced, technologically
savvy users, a good deal of this information will likely be
unfamiliar and of interest.
www.istss.org
Pre-Meeting Institute
Wednesday, November 9
1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Dallas A2
PMI #7
Ethics for the International Trauma Specialists
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Global
Ethics-Global-Civil/War
Prof
M
Global
Elena Cherepanov, PhD
Cambridge College, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
An international trauma specialist provides services to
highly vulnerable and culturally diverse populations around
the world. The unprecedented scale of human suffering,
complexity of psychological needs and limited resources
create particular professional and personal challenges and
puts special demands on making independent, responsible
and ethical decisions in extraordinary and often unique
circumstances. Adherence to ethical principles sets standards
for practice, gives a sense of professional community
(Williams, 2012) and ensures a shared framework in every
humanitarian response. The international perspective offers
a guidance for the competent trauma care based on the
international humanitarian principles: humanity, neutrality,
impartiality, and independence (UNOCHA, 2012). In the
first part of the training, the participants will learn about
international humanitarian norms, universal humanitarian
values, and limits of humanitarian actions as they apply to the
trauma work and research. In the second part, participants
will use case scenarios to further explore the role and
responsibility of an international trauma specialist in the
setting with complex needs; moral, cultural and ethical
dilemmas; advocacy, media and communication; and ethically
questionable practices: rescue fantasy, imposing moral
judgments; fostering psychological dependence; misuse
of power, or ignoring survivors’ competency. The review of
the signs and consequences of the burnout in the field work
highlights the importance of self-awareness and self-care as
cornerstones of the professionalism and offers relevant coping
skills.
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Multi Media
Friday, November 11
4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Dallas A3
Multi Media
Getting the Word Out on Complex Trauma: Use of Multimedia Resources to Support
Education and Awareness for Youth and Families and Across Systems
Primary Keyword: Train/Ed/Dis
Secondary Keyword: Assess Dx-CPA-ComplexMedia
Population Type: Child/Adol
Presentation Level: I
Region: Industrialized
Kisiel, Cassandra, PhD1; Fehrenbach, Tracy, PhD1; Habib,
Mandy, PsyD2; Spinazzola, Joseph, PhD3
1
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine,
Chicago, Illinois, USA
2
Adelphi University, Garden City, New York, USA
3
Trauma Center at Justice Resource Institute, Brookline,
Massachusetts, USA
This workshop will feature innovative multimedia resources
on complex trauma for youth, caregivers, and providers
across service systems, developed in conjunction with the
National Child Traumatic Stress Network. We will highlight the
following educational resources: 1) a short film “Remembering
Trauma: Connecting the Dots between Complex Trauma and
Misdiagnosis in Youth” and 2) the Complex Trauma Resource
Guide for Youth. The development of an upcoming complex
www.istss.org
trauma video- made by youth and for youth- will also be
discussed. These products are all designed to: 1) enhance
understanding of the complex effects of trauma across
development, 2) reduce the potential for mislabeling or
misdiagnosing symptoms of complex trauma, and 3) enhance
public awareness and de-stigmatize trauma-related issues for
youth across systems (mental health, child welfare, juvenile
justice, schools). We will emphasize use and application of
these resources in real world settings. These products are a
response to feedback from youth and providers regarding
needs and gaps and designed to support professionals across
disciplines to use a “trauma lens” in their ongoing work.
Participants will be engaged in discussion of how to effectively
disseminate and utilize the resources in practice at both an
individual level with youth and families and at a systems level
for trauma education and advocacy.
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Pre-Meeting Institutes
Wednesday, November 9
Full-Day Institute
8:30 a.m. – Noon and 1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Dallas A1
Half-Day Institute
8:30 a.m. – Noon
Dallas A2
PMI #1
PMI #2
Behavioral Sleep Medicine Interventions
for Trauma-related Sleep Disturbances:
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia
and Exposure, Relaxation, and Rescripting
Therapy for Chronic Nightmares
Keeping Traumatic Stress Patients’
Electronic Data and Communication Private
and Secure: Ethical and Legal Issues, and
Applied Software Applications
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Train/Ed/Dis
Practice-Sleep-Train/Ed/Dis
Adult
I
Global
Kristi Pruiksma, PhD ; Rachel Micol, BS ; Daniel Taylor, PhD
University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, Fort
Hood, Texas, USA
2
The University of Tulsa, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA
3
University of North Texas, Denton, Texas, USA
1
2
3
1
Nightmares and sleep disturbances are commonly reported
following trauma and are considered the hallmark of
posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Historically, sleep
disturbances have been conceptualized as secondary
symptoms that will remit following PTSD treatment. However,
coalescing lines of research indicate sleep disturbances are
more than just PTSD symptoms, have likely become partially
independent, and may be maintaining and exacerbating PTSD.
Sleep disturbances may also remain following successful
treatment of PTSD and are uniquely related to suicidality,
depression, and substance use. There is strong evidence
supporting non-medication treatments for insomnia and
nightmares, yet many providers have not received adequate
training in the implementation of these interventions. Thus
the goals of this PMI are to (1) present the evidence base
for cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) and
Exposure, Relaxation, and Rescripting Therapy (ERRT) for
nightmares and (2) to provide step-by-step guidance on how
to implement these interventions in clinical practice. We will
achieve these goals by presenting case examples, providing
handouts to be used in clinical practice, video demonstrations
as well as audience exercises to further reinforce the utility of
these treatments.
www.istss.org
Tech
Practice-Ethics
N/A
I
Global
Jon Elhai, PhD
University of Toledo, Toledo, Ohio, USA
In recent years, mental health professionals have increasingly
incorporated information technology into patient care,
including use of smartphones, tablets and laptops for
electronic communication, psychological assessment,
homework assignment completion and record keeping.
Yet weaknesses exist in these technologies that can put
patient privacy at risk. This issue is especially salient when
working with traumatic stress patients, given the sensitive
nature of narrative discussion that happens in traumafocused psychotherapy (e.g., exposure interventions). In
this workshop, issues of ethics, privacy and security of such
technology will be discussed in regard to the treatment of
traumatic stress patients. Common vulnerabilities empirically
found with electronic privacy among mental health clinicians
will be detailed. HIPAA regulations related to electronic
security will be discussed. An introduction to the concept of
“encryption” and its application to traumatic stress practice
will be emphasized. I will also explain the relevance of
social psychological theory on protection motivation to
explaining successful adoption of electronic security practices.
Discussion and details are offered on free, easy to use software
application solutions for securing patient communication and
records. Also discussed are such issues as using encrypted
wireless networks, secure email, encrypted messaging and
videoconferencing, privacy on social networks, and others. For
non-technologically savvy users, this discussion will likely be
unfamiliar; though the information will be presented in very
basic, non-technical terms. Even for advanced, technologically
savvy users, a good deal of this information will likely be
unfamiliar and of interest.
Itinerary Builder
50
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Pre-Meeting Institutes
Wednesday, November 9
Half-Day Institute
8:30 a.m. – Noon
Dallas A3
PMI #3
Systematic Delivery of Exposure, Cognitive,
and Behavioral Treatments for PTSD with a
16-Week Manualized Group Protocol
Primary Keyword: Clin Res
Secondary Keyword: Practice-Cog/Int-Mil/
Vets-Gender
Population Type: Adult
Presentation Level: A
Region: Industrialized
Diane Castillo, PhD1; Janet C’de Baca, PhD2; Christine Chee,
PhD2; Heidi La Bash, PhD1
1
VA VISN 17 Center of Excellence for Research on Returning
War Veterans, Waco, Texas, USA
2
New Mexico VA Healthcare System, Albuquerque, New
Mexico, USA
This is a two-part advanced workshop for clinicians wishing
to use a group format to deliver exposure, cognitive, and
behavioral treatments for PTSD. The first hour will cover
the group literature, challenges to group treatment, and
results from a unique 3-member randomized controlled trial
with three treatment modules. The manualized 16-week
group treatment showed improvement in PTSD (24-point
decrease on the CAPS, p<.001, ES=1.72); on functioning (SF36: Mental: p<.001, ES=1.31; and Physical, p<.001, ES=1.08);
and in quality of life (QOLI: p<.001, ES=1.01) in a sample of
female OEF/OIF PTSD Veterans. Clinical improvement was
comparable to individual PE (Schnurr, et al., 2003), with 77%
showing a response to treatment and 52% loss of diagnosis.
PCL scores significantly improved for the Exposure (ES=1.42)
and Cognitive (ES=0.90) modules, with both superior to the
behavioral (Skills) module.
The second part of the workshop will be devoted to providing
direction on how to conduct the novel 3-member, 3-module
(Exposure, Cognitive, Skills) group treatment protocol.
Instruction will include a combination of didactics, instructor
demonstrations, and role play for attendees. Most unique to
the protocol is conducting imaginal exposure in a 3-member,
90-minute group, with weekly in-session imaginal exposure
for each group member. This protocol design addresses the
logistic problem of exposure therapy in group. Orientation
and Wrap up are conducted in sessions 1 and 16, respectively.
Exposure Module (5 sessions). The rationale, identification
of safety options, and index trauma are addressed in session
1. Guided imaginal exposure (Keane, et al., 1989; Foa, et al.,
2007) is conducted in sessions 2 through 5, with 30 minutes
www.istss.org
devoted to each member. Cognitive Module (5 sessions).
General cognitive restructuring is taught in session 1, with
cognitive distortions on 5 themes (safety, trust, power/
control, esteem/intimacy) from Cognitive Processing
Therapy (Resick & Schnicke, 1993) challenged in sessions
2-5. Skills Module (4 sessions). Behavioral strategies including
assertiveness training are implemented in sessions 1 and 2,
and videotaped assertiveness roleplay in sessions 3 and 4.
Relaxation techniques are reviewed and practiced in the last
30 minutes of each Skills session. Workshop participants will
receive a manual describing the group protocol, including
handouts for each treatment component. Participants will
be encouraged to: actively participate in roleplays as a group
facilitator; identify potential issues, and discuss components of
successful group treatment. The group protocol is a practical
and effective delivery option that systematically includes
exposure, cognitive, and behavioral components for PTSD
treatment.
Half-Day Institute
8:30 a.m. – Noon
Dallas D1
PMI #4
The Interpersonal Paradox of Trauma:
Principles and Practice of Treating Trauma
in Couple and Family Systems
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Practice
Fam/Int-Theory
Lifespan
M
Global
Briana Nelson Goff, PhD1; Lauren Oseland, MS, PhD Student1; Kami Schwerdtfeger Gallus, PhD, LMFT2; Laurel Kiser,
PhD MBA3; Rachel Dekel, PhD4
1
Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas, USA
2
Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Oklahoma, USA
3
University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore,
Maryland, USA
4
Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Ramat Gan, Israel
While the study of psychological trauma has traditionally
focused on the development of individual symptoms in the
person directly exposed to a traumatic event, research over
the past 20 years invites a more dynamic conceptualization
of the recursive relationship between trauma, interpersonal
relationships, and broader contextual factors that influence
the expression and duration of traumatic stress (e.g., Figley
& Kiser, 2013; Goff & Smith, 2005). Trauma exposure is a
multifaceted and complex experience that uniquely impacts
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Pre-Meeting Institutes
Wednesday, November 9
individual survivors, their loved ones, and the social systems in
which they live. In particular, there appears to be a basic, yet
important paradox involved within the interpersonal context
of trauma as trauma frequently erodes the strengths of and
has a negative impact on the very interpersonal relationships
that could promote recovery and posttraumatic growth
(Johnson, 2002). Due to the interpersonal nature of trauma,
traditional intervention and recovery-focused therapy on an
individual level may be inadequate. In Part 1 of this PMI, the
presenters will describe models of systemic trauma, based on
current theories, research, and clinical experience, including
Family Systems Theory, Ecological Systems Theory, and
Attachment Theory. Specifically, The Couple Adaptation to
Traumatic Stress Model (Goff & Smith, 2005; Oseland, Gallus,
& Nelson Goff, 2016) and the Family Adaptation to Trauma
Model (Figley & Kiser, 2013) will be reviewed. The presentation
will disseminate information regarding the presented models,
the primary issues faced by traumatized systems (i.e., couple,
family, and community), and methods to apply these models
to the empirical study of and clinical approaches with
traumatized systems. In Part 2 of this PMI, the presenters will
describe methods of engaging couple and family systems in
trauma-informed systemic treatment approaches. This session
will focus on practical skills for working systemically with
couple and family systems, recognizing critical ethical issues in
working with these groups, and addressing specific challenges
that may be unique to trauma-exposed relational systems.
Presenters have experience working in industrialized and
developing countries with couples, families and communities
coping with traumatic stress. Thus, the aim of this session is
to provide applicable knowledge for clinicians from diverse
backgrounds to bridge the gap between empirical and clinical
approaches to working with trauma survivors and their families.
www.istss.org
Half-Day Institute
8:30 a.m. – Noon
Dallas D2
PMI #5
Addressing Trauma and Grief in
Adolescence: New Models, Measures, and
Interventions
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Grief
Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Clin Res
Death-Dev/Int-Pub HealthChild/Adol
M
Global
William Saltzman, PhD(c)1; Christopher Layne, PhD2; Julie
Kaplow, PhD, ABPP3; Robert Pynoos, MD, MPH2; Erna
Olafson, PhD, PsyD4; Monique Marrow, PhD5
1
California State University, Long Beach, Long Beach,
California, USA
2
UCLA - National Center for Child Traumatic Stress, Los
Angeles, California, USA
3
University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, Texas, USA
4
University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
5
University of Kentucky Center for the Study of Violence
Against Children, Lexington, KY 40506, Kentucky, USA
Converging developments in basic and applied research
suggest that posttraumatic stress and grief reactions are
related yet different entities that call for different assessment
measures and intervention components. Further, trauma and
bereavement often co-occur, especially among adolescents—
an age group at highest risk for exposure to violent crime,
traumatic injury, and traumatic death. This PMI will cover
recent advances in the treatment of the effects of trauma and
bereavement in adolescence, including an evidence-based
intervention for traumatized and bereaved adolescents—
Trauma and Grief Component Therapy for Adolescents
(TGCT-A). TGCT-A is an assessment-driven, modularized
intervention that can be flexibly tailored according to the
exposure histories, needs, strengths, and life circumstances
of specific groups and individuals. We will begin with an
overview of the developmental tasks, capacities, and needs
of adolescents, and the window of opportunity offered by
adolescence for intervention. We will then discuss recent
advances in conceptualizing, assessing, and treating the
interplay between trauma and bereavement as viewed
through the lens of multidimensional grief theory. We will
then present findings from domestic and international open
field trials, qualitative studies, and a large-scale randomized
controlled field trial, which show consistent evidence of the
effectiveness of TGCT-A in reducing posttraumatic stress
and maladaptive grief reactions, and improving academic
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Pre-Meeting Institutes
Wednesday, November 9
performance, peer relationships, and pro-social behaviors.
We will then discuss how TGCT-A components, paired with
properly designed assessment measures, can be tailored to
provide universal (broad-spectrum), targeted (specialized), and
preventive (resilience-enhancing) services in school, juvenile
justice, and child welfare settings. We illustrate methods for
providing state-of-the-art treatment for posttraumatic stress
and grief reactions to vulnerable adolescents with complex
histories of trauma and loss in ways that abide by public health
principles—including identifying high-risk groups, stratifying
groups by exposure severity and type of need, and improving
access to services. Given its utility for juvenile justice, we will
review a recently published multi-year evaluation of TGCT-A
paired with trauma-informed staff training (Think Trauma)
at six residential facilities, which found significant pre-post
reductions in posttraumatic stress, depression and anger
symptoms, seclusions, and restraints. We will conclude with
demonstrations of ways to use TGCT-A’s modularized design
to customize intervention for either groups or individuals with
different assessment profiles, as well as discussion of next
steps in research and program dissemination.
trauma due to injury, illness, or medical procedures (4) the
continuum of trauma-informed interventions ranging from
single session, short-term (EBTs), and patient education, and
(5) how to provide linkage to community resources, including
outpatient behavioral health, shelter, legal resources.
Providers in primary care settings find themselves addressing
the needs of survivors of abuse, natural & manmade disasters,
traumatic grief & loss, medical trauma, and intimate partner
violence. Interventions need to recognize the common clinical
needs of survivors (e.g., coping with emotional & physical pain,
grief & loss, finding meaning following painful experiences,
and self-identity shifts from trauma victim to survivor) and
simultaneously be flexible enough to address trauma-specific
needs of survivors (e.g., avoidance issues, preparing for
anticipated trigger situations).
Half-Day Institute
8:30 a.m. – Noon
Dallas D3
Half Day Institute
1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Dallas A2
PMI #6
PMI #7
Trauma-informed Primary Care:
A Practical Approach
Ethics for the International Trauma
Specialists
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Practice
Health-Care
Lifespan
M
N/A
Jennifer Ayres, PhD1; Karen Sitterle, PhD2
University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA
2
University of Texas Southwestern, Dallas, Texas, USA
1
Patients who are reluctant to self-refer for psychotherapy are
often more receptive to receiving behavioral health services
integrated into medical care. Intervention with patients with
histories of recent or past trauma presenting for primary care
gives medical and mental health providers an opportunity to
address the neurobiological aspects of trauma in an integrated
fashion that fosters interdisciplinary collaboration. This premeeting institute (PMI) will address (1) the unique challenges
and benefits of intervening with trauma survivors in primary
care settings, (2) how to provide interdisciplinary trauma
training that addresses impact of traumatic life events on
patient health, (3) quick and efficient screening for trauma
history, intimate partner violence, traumatic grief & loss,
www.istss.org
This PMI will focus on how to overcome barriers and
limitations to providing trauma-informed care in primary care
settings (e.g., short appointment slots, busy schedules, lack
of resources for mental health services, limited financial and
transportation resources, and treatment adherence issues).
Case examples will be presented. Global
Ethics-Global-Civil/War
Prof
M
Global
Elena Cherepanov, PhD
Cambridge College, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
An international trauma specialist provides services to
highly vulnerable and culturally diverse populations around
the world. The unprecedented scale of human suffering,
complexity of psychological needs and limited resources
create particular professional and personal challenges and
puts special demands on making independent, responsible
and ethical decisions in extraordinary and often unique
circumstances. Adherence to ethical principles sets standards
for practice, gives a sense of professional community
(Williams, 2012) and ensures a shared framework in every
humanitarian response. The international perspective offers
a guidance for the competent trauma care based on the
international humanitarian principles: humanity, neutrality,
Itinerary Builder
53
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Pre-Meeting Institutes
Wednesday, November 9
impartiality, and independence (UNOCHA, 2012). In the
first part of the training, the participants will learn about
international humanitarian norms, universal humanitarian
values, and limits of humanitarian actions as they apply to the
trauma work and research. In the second part, participants
will use case scenarios to further explore the role and
responsibility of an international trauma specialist in the
setting with complex needs; moral, cultural and ethical
dilemmas; advocacy, media and communication; and ethically
questionable practices: rescue fantasy, imposing moral
judgments; fostering psychological dependence; misuse
of power, or ignoring survivors’ competency. The review of
the signs and consequences of the burnout in the field work
highlights the importance of self-awareness and self-care
as cornerstones of the professionalism, and offers relevant
coping skills.
Half Day Institute
1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Dallas D1
Half Day Institute
1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Dallas A3
PMI #9
PMI #8
Dropping the Trauma Account:
Intro into Cognitive Processing Therapy—
Cognitive Only
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Practice
Clin Res-Practice-Cog/Int
Adult
I
Industrialized
Katherine Dondanville, PsyD1; Patricia Resick, PhD, ABPP2
1
University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San
Antonio, Texas, USA
2
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA
CPT is an evidence-based cognitive therapy for PTSD and
comorbid symptoms that can be implemented without a
written account. For over a decade trainings in Cognitive
Processing Therapy (CPT) have exclusively taught CPT
including the trauma account as an assignment. Results
from a dismantling study (Resick et al., 2008) indicate the
trauma account is a non-essential element for symptom
change. CPT- Cognitive Only (CPT-C) was found to be equally
effective and more efficient than utilizing the traditional
model. Most importantly, eliminating the trauma account may
prevent patient drop-out. The purpose of this institute is to
provide attendees the basics of cognitive processing therapy
– cognitive only (CPT-C) and facilitate a discussion about
making the transition for those practicing CPT with the trauma
account. Clinicians may be more comfortable with providing
the version of CPT that does require writing and reading a
www.istss.org
trauma account or may have been in the habit of doing so and
are unsure of how to conduct the protocol without the written
narrative. CPT-C is a systematic approach to treating PTSD
in which participants are encouraged to feel their emotions
and learn to think about their traumatic events differently. The
institute includes a functional cognitive description of why
some people do not recover after traumatization. Following
a review of research on CPT-C, participants will receive an
overview of the 12-session therapy, with an emphasis on the
differences between CPT and CPT-C. The use of Socratic
Dialogue to facilitate emotional processing will be reviewed,
along with research regarding who may respond better to
treatment with or without a trauma narrative. Specific trauma
details will be discussed and presented in video-recorded
sessions. Role-play and consultation will be included.
Use of Expert Evidence on Counterintuitive
Victim Behavior in Sexual Assault
Prosecution
Primary Keyword: Secondary Keyword: Population Type: Presentation Level: Region: Train/Ed/Dis
DV-Rape-Social-Gender
Adult
I
Industrialized
Mindy Mechanic, PhD
California State University, Fullerton, Fullerton, California, USA
LED
E
C
The goal of the proposed
ANPMI is to provide trauma
professionals with C
education and training on the use of expert
testimony on counterintuitive victim behavior in sexual assault
prosecutions. Such training will provide trauma professionals
with valuable knowledge, enabling them to share their
knowledge with judges and juries. The term “counterintuitive
victim behavior” (CIVB) refers to behavioral, emotional, or
physical responses observed among, or reported by trauma/
crime victims that can be understood within the context
of that trauma/victimization, but which lay persons fail to
understand or misunderstand due to lack of information,
myths and stereotypes or other misconceptions held about
how ‘real’ victims behave or ought to behave. It includes
actions, behaviors, feelings, and other responses, in addition
to failures to respond in expected ways. Courts across the U.S.
have admitted CIVB testimony in the prosecution of sexual
assault. When lay persons fail to accurately understand the
reality of IPA/sexual assault, they apply their own incorrect
assumptions about how ‘real’ victims do or should behave,
Itinerary Builder
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Pre-Meeting Institutes
Wednesday, November 9
consequently judging victims as not credible and dismissing
their accounts as lacking veracity. Expert testimony on CIVB
can help to rebut prevailing myths and misunderstandings
about the nature of, and responses to sexual assault,
particularly non-stranger sexual assault, in contrast to the
prevailing ‘stranger danger’ mythology. Expert testimony can
be used to provide a framework or context, within which to
interpret a sexually assaulted woman’s behavior, helping to
make sense out of the unimaginable things that simply do not
make logical sense when viewed out of the unique context in
which they occurred. This is particularly true for acts that defy
lay expectations, e.g., compliance perpetrator demands, lack
of forceful resistance, and lack of affect post-assault. CIVB
evidence offers jurors a framework for fairly interpreting
and evaluating victim accounts without dismissing them as
disingenuous. In addition to myths and misunderstandings
about how victims respond to sexual assault or IPSA, many
aspects of trauma-related behavior are unfamiliar and
counterintuitive to them. Such topics include traumatic
memory; delayed reporting/disclosure; lack of effect when
recounting the assault; incomplete or inconsistent statements
to the police or other providers; continued contact with the
alleged offender, particularly in non-stranger sexual assault
cases; returning to life as usual following assault.
Half Day Institute
1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Dallas D2
PMI #10
Learning To Effectively Administer and Score
the Clinician-administered PTSD Scale for
DSM-5 (CAPS-5)
Primary Keyword: Assess/Dx
Secondary Keyword: Practice-Res Meth-Train/
Ed/Dis
Population Type: N/A
Presentation Level: M
Region: N/A
National Center for PTSD, the Clinician-Administered PTSD
Scale (CAPS; Blake et al., 1990) has become the most widely
used structured interview for PTSD (Bovin & Weathers, 2012).
In response to the significant revisions made to the PTSD
diagnosis for the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5; APA, 2013), the CAPS was
recently revised to reflect the new criteria. The goals for the
revision were to ensure correspondence with DSM-5, retain
distinctive features and maximize backward compatibility with
earlier versions of the CAPS, and streamline administration
and scoring (Weathers, 2014). Initial evaluation of the CAPS5 indicates that it maintains the excellent psychometric
properties of its predecessors (Weathers et al., in preparation).
Because the DSM-5 PTSD criteria constitute the current
official definition of PTSD and reflect an updated
conceptualization of the disorder, it is essential for clinicians
and investigators to begin using DSM-5-compatible measures
such as the CAPS-5 as soon as possible -- measures reflecting
DSM-IV criteria are now outdated. However, because of the
changes made to both the structure and the content of the
CAPS-5, careful training on the new version of the instrument
is required to ensure that the measure is administered and
scored accurately. Accordingly, the purpose of this premeeting institute is to provide attendees with an in-depth
examination of the CAPS-5 so they can begin to use it
effectively in their own clinics and laboratories. This important
and timely workshop will review the following topics:
(1) The history of the CAPS and the rationale for the new
format for the CAPS-5;
(2) The three versions of the CAPS-5 and when each can be
employed effectively;
(3) Guidelines for standard administration and scoring;
(4) Tips for effectively handling common challenges that occur
during CAPS-5 interviews.
In order to provide a “hands-on” training experience,
participants will watch a live mock CAPS-5 interview, score
each item in real time, and have the opportunity to ask
questions about the rationale behind administration and
scoring decisions.
Michelle Bovin, PhD1; Frank Weathers, PhD2
1
VA Boston Healthcare System, National Center for PTSD;
Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts,
USA
2
Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama, USA
Reliable and valid assessment of posttraumatic stress disorder
(PTSD) is essential for correctly identifying individuals with
this debilitating disorder. Structured diagnostic interviews
are considered the “gold standard” for assessing PTSD
symptoms and establishing PTSD diagnostic status (Bovin,
Marx, & Schnurr, 2015). Since its development in 1990 at the
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Pre-Meeting Institutes
Wednesday, November 9
Half Day Institute
1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Dallas D3
PMI #11
Working with PTSD in Refugees and
Asylum Seekers
Primary Keyword: Practice
Secondary Keyword: Cul Div-RefugeeTorture-Theory
Population Type: Adult
Presentation Level: M
Region: Industrialized
Kerry Young, PhD
Central and North West London NHS Foundation Trust,
London, England, United Kingdom
In this workshop, I will give participants a theoretical and
practical framework for the cognitive-behavioural assessment
and treatment of refugees and asylum seekers with PTSD,
using the aforementioned evidence base as a guide. Topics
covered will be:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Working with interpreters
Cultural modifications of trauma-focused therapy
What to consider at assessment
What theoretical framework to use for formulation
Treatment planning
How to do reliving and other evidence-based treatments
with people who have experienced multiple traumatic
events
Outcome research in this area The workshop will involve formal presentations, case
discussion, lots of video role-play of techniques and group
discussion.
Many countries across the world have seen a dramatic
increase in the number of people seeking asylum. Currently,
there are thought to be approximately 19 million official
refugees worldwide (UNHCR, 2016). While estimates vary, we
expect up to half of those seeking asylum to suffer from PTSD
(Bogic et al., 2012; Turner et al., 2001). Thus, there is a pressing
need for evidence-based interventions for treating PTSD in
this group.
There are well-established protocols for the effective
treatment of PTSD using trauma-focused therapies (e.g.
Ehlers et al. 2005; McLean and Foa, 2011; Resick et al., 2012).
However, there is relatively little information about how
to adapt these therapies for PTSD resulting from multiple
traumatic events in refugee populations. Currently, the
weight of what evidence there is points to the effectiveness of
Narrative Exposure Therapy (NET)(Schauer, Neuner & Elbert,
2005) in the treatment of multiply traumatized refugees and
asylum seekers (see Robjant and Fazel, 2010 for a review).
There has also been some work adapting Cognitive Processing
Therapy (CPT) (Kaysen et al., 2011; Bass et al., 2013) and
standard Imagery Re-scripting (ImRS) protocols in this
population (Arntz et al., 2013).
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Paper in a Day
Wednesday, November 9
8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. – Plus Pre- and Post-Meeting Assignments
Trinity 1
Paper in a Day grew out of a wish to foster collaborations between young researchers from around the world. Many of these
researchers will be future leaders in the domain of posttraumatic mental health and the field will benefit from their partnerships
and teamwork. Paper in a Day is designed to stimulate international connections and the exchange of ideas by working on a
tangible outcome: a brief paper or commentary for a peer-reviewed journal. This will be an intensive, productive and enjoyable
day. Previous editions have led to conference contributions, journal articles, and lasting contacts (see the recent article in
Traumatic Stress Points for more information). Because Paper in a Day will take place prior to the ISTSS annual meeting,
participants will have the opportunity to continue dialogue with colleagues during the conference.
Program
How to participate
After registration, participants will be assigned to a team. Each
team will choose a topic based on shared interests. Two weeks
prior to the workshop, participants will individually prepare
(e.g. read relevant articles, draft sections of the paper). The
workshop will include plenary discussions about the topic and
the drafted texts, and writing time in subgroups. Following the
workshop, the draft will be finalized for submission.
This event is aimed at early career academics who have
obtained their PhD after November 2011 or who are in the
final stages of submission. If you would like to participate,
please send an email to [email protected] by October 1,
2016 (first come, first serve) with the following information:
Commitment
In order to make the event a success, we ask participants to
commit to:
a) Prepare in advance of the meeting - dedicate eight hours
prior to the workshop.
1) A short CV listing your publications and main research
interests to inform our choice of topics. Please also let us
know if you have an idea for/access to data to complete a
relatively contained empirical paper, meta-analysis/review,
or commentary on a recent article.
2) A statement that you commit to the required preparation,
attendance and follow-up activities as described.
There is no registration fee for this PMI.
b) Be present for the entire workshop.
c) Contribute to the final editing and referencing following
the workshop.
ISTSS Special Interest Groups
Special Interest Groups (SIGs) provide members with a forum for communication and interaction about specific topics related
to traumatic stress. They provide a means of personal and professional involvement in the activities of the society. All meeting
participants are welcome to attend SIG meetings.
Thursday, November 10, 11:45 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Saturday, November 12, 11:45 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Complex Trauma SIG
Houston B
Aging, Trauma and the Life Course SIG
Dallas D2
Diversity and Cultural Competence SIG
Dallas D2
Dissemination and Implementation SIG
Dallas A1
Early Interventions SIG
Dallas A2
Dallas A2
Family Systems SIG
Dallas D1
Intergenerational transmission of Trauma
and Resilience SIG
Military SIG
Dallas A3
Trauma Assessment and Diagnosis SIG
Dallas D3
Gender and Trauma SIG
Houston C
Genomics and Trauma SIG
Dallas A1
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) SIG
Dallas D3
Psychodynamic Research and Practice SIG
Houston A
Terrorism and Bioterrorism Related Trauma SIG
Dallas B/C
Theory and Traumatic Stress Studies SIG
Dallas A3
Trauma and Substance Use Disorders SIG
San Antonio B
Traumatic Loss and Grief SIG
San Antonio A
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
SIG Endorsed Presentations
Aging, Trauma and the Life Course SIG
Thursday, November 10, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Symposium: New Directions in Assessing Trauma and Adversity across the
Lifespan: A Public Health Imperative
Thursday, November 10, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Paper Presentation: The Influence of Comorbid Depression on
Treatment Outcome among Older Male Combat Veterans with PTSD
Saturday, November 12, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Paper Presentation: Impact of Military Service on Longevity among
World War II American Veterans of Japanese Ancestry
Saturday, November 12, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Paper Presentation: Longitudinal Association of PTSD and Physical Function
in Military Veterans: Data from the Mind Your Heart Study
Complex Trauma
Thursday, November 10, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Symposium: Core Symptoms of ‘Classic’ PTSD and Complex PTSD –
and their Relation to DSM-5 PTSD
Saturday, November 12, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Symposium: The Social Self: Contributions of Disruptions in Emotion and
Physiology to Relational Processes in Trauma
Saturday, November 12, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Symposium: The Influence of Social Resources on Adjustment
Following Trauma
Early Intervention SIG
Thursday, November 10, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Symposium: Prediction of Posttraumatic Psychopathology in Recent Trauma
Survivors, Do We Need Biology?
Thursday, November 10, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Workshop: Early Interventions Following Terrorist Attacks:
From the Emergency Room to the Living Room
Saturday, November 12, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Symposium: Designing and Implementing Broad Reach Early Trauma
Focused Interventions for Public Health Dissemination
Gender and Trauma SIG
Thursday, November 10, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.Symposium: Sex Specificity in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: From Biological
Mechanisms to Treatment Response
Thursday, November 10, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.Symposium: The Effects of Stress and Sex Hormones on Mechanisms of
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Friday, November 11, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Symposium: Trauma, PTSD, and Women’s Reproductive Health
Genomics and Trauma SIG
Thursday, November 10, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.Symposium: Epigenetic Insights into Post-traumatic Stress Disorder: Novel
Results from Psychiatric Genomics Consortium Investigators
Friday, November 11, 8:30 a.m. – 9:50 a.m.Keynote Address: Epigenetic Regulation of Stress Genes and Their Role In
Stress-related Psychiatric Disorders: FKBP5 as an Example
Friday, November 11, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.Updates from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium for PTSD: GWAS, EWAS,
Expression, and Imaging
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender (LGBT) SIG
Friday, November 11, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.Symposium Part: Does PTSD Predict Marijuana Use? Event-level Relationships
between PTSD and Marijuana Use among Young Sexual Minority Women
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
SIG Endorsed Presentations
Military SIG
Thursday, November 10, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.Symposium: Examining the Impact of PTSD on Work, Family, and Other
Related Quality of Life Outcomes in Veterans of the Wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan
Thursday, November 10, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Treatment One Paper Session
Friday, November 11, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.Symposium: Factors Influencing Long-term Functional Recovery among
Warzone-Deployed Service Members
Trauma and Substance Use Disorders SIG
Thursday, November 10, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Symposium Part: Treatment of PTSD and Comorbid Addiction with
N-acetylcysteine
Friday, November 11, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Symposium Part: A Randomized Clinical Trial of Sequential Versus Integrated
Treatment for Veterans with Co-Occurring PTSD and Substance
Use Disorders
Friday, November 11, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Symposium Part: Chronic Cannabis Use is Associated with
Impaired Fear Extinction in Humans
Trauma Assessment and Diagnosis SIG
Thursday, November 10, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Symposium Part: Advanced Computational Methods Improve the
Prediction of Post-traumatic Psychopathology in Acutely Traumatized Adults
Friday, November 11, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Symposium Part: An Overview of Complex PTSD in ICD-11:
Measurement and Evidence
Friday, November 11, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Paper presentation: Network Models of DSM-5 Posttraumatic Stress Disorder:
Implications for ICD-11
Traumatic Loss and Grief SIG
Wednesday, November 9, 8:30 a.m. – Noon
PMI #5 Addressing Trauma and Grief in Adolescence:
New Models, Measures, and Interventions
Thursday, November 10, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Symposium: ICD-11 Symposium I: An update of the development of
the ICD-11 classification of disorders specifically associated with stress
Thursday, November 10, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Symposium: Sudden and Violent Deaths: Implications for
Improved Public Health Response
Friday, November 11, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Symposium: Youth Positive Adaptation in the Aftermath of Trauma and Loss:
Implications for Intervention and Public Policy
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting Award Winners
The ISTSS Awards will be presented at the start of each morning’s Keynote Session
Thursday, November 10
Frank W. Putnam Trauma Research Scholar Grants
Lifetime Achievement Award
Ulrich Schnyder, MD
University Hospital Zurich, Switzerland
Friday, November 11
Chaim and Bela Danieli Young Professional Award
Brian Hall, PhD
University of Macau, Macau
Robert S. Laufer Award for Outstanding Scientific Achievement
Sandro Galea, MD, DrPH
Boston University School of Public Health, USA
Public Advocacy Award
Diane Elmore, PhD, MPH
UCLA-Duke University National Center for Child Traumatic Stress, USA
Saturday, November 12
Frank Ochberg Award for Media and Trauma Study
Klas Backholm, DSc
Abo Academy University, Finland
Dart Awards for Excellence in Coverage of Trauma
ISTSS Student Poster Awards
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Guides to Information in Schedule
Keyword Type Descriptions
Primary Keywords
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Assessment/Diagnosis (Assess Dx)
Biological/Medical (Bio Med)
Clinical/Intervention Research (Clin Res)
Clinical Practice (Practice)
Community-Based Programs (Commun)
Culture/Diversity (Cul Div)
Ethics (Ethics)
Global Issues (Global)
Journalism and Trauma (Journalism)
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Multi-Media (Media)
Prevention/Early Intervention (Prevent)
Public Health (Pub Health)
Research Methodology (Res Meth)
Social Issues – Public Policy (Social)
Technology (Tech)
Training/Education/Dissemination (Train/Ed/Dis)
Vicarious Traumatization and Therapist Self-Care
(Self-Care)
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Illness/Medical Conditions (Illness)
Intergenerational Trauma (Intergen)
Journalism and Trauma (Journalism)
Multi-Media (Media)
Natural Disaster (Nat/Dis)
Neglect (Neglect)
(Neuro)Biological Processes/Interventions (Bio/Int)
Neuro Imaging (Neuro)
Prevention/Early Intervention (Prevent)
Primary Care (Care)
Psychodynamic Research (Psych)
Public Health (Pub Health)
Quality of Life (QoL)
Rape/Sexual assault (Rape)
Refugee/Displacement Experiences (Refugee)
Research Methodology (Res Meth)
Sexual Orientation and Trauma (Orient)
Sleep (Sleep)
Social Issues – Public Policy (Social)
Substance Use/Abuse (Sub/Abuse)
Survivors/Descendants of Historical Trauma (Surv/Hist)
Technical Disaster (Tech/Dis)
Technology (Tech)
Terrorism (Terror)
Theory (Theory)
Torture (Torture)
Training/Education/Dissemination (Train/Ed/Dis)
Traumatic Grief (Grief )
Vicarious Traumatization and Therapist Self-Care
(Self-Care)
War – Civilians in War (Civil/War)
War – Military/Peacekeepers/Veterans (Mil/Vets)
Secondary Keywords
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Accident/Injury (Acc/Inj)
Acute/Single Trauma (Acute)
Affective Processes/Interventions (Affect/Int)
Aggression/Aggressive Behavior (Aggress)
Aging/Lifecourse (Aging)
Anxiety (Anx)
Assessment/Diagnosis (Assess Dx)
Biological/Medical (Bio Med)
Child Physical Abuse/Maltreatment (CPA)
Child Sexual Abuse (CSA)
Chronic/Repeated Trauma (Chronic)
Clinical/Intervention Research (Clin Res)
Clinical Practice (Practice)
Cognitive Processes/Interventions (Cog/Int)
Community-Based Programs (Commun)
Community/Social Processes/Interventions (Comm/Int)
Community Violence (Comm/Vio)
Complex Trauma (Complex)
Culture/Diversity (Cul Div)
Death/Bereavement (Death)
Depression (Depr)
Developmental Processes/Interventions (Dev/Int)
Domestic Violence (DV)
(Epi)Genetic Processes/Interventions (Gen/Int)
Ethics (Ethics)
Ethnicity (Ethnic)
Family Relationship Processes/Interventions (Fam/Int)
Gender and Trauma (Gender)
Genetics/Epigenetics (Genetic)
Global Issues (Global)
Health Impact of Trauma (Health)
Human Rights (Rights)
www.istss.org
•
•
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Guides to Information in Schedule
Regions
• Central and Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of
Independent States (C & E Europe & Indep)
• Eastern and Southern Africa (E & S Africa)
• East Asia and the Pacific (E Asia & Pac)
• Industrialized Countries (Industrialized)
• Latin America and the Caribbean (Latin Amer & Carib)
• Middle East and North Africa (M East & N Africa)
• South Asia (S Asia)
• West and Central Africa (W & C Africa)
Population Types
• Child/Adolescent (Child/Adol)
• Adult (Adult)
• Older People/Aging (Older)
• Both Adult and Child/Adolescent (Lifespan)
• Mental-Health Professionals (Prof)
• Other Professionals (Other)
Presentation Level
All presentations designate the knowledge/skill level required of the participant as either: Introductory (I), Intermediate (M)
or Advanced (A). These are used as a general guide only since attendees have very diverse educational and professional
backgrounds.
Introductory (I): Presentations
that all participants (including
undergraduate students) with any
appropriate background will be able to
fully comprehend and/or appreciate.
Presentations will discuss concepts that
are considered basic skills/knowledge
for those working in the field.
Intermediate (M): Presentations
that participants may more fully
comprehend/appreciate if they have at
least some work experience in the topic
to be discussed.
Advanced (A): Presentations consisting
of concepts requiring a high-level of
previous educational background, or
work experience, in the particular area/
topic to be discussed as well as being
most geared for specialists and those in
advanced stages of their career.
Presentation Type Descriptions*
● Case Study Presentation
● Poster Presentation
Sessions use material from a single or a set of cases to
illustrate clinical, theoretical or policy issues. These sessions
may involve the audience in discussion of the case material
presented.
Individual presentation in a poster format on a topic related
to traumatic stress, typically including the presentation of
research data.
● Media Presentation
Institutes are full- or half-day sessions that provide an
opportunity for intensive training on topics integral to the
conference program, presented by leaders in the field.
Session involving presentation of a segment of film, video,
music, drama, literature, artwork or other form of media
relevant to traumatic stress, along with discussion.
● Oral Paper Presentation
Individual presentations of no more than 15 minutes on a topic
related to traumatic stress, typically including the presentation
of research data.
● Panel Presentation
Sessions that include three to four participants discussing a
common theme, issue or question. Panels may include short
statements during which panelists outline diverse or similar
approaches to the same question. Panels are typically more
interactive than symposia, involving active discussion among
the panelists.
www.istss.org
● Pre-Meeting Institute (PMI)
● Symposium
Session that includes a group of three to four sequential
presentations, each related to the overall theme of the
symposium.
● Workshop Presentation
Instructional session that helps increase participants’
understanding and skill in a particular area of interest. Such
sessions may include active involvement of the audience.
* Presentation types are color-coded throughout the schedule.
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Tuesday, November 8
4:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Location
Registration Desk Open
Grand Hall
Wednesday, November 9
7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m.
Coffee and Tea Service
Grand Hall
7:30 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Registration Desk Open
Grand Hall
1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Bookstore Open
Grand Hall
Wednesday, November 9, 8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
PMI 1
Dallas A1
Behavioral Sleep Medicine Interventions for Trauma-related Sleep Disturbances: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia and
Exposure, Relaxation, and Rescripting Therapy for Chronic Nightmares
Presentation
Level
I
(Pruiksma, Kristi, PhD; Micol, Rachel, BS; Taylor, Daniel, PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Practice, Sleep, Train/Ed/Dis, Adult, Global)
Wednesday, November 9, 8:30 a.m. – Noon
PMI 2
Dallas A2
Keeping Traumatic Stress Patients’ Electronic Data and Communication Private and Secure: Ethical and Legal Issues, and Applied
Software Applications
I
(Elhai, Jon, PhD)
(Tech, Practice, Ethics, N/A, Global)
PMI 3
Dallas A3
Systematic Delivery of Exposure, Cognitive, and Behavioral Treatments for PTSD with a 16-Week Manualized Group Protocol
(Castillo, Diane, PhD; C’de Baca, Janet, PhD; Chee, Christine, PhD; La Bash, Heidi, PhD)
A
(Clin Res, Practice, Cog/Int, Mil/Vets, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
PMI 4
Dallas D1
The Interpersonal Paradox of Trauma: Principles and Practice of Treating Trauma in Couple and Family Systems
(Nelson Goff, Briana, PhD; Oseland, Lauren, MS, PhD Student; Schwerdtfeger Gallus, Kami, PhD, LMFT; Kiser, Laurel, PhD MBA; Dekel,
Rachel, PhD)
M
(Practice, Fam/Int, Theory, Lifespan, Global)
PMI 5
Dallas D2
Addressing Trauma and Grief in Adolescence: New Models, Measures, and Interventions
(Saltzman, William, PhD(c); Layne, Christopher, PhD; Kaplow, Julie, PhD, ABPP; Pynoos, Robert, MD MPH; Olafson, Erna, PhD, PsyD;
Marrow, Monique, PhD)
M
(Clin Res, Death, Dev/Int, Pub Health, Grief, Child/Adol, Global)
PMI 6
Dallas D3
Trauma-informed Primary Care: A Practical Approach
(Ayres, Jennifer, PhD; Sitterle, Karen, PhD)
M
(Practice, Health, Care, Lifespan, N/A)
Noon – 1:30 p.m.
www.istss.org
Lunch on your Own
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
63
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Wednesday, November 9, 1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
PMI 7
Dallas A2
Presentation
Level
Ethics for the International Trauma Specialists
(Cherepanov, Elena, PhD)
M
(Global, Ethics, Global, Civil/War, Prof, Global)
PMI 8
Dallas A3
Dropping the Trauma Account: Intro into Cognitive Processing Therapy-cognitive Only
(Dondanville, Katherine, PsyD; Resick, Patricia, PhD, ABPP)
I
(Practice, Clin Res, Practice, Cog/Int, Adult, Industrialized)
PMI 9
Dallas D1
Use of Expert Evidence on Counterintuitive Victim Behavior in Sexual Assault Prosecution
(Mechanic, Mindy, PhD) CANCELED
I
(Train/Ed/Dis, DV, Rape, Social, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
PMI 10
Dallas D2
Learning To Effectively Administer and Score the Clinician-administered PTSD Scale for DSM-5 (CAPS-5)
(Bovin, Michelle, PhD; Weathers, Frank, PhD)
M
(Assess Dx, Practice, Res Meth, Train/Ed/Dis, N/A, N/A)
PMI 11
Dallas D3
Working with PTSD in Refugees and Asylum Seekers
(Young, Kerry, PhD)
M
(Practice, Cul Div, Refugee, Torture, Theory, Adult, Industrialized)
5:15 – 6:15 p.m. Dallas D3
Student Attendee Orientation
6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Keynote Panel
Dallas B/C
Responding to Terror Attacks: What are the Right Ways to Act?
Moderator: Grete Dyb, MD, PhD
(Dyb, Grete, MD, PhD, Shapiro, Bruce, Brewin, Chris, PhD, Svendsen, Tuva, Pirard, Philippe, Brymer, Melissa, PhD, PsyD,
Pynoos, Robert, MD, MPH)
M
(Prevent, Acute, Journalism, Pub Health, Terror, Lifespan, Global)
Thursday, November 10
7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m.
Coffee and Tea Service
Grand Hall
7:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Registration Desk Open
Grand Hall
7:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Exhibits Open
Grand Hall
7:30 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Bookstore Open
Grand Hall
8:30 a.m. – 8:50 a.m.
ISTSS Award Presentations
Dallas B/C
8:50 a.m. – 9:50 a.m.
Keynote Address
Dallas B/C
The Epidemiology of Trauma and PTSD
(Kessler, Ronald, PhD)
www.istss.org
A
(Pub Health, Chronic, Complex, Global, Prevent, Adult, Global)
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
64
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session One
Invited
Symposium
Dallas B/C
How Novel Technology may Support a Public Health Approach to Trauma and Its Consequences around the World
Chair (Olff, Miranda, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Scaling Up: Using Web and Phone Technologies to Assist Trauma Survivors
(Ruzek, Josef, PhD)
(Global, Global, Pub Health, Tech, Lifespan, Global)
Reaching Populations in Need: A Protocol for Developing an eMental Health Intervention for Migrant Workers
(Hall, Brian, PhD)
(Global, Global, Pub Health, Tech, Lifespan, Global)
Using Hope Stories to Facilitate Resilience: A Public Health Approach
(Ho, Samuel, PhD, PsyD; Zhang, Eugene, PhD)
(Global, Global, Pub Health, Lifespan, Global)
Addressing the Population-level Burden of Child Trauma: The Promise and Challenge of eHealth Tools
(Kassam-Adams, Nancy, PhD)
(Global, Global, Pub Health, Tech, Lifespan, Global)
Invited
Symposium
Houston C
Gun Violence and Its Impact on Society
Co-Chairs (Kenardy, Justin, PhD; Greene, Carolyn, PhD)
Discussant (Shultz, James, PhD)
M
Community Responses to the 2011 Attack in Norway: Psychological Proximity, Emotional Responses, Trust in Government and Attitudes
towards Safety Measures
(Thoresen, Siri, PhD; Hjemdal, Ole Kristian, MA)
(Pub Health, Cul/Div, Health, Terror, Adult, Industrialized)
At the Intersection of Developmental Trauma and Historical Trauma: Addressing the Effects of Gun Violence in Chicago's Youth
(Stolbach, Bradley C., PhD: Reese, Carol S., MDiv, LCSW; Joseph, Kimberly, MD)
(Pub Health, Acc/Inj, Chronic, Comm/Vio, Surv/Hist, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Predictors of Adjustment following Gun Violence: Lessons Learned from a Study of Victims of the Virginia Tech Campus Shooting
(Littleton, Heather, PhD)
(Clin Res, Comm/Vio, Social, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
65
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session One
Symposium
Dallas A1
How does Media Coverage of Traumatic Events Impact the Populace and Those Who Report It? Evidence from Survey and
Experimental Research
Chair (Garfin, Dana Rose, PhD)
Discussant (Galea, Sandro, MD, DrPH)
Presentation
Level
M
Hours vs. Images: Understanding how Media-based Collective Trauma Exposure is Linked to Psychological Well-being
(Holman, E. Alison, PhD; Garfin, Dana Rose, PhD; Cohen Silver, Roxane, PhD)
(Pub Health, Terror, Adult, Industrialized)
Media Exposure to the Ebola Public Health Crisis and Implications for Public Health in an Industrialized Nation
(Garfin, Dana Rose, PhD; Holman, E. Alison, PhD; Fischhoff, Baruch, PhD; Wong-Parodi, Gabrielle, PhD; Cohen Silver, Roxane, PhD)
(Pub Health, Health, Adult, Industrialized)
Intrusive Memories Following Film Footage with Traumatic Content: Insights from Experimental Psychopathology
(Holmes, Emily, PhD; James, Ella, PhD)
(Prevent, Cog/Int, Prevent, Pub Health, Res Meth, Adult, N/A)
Posttraumatic Stress among Photojournalists: An Occupational Hazard of Repeated Exposure to Trauma
(Redmond, Sarah, Doctoral Student; Cohen Silver, Roxane, PhD; Lubens, Pauline, PhD Candidate)
(Journalism, Civil/War, Adult, N/A)
Symposium
Dallas A2
New Computational Methods for PTSD Research
Chair (Saxe, Glenn, MD)
Discussant (Marmar, Charles, MD)
I
Risk Factors for PTSD in Children: New Computational Methods
(Saxe, Glenn, MD)
(Res Meth, Acc/Inj, Bio Med, Genetic, Child/Adol, N/A)
Identification of High Dimensional Genetic & Phenotypic Interactions that Regulate the Emergence of Posttraumatic Stress & Resilience
following Life Threat in a Prospective Cohort of Police Officers
(Galatzer-Levy, Isaac, PhD; Marmar, Charles, MD)
(Bio Med, Acute, Chronic, Sleep, Genetic, Adult, Industrialized)
Advanced Computational Methods Improve the Prediction of Post-traumatic Psychopathology in Acutely Traumatized Adults.
(Shalev, Arieh, MD; Galatzer-Levy, Isaac, PhD; Qi, Wei, MD; Gevonden, Martin, PhD; Marmar, Charles, MD)
(Assess Dx, Acute, Assess Dx, Bio Med, Prevent, Adult, Global)
Brain Entropy as a Substrate of Psychological States in Trauma Victims
(Calderone, Daniel, PhD)
(Bio Med, Res Meth, Neuro, Theory, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
66
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session One
Symposium
Dallas A3
A Multi-method Evaluation of Current Initiatives for Trauma-exposed Children and Youth
Chair (Romano, Elisa, PhD, Cpsych)
Presentation
Level
M
Meta-analysis of Interventions for Children Exposed to Intimate Partner Violence
(Saini, Michael, PhD; Romano, Elisa, PhD, Cpsych; Bell, Tessa, Doctoral Student)
(Clin Res, DV, Res Meth, Lifespan, N/A)
Permanency and Safety among Children in Foster Family and Kinship Care: A Scoping Review
(Bell, Tessa, Doctoral Student; Romano, Elisa, PhD, Cpsych)
(Clin Res, CPA, Prevent, Res Meth, Child/Adol, N/A)
How Useful is a Community-based Partnership Model to Support Educational Outcomes for Foster Care Youth?
(Weegar, Kelly, PhD Candidate; Fall, Mariama, PhD Candidate; Hickey, Andrea, PhD Candidate; Shewchuk, Samantha, PhD Candidate; Flynn,
Robert, PhD)
(Commun, CPA, Comm/Int, Prevent, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Understanding Outcomes of the SafeCare® Program for Child Welfare-involved Families: A Focus on Provider and Parent Assessments
(Romano, Elisa, PhD, Cpsych; Gallitto, Elena, PhD Student; Czechowski, Karina, BA (Hons))
(Prevent, Clin Res, Neglect, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Symposium
Dallas D1
Sex Specificity in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: From Biological Mechanisms to Treatment Response
Chair (Felmingham, Kim, PhD)
Discussant (Jovanovic, Tanja, PhD)
I
Prospective Study of Sex Differences in the Development of PTSD: Why Women are at Higher Risk
(Michopoulos, Vasiliki, PhD, MSc; Rothbaum, Barbara, PhD, ABPP; Ressler, Kerry, MD PhD; Jovanovic, Tanja, PhD)
(Prevent, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Sex Differences in the Reinstatement of Fear: High Estradiol as a Protective Factor
(Felmingham, Kim, PhD; Zuj, Daniel, PhD Candidate; Nicholson, Emma, BSc Hons Psychology; Chia Ming Hsu, Ken, MPsych)
(Bio Med, Bio Med, Bio/Int, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Gender Difference in Outcomes following Trauma-focused Interventions for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder:
Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
(Wade, Darryl, PhD; Varker, Tracey, PhD; Kartal, Dzenana, PhD Candidate; Hetrick, Sarah, PhD; O’Donnell, Meaghan, PhD; Forbes, David, PhD)
(Clin Res, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Sex Differences in the Enzyme Site at which GABAergic Neuroactive Steroid Synthesis is Blocked in PTSD:
Implications for Targeting of PTSD Therapeutics
(Rasmusson, Ann, MD; King, Matthew, PhD; Gregor, Kristin, PhD; Scioli-Salter, Erica, PhD; Pineles, Suzanne, PhD; Valovski, Ivan, MD; Hamouda,
Mohamed, MD; Pinna, Graziano, PhD)
(Bio Med, Bio Med, Depr, Bio/Int, Gender, Adult, N/A)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
67
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session One
Symposium
Dallas D2
Implementing and Evaluating Exposure-based Group Treatments with Trauma Survivors
Chair (Karlsson, Marie, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Follow-up Data from a Brief Exposure-based Group Treatment with Incarcerated Women
(Karlsson, Marie, PhD; Zielinski, Melissa, MA PhD Student; Calvert, Maegan, MS, PhD Student; Bridges, Ana, PhD)
(Clin Res, Rape, Adult, Industrialized)
Practical Considerations in Adapting Evidence-based Trauma Treatment for Incarcerated Women
(Zielinski, Melissa, MA, PhD Student; Karlsson, Marie, PhD; Bridges, Ana, PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Rape, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Group-Delivered Exposure Therapy: Empirical Support for from Two Studies on Female Veterans with PTSD
(Castillo, Diane, PhD; C’de Baca, Janet, PhD; La Bash, Heidi, PhD)
(Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
A Model for Group-delivered Exposure Therapy
(C’de Baca, Janet, PhD)
(Clin Res, Complex, Adult, N/A)
Symposium
Dallas D3
ICD-11 Symposium I: An Update of the Development of the ICD-11 Classification of Disorders Specifically Associated with Stress
Chair (Maercker, Andreas, PhD, MD)
M
Ecological Implementation Studies for ICD-11 Disorders Specifically Associated with Stress: A Preview
(Keeley, Jared, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Practice, Cul Div, Global, Res Meth, Lifespan, Global)
An Overview of the Emerging Evidence on PTSD in ICD-11
(Brewin, Chris, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Practice, Pub Health, Adult, Industrialized)
An Overview of Complex PTSD in ICD-11: Measurement and Evidence
(Cloitre, Marylene, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Chronic, Complex, Global, Social, Adult, N/A)
Investigating the ICD-11 Formulations for Prolonged Grief Disorder and Adjustment Disorder
(Maercker, Andreas, PhD, MD)
(Assess Dx, Pub Health, Adult, Global)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
68
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session One
Symposium
San Antonio B
Strengthening at the Roots: Violence Prevention and Mental Health Intervention in the Context of Ongoing Political Conflict
Chair (D’Andrea, Wendy, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Fostering Healing in Communities Where Everyone Hurts
(Bergholz, Lou, BS)
(Commun, Chronic, Commun, Comm/Vio, Civil/War, Child/Adol, M East & N Africa)
Why They Fight: Evidence from the Field
(Sheikh, Hammad, PhD)
(Social, Terror, Mil/Vets, Lifespan, Global)
Eye to the Future: Reducing Aggression and Stress and Building Resilience Using a Community Psychosocial Approach with
Children Living in Gaza
(D’Andrea, Wendy, PhD; Bergholz, Lou, BS; Freed, Steven, MA, PhD Student; Aboagye, Adjoa, PhD)
(CulDiv, Aggress, Complex, Civil/War, Child/Adol, M East & N Africa)
Symposium
Houston A
Public Health and Individual Impact of Different Screening Procedures to Assess Risk for PTSD following Traumatic Injury
Chair (deRoon-Cassini, Terri, PhD)
Discussant (O'Donnell, Meaghan, PhD)
I
Effective Strategies for Predicting Prospective Risk for PTSD Symptom Development in the Aftermath of Trauma
(Rothbaum, Barbara, PhD, ABPP; Michopoulos, Vasiliki, PhD, MSc; Post, Loren, PhD; Fiorillo, Devika, PhD; Roffman, Rebecca, MA; Rothbaum,
Alex, BS; Maples, Jessica, MS (PhD Student); Jovanovic, Tanja, PhD; Ressler, Kerry, MD PhD)
(Assess Dx, Acc/Inj, Prevent, Adult, N/A)
Enhancing the Population Impact of PTSD and Comorbidity Screening
(Zatzick, Douglas, MD; Ingraham, Leah, BS; Guiney, Roxanne, BA; Colosi, Patricia L., BS, BA; Darnell, Doyanne, PhD; Kompar, Christopher, BS;
Sandgren, Kirsten, MSW; Love, Jeff, BA; Wang, Jin, PhD; Russo, Joan, PhD)
(Clin Res, Acute, Assess Dx, Prevent, Pub Health, Adult, Industrialized)
PTSD and Depression Screening with an In-person 9-Item Measure for Hospitalized Trauma Survivors
(deRoon-Cassini, Terri, PhD; Hunt, Josh, PhD; Warren, Ann Marie, PhD)
(Prevent, Acc/Inj, Acute, Assess Dx, Adult, Industrialized)
Use of Brief Screening Tools for Psychological Assessment Following Physical Injury: Strategies for Implementation During Acute Care
(Warren, Ann Marie, PhD)
(Clin Res, Acc/Inj, Assess Dx, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
69
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session One
Symposium
Houston B
Emerging Network for Post-disaster Psychosocial Support in Asia
Chair (Kim, Yoshiharu, MD, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Trauma and/or Embitterment of the Bereaved Parents of Adolescent Victims by Sewol Ferry Disaster
(Chae, Jeong-Ho, MD, PhD; Huh, Hyu Jung, MD; Huh, Seung, MD)
(Assess Dx, Acc/Inj, Death, Tech/Dis, Grief, Adult, E Asia & Pac)
Fukushima, Mental Health and Suicide
(Maeda, Masaharu, MD, PhD; Oe, Misari, MD PhD; Bromet, Evelyn, PhD; Yasumura, Seiji, MD PhD; Ohto, Hitoshi, MD, PhD)
(Pub Health, Acc/Inj, Assess Dx, Health, Tech/Dis, Lifespan, Industrialized)
How We Can Strengthen Traumatic Stress Studies in Asia
(Tsutsumi, Atsuro, PhD; Izustu, Takashi, PhD; Kim, Yoshiharu, MD, PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Nat/Dis, Health Professionals, S Asia)
Trauma and Panic Response Facing MERS (Middle East Respiratory Syndrome) in Korea
(Lee, So Hee, MD, PhD)
(Prevent, Acute, Anx, Pub Health, Tech/Dis, Adult, Global)
Panel
Presentation
San Antonio A
The Concept and Role of the Therapeutic Relationship Across Trauma Therapies:
A Conversation Among PE, CPT, EMDR, and Body Therapy Experts
Discussant (Kudler, Harold, MD)
(Kudler, Harold, MD; Frankfurt, Sheila, PhD; Resick, Patricia, PhD, ABPP; van der Kolk, Bessel, MD; Rauch, Sheila, PhD, ABPP; Rouanzoin,
Curtis, PhD)
M
(Practice, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Train/Ed/Dis, Psych, N/A, N/A)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
70
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10
Location
10:30 a.m.– 5:30 p.m.
Poster Viewing Session One
11:30 a.m. – 1:15 p.m.
Lunch on your Own
11:45 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
SIG Meetings
Grand Hall
Complex Trauma
Houston B
Diversity and Cultural Competence SIG
Dallas D2
Early Interventions SIG
Dallas A2
Family Systems SIG
Dallas D1
Gender and Trauma SIG
Houston C
Genomics and Trauma SIG
Dallas A1
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) SIG
Dallas D3
Psychodynamic Research and Practice SIG
Houston A
Terrorism and Bioterrorism Related Trauma SIG
Dallas B/C
Theory & Traumatic Stress Studies SIG
Dallas A3
Trauma and Substance Use Disorders SIG
San Antonio B
Traumatic Loss and Grief SIG
San Antonio A
Thursday, November 10, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Two
Invited
Panel
Dallas B/C
The Refugee Situation in the World: a Humanitarian Emergency
Discussant (Michael, Tanja, PhD)
(Michael, Tanja, PhD; Essali, Adib, MD; Young, Kerry, PhD; Lindert, Jutta, PhD, MPH, MA; Liddell, Belinda, PhD; van Ommeren, Mark, PhD)
Presentation
Level
I
(Global, Health, Refugee, Social, Civil/War, N/A, Global)
Invited Panel
San Antonio B
Trauma-informed Policing with Communities of Color—Learning from the Dallas Experience
Moderator: Williams, Amy, PhD
Williams, Amy, PhD; Foreman, Michael, MD; Galovski, Tara, PhD; Pennie, Sargeant Demetrick, MA; Richardson-Rowe, Brenda, PhD,
LPC-S; Warren, Ann Marie, PhD, ABBP-Rp
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
I
71
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Two
Symposium
Dallas A1
Sudden and Violent Deaths: Implications for Improved Public Health Response
Co-chairs (Cozza, Stephen, MD; Shear, M Katherine, MD)
Presentation
Level
M
Military Family Members Bereaved by Sudden and Violent Death: Differentiating Grief-, Depression- and Trauma-related Symptom Clusters
(Cozza, Stephen, MD; Fisher, Joscelyn, PhD; Zhou, Jing, MS; Fullerton, Carol, PhD; Ursano, Robert, MD)
(Pub Health, Death, Pub Health, Grief, Civil/War, Adult, Industrialized)
Terrorism-Related Grief Reactions Fifteen Years After 9-11: Public Health Implications
(Fisher, Joscelyn, PhD; Fetchet, Mary, LCSW; Zhou, Jing, MS; Dinh, Hieu, BS; Cozza, Stephen, MD)
(Assess Dx, Death, Terror, Grief, Adult, Industrialized)
Performance of DSM-5 Criteria for Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder
(Mauro, Christine, PhD; Shear, M Katherine, MD; Cozza, Stephen, MD; Reynolds, Charles, MD; Simon, Naomi, MD; Zisook, Sidney, MD;
Skritskaya, Natalia, PhD; Wang, Yuanjia, PhD; Lebowitz, Barry, PhD; Duan, Naihua, PhD; Gribbin, Colleen, MA; Fisher, Joscelyn, PhD; Zhou, Jing,
MS; Ortiz, Claudio, PhD; Fullerton, Carol, PhD; Ursano, Robert, MD; Wall, Melanie, PhD; Ghesquiere, Angela, PhD MSW; First, Michael, MD;
Glickman, Kim, PhD)
(Res Meth, Assess Dx, Clin Res, Death, Adult, N/A)
Response to Complicated Grief Treatment in Violent Compared to Natural Death
(Shear, M Katherine, MD; Skritskaya, Natalia, PhD; Mauro, Christine, PhD; Gribbin, Colleen, MA; Reynolds, Charles, MD; Simon, Naomi, MD;
Zisook, Sidney, MD; Lebowitz, Barry, PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Practice, Death, Grief, Adult, N/A)
Symposium
Dallas A2
Virtual Reality – Coming to a Clinic Near You
Chair (Brewin, Chris, PhD)
M
Clinical Virtual Reality: A Brief Review of the Future and Beyond!
(Rizzo, Skip, PhD)
(Tech, Clin Res, Adult, Global)
Investigating the Relationships Between PTSD Symptom Clusters within Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy for OEF/OIF Veterans
(Rothbaum, Barbara, PhD, ABPP; Maples, Jessica, MS, PhD Student; Price, Matthew, PhD; Gerardi, Maryrose, PhD; Rauch, Sheila, PhD, ABPP)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
Using Embodiment to Learn Self-compassion within Immersive Virtual Reality
(Brewin, Chris, PhD)
(Tech, Clin Res, Practice, Depr, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
72
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Two
Symposium
Dallas D1
Integrative Approaches for Traumatic Stress Disorders and Addictions using CBT and Biological Interventions
Chair (Hien, Denise, PhD, ABPP)
Discussant (Norman, Sonya, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Treatment of PTSD and Comorbid Addiction with N-acetylcysteine
(Back, Sudie, PhD; Gros, Daniel, PhD; Korte, Kristina, PhD; Brady, Kathleen, MD, PhD)
(Clin Res, Sub/Abuse, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
Trajectory of PTSD Change with Combination Seeking Safety and Sertraline on Alcohol Use Outcomes
(Hien, Denise, PhD, ABPP; Ruglass, Lesia, PhD; Lopez-Castro, Teresa, PhD)
(Clin Res, Bio Med, Sub/Abuse, Adult, Industrialized)
Integrated CBT for PTSD and Substance Use Disorders in Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans
(Capone, Christy, PhD; Presseau, Candice, MA; Eaton, Erica, PhD; McGovern, Mark, PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Does Oxytocin Modulate Functional Brain Connectivity in Trauma Exposed Individuals?
(Moran-Santa Maria, Megan, PhD; Vaughn, Brandon, BS; Flanagan, Julianne, PhD; Back, Sudie, PhD; Joseph, Jane, PhD)
(Bio Med, Clin Res, Neuro, Gender, Adult, N/A)
Symposium
Dallas D2
Examining the Impact of PTSD on Work, Family, and Other Related Quality of Life Outcomes in
Veterans of the Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
Chair (Smith, Brian, PhD)
M
Consequences of PTSD for the Work and Family Quality of Life of Female and Male U.S. Afghanistan and Iraq War Veterans
(Vogt, Dawne, PhD; Smith, Brian, PhD; Fox, Annie, PhD; Schnurr, Paula, PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, QoL, Mil/Vets, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
The Roles of PTSD, Depression, and Alcohol Misuse Symptomatology in Linking Deployment Stressors and Work and Family Outcomes in Male
and Female Veterans
(Smith, Brian, PhD; Taverna, Emily, BA; Fox, Annie, PhD; Schnurr, Paula, PhD; Matteo, Rebecca, PhD; Vogt, Dawne, PhD)
(Pub Health, QoL, Res Meth, Mil/Vets, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
The Inventory of Psychosocial Functioning (IPF): Development and Utility of a Measure of PTSD-Specific Impairment
(Bovin, Michelle, PhD; Black, Shimrit, PhD; Rodriguez, Paola, PhD; Lunney, Carole, MA; Weathers, Frank, PhD; Schnurr, Paula, PhD; Keane,
Terence, PhD; Marx, Brian, PhD)
(Assess Dx, QoL, Adult, Industrialized)
Perceived Impact of PTSD Symptoms on Work, Social, and Quality of Life Outcomes in Veterans: Exploring the Potential Benefits of a PTSD
Specific Functioning Measure
(McCaslin, Shannon, PhD; Maguen, Shira, PhD; Metzler, Thomas, MA; Bosch, Jeane, MS, PhD Student; Neylan, Thomas, MD;
Marmar, Charles, MD)
(Assess Dx, Clin Res, QoL, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
73
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Two
Symposium
Dallas D3
New Directions in Assessing Trauma and Adversity Across the Lifespan: A Public Health Imperative
Chair (Ford, Julian, PhD)
Presentation
Level
I
Screening for Childhood Adversity with Depressed and Non-depressed Older Adults
(Ford, Julian, PhD; Steffens, David, MD; Wu, Rong, MS)
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Dev/Int, Pub Health, Aging, Older, Industrialized)
Initial Psychometric Properties of the Structured Trauma-related Experiences and Symptoms Screener for Adults in a Prenatal Care Clinic Sample of Pregnant Women
(Grasso, Damion, PhD; Ford, Julian, PhD; Greene, Carolyn, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, CPA, CSA, Prevent, Adult, Industrialized)
Rapid Assessment of Pediatric Adversity and Trauma (RAPAT): A Two-Part Process
(Sugar, Jeff, MD)
(Assess Dx, CPA, Practice, Health, Prevent, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Identifying Classes of Trauma Exposure Across the Life Span: Findings from a Multi-survey Latent Class Analysis
(Steel, Zachary, PhD; O’Donnell, Meaghan, PhD; Hadzi-Pavlovic, Dusan, MPsych; McFarlane, Alexander, MD; Van Hooff, Miranda, BA (Hons),
PhD; Bryant, Richard, PhD)
(Pub Health, CPA, Chronic, Gender, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Symposium
San Antonio A
Prediction of Posttraumatic Psychopathology in Recent Trauma Survivors, Do We Need Biology?
Chair (Shalev, Arieh, MD)
M
Integrating Early Neuroendocrine and Behavioral Responses to Predict the Development of PTSD
(Galatzer-Levy, Isaac, PhD; Ma, Sisi, PhD; Shalev, Arieh, MD)
(Res Meth, Assess Dx, Bio Med, Adult, Global)
Early Symptoms Predict Long-term PTSD in an International Pooled Sample
(Gevonden, Martin, PhD; Ratanatharathorn, Andrew, MA, PhD Student; Qi, Wei, MD; Bryant, Richard, PhD; Delahanty, Douglas, PhD;
Matsuoka, Yutaka, MD PhD; O’Connor, Paul, BSc; Olff, Miranda, PhD; Robinson, James, MS, Ed; Schnyder, Ulrich, MD; Koenen, Karestan, PhD;
Laska, Eugene, PhD; Shalev, Arieh, MD)
(Assess Dx, Acc/Inj, Acute, Prevent, Adult, Global)
Closing the Gap between Risk Factors and Prognostic Prediction of PTSD
(Qi, Wei, MD; Gevonden, Martin, PhD; Ratanatharathorn, Andrew, MS, PhD Student; Shalev, Arieh, MD; Koenen, Karestan, PhD)
(Clin Res, Prevent, Res Meth, Adult, Global)
Can Network Associations of Psychological and Biological Factors Predict PTSD?
(Bryant, Richard, PhD; O’Donnell, Meaghan, PhD; Creamer, Mark, PhD; Forbes, David, PhD; McFarlane, Alexander, MD;
Silove, Derrick, MD PhD)
(Assess Dx, Acc/Inj, Prevent, Res Meth, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
74
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Two
Panel
Presentation
Houston A
What Next? Sustainment of Evidence-based Practices
(Lang, Jason, PhD; Ake, George, PhD; Berliner, Lucy, MSW; Halladay Goldman, Jane, PhD, MSW)
Workshop
Presentation
Dallas A3
Exposure, Relaxation, and Rescripting Therapy for Children: A Cognitive Behavioral Treatment for Child and Adolescent Trauma
Related Nightmares
(Cromer, Lisa, PhD; Borntrager, Cameo, PhD; Fernandez Lopez, Shantel, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
(Train/Ed/Dis, CPA, Clin Res, Commun, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
I
(Clin Res, Sleep, Child/Adol, N/A)
Paper Session
Houston B
Neuroimaging One Paper Session
Moderator: (Teicher, Martin, MD, PhD)
Combining Acute Stress Symptoms and Hippocampal Volume in Machine Learning Prediction of PTSD
(Wang, Xin, MD, PhD; Xie, Hong, MD, PhD; Kessler, Daniel, MS; Elhai, Jon, PhD; Liberzon, Israel, MD)
A
(Bio Med, Neuro, Adult, Global)
Epigenetic Profiles Associated with Childhood Maltreatment and Post-traumatic Stress Disorder
(Bustamante, Angela, BS, MS; Aiello, Allison, MS, PhD; Koenen, Karestan, PhD; Ratanatharathorn, Andrew, MS, PhD Student; Wildman, Derek,
PhD; Uddin, Monica, PhD)
M
(Bio Med, Anx, Bio Med, CPA, Genetic, Adult, Industrialized)
Structural Alterations in the Brain and their Associations with Psychological and Psychosocial Characteristics in Sexual Assault Victims
(Berman, Zohar, Doctoral Student; Assaf, Yaniv, PhD; Tarrasch, Ricardo, PhD; Ginzburg, Karni, phD; Joel, Daphna, PhD)
M
(Bio Med, Affect/Int, Rape, Social, Neuro, Adult, Industrialized)
Interactive Sensitizing Effects of Early and Later Exposure to Childhood Maltreatment on Amygdala Volume
(Teicher, Martin, MD, PhD; Anderson, Carl, PhD; Ohashi, Kyoko, PhD; McGreenery, Cynthia, Assistant; Bolger, Elizabeth, MA;
Khan, Alaptagin, MD)
M
(Bio Med, CPA, CSA, Neglect, Neuro, Lifespan, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
75
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Three
Paper Session
Houston C
Presentation
Level
Treatment One Paper Session
Moderator: (Edwards-Stewart, Amanda, PhD)
Sustainability of Cognitive Processing Therapy for PTSD 2.5 Years After its Implementation Across National Mental Health Service for Veterans
(Couineau, Anne-Laure, MA; Kartal, Dzenana, PhD Candidate; Lloyd, Delyth, MA; Nixon, Reginald, PhD; Wade, Darryl, PhD; Forbes, David, PhD)
M
(Practice, Commun, Train/Ed/Dis, Mil/Vets, Prof, Industrialized)
A Naturalistic Evaluation of Evidence-based Treatment for Veterans with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
(Doran, Jennifer, PhD; DeViva, Jason, PhD)
I
(Clin Res, Practice, Complex, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Predictors of Reengagement in Psychotherapy Among Veterans with PTSD
(Buchholz, Katherine, PhD; Bohnert, Kipling, PhD; Pfeiffer, Paul, MD; Ganoczy, Dara, MPH; Sripada, Rebecca, PhD)
M
(Clin Res, Pub Health, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Examining Dose-response in Outpatient Psychotherapy among Active Duty Army Service Members Being Treated for PTSD Symptoms: A Multilevel Modeling Approach
(Hoyt, Tim, PhD; Edwards-Stewart, Amanda, PhD)
M
(Practice, Clin Res, Res Meth, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Thursday, November 10, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Three
Master
Clinician
San Antonio A
Competent Parenting: The Key to Preventing Social, Emotional and Behavioural Problems in Children of Trauma Related Adversity
(Sanders, Matthew, PhD)
M
(Practice, CPA, Fam/Int, Lifespan, Global)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
76
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Three
Symposium
Dallas A1
Creating a Trauma-informed Health Care System for Children: Global Data on Needs and Training Models
Chair (Kassam-Adams, Nancy, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Worldwide Surveys on Trauma-informed Care for Children – Current Knowledge and Training Needs of Emergency Care Providers
(Alisic, Eva, PhD; Kassam-Adams, Nancy, PhD; Tyler, Mark, BSc Hons Psychology; Hoysted, Claire, BSc Hons Psychology; Landolt, Markus,
PhD)
(Prevent, Acc/Inj, Dev/Int, Global, Train/Ed/Dis, Health Care Providers, Global)
Bringing Trauma-informed Care to a Pediatric Hospital: Results of a Program of Staff Training
(Marsac, Meghan, PhD; Weiss, Danielle, MS; Murray, Carol, MSW; Kohser, Kristen, MSW; Winston, Flaura, MD, PhD; Fein, Joel, MD MPH;
Kassam-Adams, Nancy, PhD)
(Prevent, Acc/Inj, Acute, Health, Illness, Medical Professionals, Industrialized)
Integrating Trauma-informed Pediatric Care into Simulation-based Assessment and Training in the Emergency Medical Setting
(Kassam-Adams, Nancy, PhD; Auerbach, Marc, MD, MsC; Butler, Lucas, BS; Nadkarni, Vinay, MD, MS)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Acc/Inj, Acute, Illness, Health Care Professionals, Industrialized)
Predicting Factors and Consequences of Distress and Posttraumatic Growth in Pediatric Intensive Care Professionals.
(Rodriguez Rey, Rocio, PhD Candidate; Palacios, Alba, MD; Alonso-Tapia, Jesus, PhD; Cruz, Jaime, MD; Kassam-Adams, Nancy, PhD; Marsac,
Meghan, PhD)
(Self-Care, Illness, QoL, Prevent, Train/Ed/Dis, Pediatric Staff, Industrialized)
Symposium
Dallas A2
Trauma and Public Health Intervention: Is On-line the Best Mainline?
Chair (Hobfoll, Stevan, PhD)
M
On-line Intervention for Veterans Using Gamelike Technology
(Hobfoll, Stevan, PhD; Stevens, Natalie, PhD; Blais, Rebecca, PhD)
(Prevent, Illness, Pub Health, Tech, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Deployment of My Trauma Recovery for the Planned Parenthood Shooting: A Public Health Cyber Approach
(Benight, Charles, PhD)
(Pub Health, Comm/Vio, Tech, Adult, Industrialized)
Providing Brief Cognitive-behavioral Interventions to Abused Homeless Youth via Mobile Technology
(Zalta, Alyson, PhD; Dowdle, Claire, PsyD; Glover, Angela, BA; Schueller, Stephen, PhD; Karnik, Niranjan, MD, PhD)
(Tech, CPA, CSA, Clin Res, Commun, Adult, N/A)
Mobile Monitoring of PTSD Symptoms Shortly After a Trauma: A Pilot Study
(Price, Matthew, PhD; van Stolk-Cooke, Katherine, BS, BA; Ward, Hannah, BA)
(Tech, Acc/Inj, Prevent, Tech, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
77
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Three
Symposium
Dallas D1
The Effects of Stress and Sex Hormones on Mechanisms of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Chair (Felmingham, Kim, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Sex Hormones, Imagery, and Emotional Memories
(Bryant, Richard, PhD; Felmingham, Kim, PhD)
(Bio Med, Bio/IntAdult, Industrialized)
Neurobiological Mechanisms of Menstrual Cycle Effects on Extinction Retention among Women with and without PTSD
(Pineles, Suzanne, PhD; Irvine, John, PhD; Webb, Andrea, PhD; Nillni, Yael, PhD; Resick, Patricia, PhD, ABPP; Orr, Scott, PhD;
Rasmusson, Ann, MD)
(Bio Med, Bio/Int, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Elevated Baseline Noradrenaline Interacts with Impaired Fear Extinction in PTSD
(Zuj, Daniel, PhD Candidate; Palmer, Matt, BA (Hons), PhD; Felmingham, Kim, PhD)
(Bio Med, Bio Med, Bio/Int, Adult, Global)
Sex Hormones Moderate the Relationship between Stress Hormones and Negative Intrusive Memories Following Trauma
(Felmingham, Kim, PhD; Zuj, Daniel, PhD Candidate; Nicholson, Emma, BSc Hons Psychology; Chia Ming Hsu, Ken, MPsych)
(Bio Med, Bio Med, Bio/Int, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Symposium
Dallas D3
Posttraumatic Dissociation: Intergroup and Interindividual Variability, Impact on Treatment, and Brief Assessment
Chair (Carlson, Eve, PhD)
M
The Structure of the Dissociation Symptoms Scale Across Race and Ethnicity: A Test of Measurement Invariance Using Latent Class Analysis in
a Non-Clinical Sample
(Anglin, Deidre, PhD; Carlson, Eve, PhD; Espinosa, Adriana, PhD; Waelde, Lynn, PhD; Polanco-Roman, Lillian, MA, PhD Student; Macia,
Kathryn, BS; Palmieri, Patrick, PhD; Smith, Steve, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Clin Res, Cul Div, Ethnic, Adult, Industrialized)
Heterogeneity in Manifestations of Dissociation across Individuals from Diverse Clinical and Non-Clinical Samples
(Macia, Kathryn, PhD Student; Carlson, Eve, PhD; Waelde, Lynn, PhD; Palmieri, Patrick, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Cul Div, Theory, Adult, Industrialized)
Dissociation During Psychotherapeutic Sessions Jeopardizes Successful Exposure-based Treatment of PTSD
(Kleindienst, Nikolaus, PhD)
(Clin Res, CSA, Adult, Industrialized)
Development and Validation of a Short Form of the Dissociative Symptoms Scale
(Waelde, Lynn, PhD; Macia, Kathryn, BS; Carlson, Eve, PhD; Anglin, Deidre, PhD; Palmieri, Patrick, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Clin Res, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
78
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Three
Panel
Presentation
Dallas D2
Public-private Partnerships in Service to Veterans and their Families
Discussant (Kudler, Harold, MD)
(Kudler, Harold, MD; Bellehsen, Mayer, PhD; Tanielian, Terri, MA; Thomesen, Charlene, MD)
Workshop
Presentation
Dallas A3
The Challenge and Opportunity of Treatment of Children and Caregivers When Both Have Traumatic Stress
(Kagan, Richard, PhD; Blaustein, Margaret, PhD; Kiser, Laurel, PhD, MBA)
Workshop
Presentation
San Antonio B
Early Interventions Following Terrorist Attacks: From the Emergency Room to the Living Room
(Freedman, Sara, PhD)
Case Study
Presentation
Houston A
Addressing Trauma and Attachment Loss in African Orphans: A Case Study of Community-based Caregiver Training
(Penney, Patrice, MSW, LCSW)
Paper Session
Houston B
Predictors Paper Session
Moderator: (Karstoft, Karen-Inge, PhD, Cpsych)
Presentation
Level
M
(Commun, Fam/Int, Pub Health, Social, Mil/Vets, Lifespan, Industrialized)
M
(Practice, Chronic, Complex, Fam/Int, Intergen, Lifespan, Industrialized)
I
(Clin Res, Prevent, Terror, Adult, Industrialized)
M
(Global, CPA, Comm/Int, Dev/Int, Fam/Int, Lifespan, E & S Africa)
Predictors of Attrition Among Children Receiving Trauma-focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT)
(Wamser-Nanney, Rachel, PhD; Steinzor, Cazzie, BA)
I
(Clin Res, Practice, Commun, Complex, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Pre-deployment Cognitive Ability and the Risk of Severe PTSD-symptoms following Deployment
(Sørensen, Holger, MD, PhD; Andersen, Søren, PhD, Cpsych; Karstoft, Karen-Inge, PhD, Cpsych; Madsen, Trine, PhD)
M
(Assess Dx, Cog/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult, S Asia)
Experiential Avoidance and Psychological Inflexibility Predicts PTSD Symptom Severity Over and Above Established PTSD Risk Factors in a
Sample of War Veterans
(La Bash, Heidi, PhD; Meyer, Eric, PhD; DeBeer, Bryann, PhD; Kimbrel, Nathan, PhD; Gulliver, Suzy, PhD; Morissette, Sandra, PhD)
I
(Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
Danish OEF Soldiers from Before to 6.5 Years After Deployment: a Prospective Cohort Study
(Karstoft, Karen-Inge, PhD, Cpsych; Nielsen, Anni, PhD, MSc, RN; Andersen, Søren, PhD, Cpsych)
M
(Assess Dx, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
79
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Three
Paper Session
Houston C
Presentation
Level
Substance Abuse/ Suicide Paper Session
Moderator: (Menefee, Deleene, PhD)
Trauma Exposure, Depression, Suicidal Ideation, and Hazardous Drinking in People with Serious Mental Illness in Rural Ethiopia
(Ng, Lauren, PhD; Medhin, Girmay, PhD, MSc; Fekadu, Abebaw, MSc, MRCPsych, MD, PhD)
I
(Global, Depr, Rights, Illness, Sub/Abuse, Adult, E & S Africa)
The Moderating Role of Dysphoria in the Relationship between Intrusions and Alcohol Use
(Contractor, Ateka, PhD; Presseau, Candice, MA; Capone, Christy, PhD; Reddy, Madhavi, PhD; Shea, M. Tracie, PhD)
M
(Assess Dx, Sub/Abuse, Adult, Industrialized)
The Influence of Comorbid Depression on Treatment Outcome among Older Male Combat Veterans with PTSD
(Walter, Kristen, PhD; Glassman, Lisa, PhD; Conover, Kate, MA; Wells, Stephanie, BA; Leek, Trevor, BS; Thorp, Steven, PhD)
I
(Clin Res, Depr, Mil/Vets, Aging, Older, Industrialized)
Examination of Perceived Threat, Cognitive Disortions, and Suicidal Ideation among US Combat Veterans with PTSD
(Menefee, Deleene, PhD; Wanner, Jill, PhD; Leopoulos, Wendy, MD)
M
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Chronic, Depr, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Thursday, November 10, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Four
Master
Methodologist
San Antonio A
Planning a Large Scale Population Survey: Choices and Consequences
(Boyle, John, PhD)
M
(Tech, Acc/Inj, Nat/Dis, N/A, N/A)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
80
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Four
Symposium
Dallas A2
Innovative Online Services to Increase Treatment Access and Engagement for Veterans
Chair (Possemato, Kyle, PhD)
Presentation
Level
I
Preliminary Evaluation of Moving Forward: An Online Problem-solving Skills Program
(Carolyn, Greene, PhD; Prins, Annabel, PhD)
(Tech, Clin Res, Depr, QoL, Train/Ed/Dis, Adult, Industrialized)
Trauma and Drinking Outcomes Among Returning Veterans Participating in a Web-based Intervention
(Brief, Deborah, PhD; Solhan, Marika, PhD; Rybin, Denis, PhD; Enggasser, Justin, PhD; Rubin, Amy, PhD; Roy, Monica, PhD; Helmuth, Eric, PhD;
Vittorio, Lisa, BA; Rosenbloom, David, PhD; Keane, Terence, PhD)
(Clin Res, Sub/Abuse, Tech, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
Can Adding Peer Support Boost the Effectiveness of a Web-based Treatment for PTSD and Alcohol Use?
(Possemato, Kyle, PhD; Johnson, Emily, PhD; Emery, Janet, BA; Maisto, Stephen, PhD)
(Tech, Clin Res, Pub Health, Mil/Vets, Care, Adult, Industrialized)
Veteran Preferences for Alternative Methods for Mental Health Care Delivery
(Ortigo, Kile, PhD; Owen, Jason, PhD, MPH; Carlson, Eve, PhD)
(Tech, Media, Tech, Mil/Vets, Care, Adult, Industrialized)
Symposium
Dallas A3
Trauma-related Cognitions in Children, Adolescents and Caregivers
Chair (Goldbeck, Lutz, PhD)
Discussant (Alisic, Eve, PhD)
I
Dysfunctional Maltreatment-related Cognitions in Children and Adolescents
(de Haan, Anke, MS, PhD Student; Ganser, Helene, MS, PhD Student; Münzer, Annika, MS, PhD Student; Witt, Andreas, MS, PhD Student;
Goldbeck, Lutz, PhD)
(Clin Res, CPA, CSA, Cog/Int, Neglect, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
The Relationship Between Parental Cognitions and Mental Health Outcomes after Children Experience Trauma
(Schilpzand, Elizabeth, PhD Candidate; Conroy, Rowena, PhD; Alisic, Eva, PhD; Anderson, Vicki, PhD)
(Clin Res, Acc/Inj, Acute, Cog/Int, Fam/Int, Lifespan, Industrialized)
The Mediating Role of Parental Posttraumatic Cognitions in the Trauma-focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy of Children and Adolescents:
Results from a Randomized Control Study
(Tutus, Dunja, MSc; Pfeiffer, Elisa, MSc; Sachser, Cedric, MSc; Goldbeck, Lutz, PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Fam/Int, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Attributions Bias Modification Training: An Intervention for Changing Children’s Threat Related Biases
(Hogan, Sue, PhD Candidate; Nixon, Reginald, PhD)
(Clin Res, Acute, Cog/Int, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
81
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Four
Symposium
Dallas D1
Epigenetic Insights into Post-traumatic Stress Disorder: Novel Results from Psychiatric Genomics Consortium Investigators
Chair (Uddin, Monica, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Region-based Analyses of Differential Methylation in Post-traumatic Stress Disorder
(Ratanatharathorn, Andrew, MA PhD Student; Aiello, Allison, MS, PhD; Armstrong, Don, PhD; Binder, Elisabeth, MD PhD; Bustamante, Angela,
BS, MS; Galea, Sandro, MD, DrPH; Koenen, Karestan, PhD; Kilaru, Varun, MS; Ressler, Kerry, MD PhD; Smith, Alicia, PhD; Sumner, Jennifer, PhD;
Uddin, Monica, PhD; Wildman, Derek, PhD; Guffanti, Guia, PhD)
(Bio Med, Genetic, Adult, Industrialized)
Differential Methylation of Imprinted Genes in Post-traumatic Stress Disorder
(Armstrong, Don, PhD; Koenen, Karestan, PhD; Smith, Alicia, PhD; Ressler, Kerry, MD PhD; Aiello, Allison, MS, PhD; Galea, Sandro, MD, DrPH;
Guffanti, Guia, PhD; Ratanatharathorn, Andrew, MS, PhD Student; Wildman, Derek, PhD; Uddin, Monica, PhD)
(Bio Med, Complex, Gen/Int, Health, Genetic, Adult, Industrialized)
Blood miRNA dysregulation in PTSD: Implications for Treatment
(Daskalakis, Nikolaos, PhD, MD)
(Bio Med, Gen/Int, Bio/Int, Mil/Vets, Genetic, Adult, N/A)
An Epigenome-wide Association Study of PTSD in Iraq/Afghanistan Veterans
(Kimbrel, Nathan, PhD; Garrett, Melanie, MS; Dennis, Michelle, BA; MIRECC Workgroup, VA Mid-Atlantic; Hauser, Michael, PhD; Beckham,
Jean, PhD; Ashley-Koch, Allison, PhD)
(Bio Med, Gen/Int, Mil/Vets, Genetic, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
82
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Four
Symposium
Dallas D2
Diverse Approaches to Understanding Post-combat Adaptation among OEF/OIF/OND Veterans: Integrating Social, Cognitive, Affective,
and Trait-based Factors
Chair (Smith, Andrew, MA, PhD Student)
Discussant (Bryan, Craig, PsyD)
Presentation
Level
M
Evolving our Approach to Understanding Social Support and PTSD: Incorporating Bi-directional Models and Method Variance
(Woodward, Matthew, MS; Morissette, Sandra, PhD; Kimbrel, Nathan, PhD; Meyer, Eric, PhD; DeBeer, Bryann, PhD; Gulliver, Suzy, PhD; Beck, J
Gayle, PhD)
(Res Meth, Assess Dx, Prevent, Mil/Vets, Theory, Adult, N/A)
Resilience and Traumatic Brain Injury among Iraq/Afghanistan War Veterans: Differential Patterns of Adjustment and Quality of Life
(Elliott, Timothy, PhD, ABPP; Hsiao, Yu-Yu, MA, PhD Student; Kimbrel, Nathan, PhD; Meyer, Eric, PhD; DeBeer, Bryann, PhD; Gulliver, Suzy,
PhD; Kwok, Oi-Man, PhD; Morissette, Sandra, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Anx, Assess Dx, QoL, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
Modifiable Risk Factors for the Emergence of PTSD in Deployed Military Personnel
(Roberge, Erika, BA; Williams, Paula, PhD; Heron, Elizabeth, PhD; Bryan, Craig, PsyD)
(Clin Res, Prevent, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
Emotion Dysregulation, Coping Appraisals, and Negative Worldview in the Post-Combat Adaptation Process among Treatment Seeking OEF/
OIF/OND Veterans
(Smith, Andrew, MA, PhD Student; Holohan, Dana, PhD; Jones, Russell, PhD)
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Cog/Int, Mil/Vets, Theory, Adult, Industrialized)
Symposium
Dallas D3
Core Symptoms of ‘Classic’ PTSD and Complex PTSD – and Their Relation to DSM-5 PTSD
Chair (Lueger-Schuster, Brigitte, PhD)
M
Performance of the PCL-5 in Comparison to the CAPS-5 in Diagnosing PTSD in a UK Treatment Seeking Population
(Roberts, Neil, DPsych(Clin); Downes, Anthony, PhD; Jumbe, Sandra, PhD; kitchiner, Neil, PhD; Bisson, Jonathan, MD)
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Adult, Industrialized)
The Psychopathological Symptom-networks of Trauma Related Disorders in DSM-5 and Proposed ICD-11
(Knefel, Matthias, MS, PhD Student; Lueger-Schuster, Brigitte, PhD)
(Assess Dx, CSA, Theory, Adult, Global)
A Comparison of the Factor Structure of ICD-11 PTSD, ICD-11 Complex PTSD, and DSM-5 PTSD among a British Clinical Sample
(Hyland, Philip, PhD; Shevlin, Mark, PhD; Brewin, Chris, PhD; Cloitre, Marylene, PhD; Downes, Anthony, PhD; Jumbe, Sandra, PhD; Karatzias,
Thanos, PhD, Cpsych; Bisson, Jonathan, MD; Roberts, Neil, DPsych(Clin))
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Chronic, Complex, Res Meth, Adult, Industrialized)
ICD-11 and DSM-5: Prevalence, Overlap and Stability of Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms over Time in Young Survivors of
the 2011 Norway Attacks
(Hafstad, Gertrud, PhD; Dyb, Grete, MD, PhD; Thoresen, Siri, PhD; Wentzel-Larsen, ToRe, MSc; Maercker, Andreas, PhD, MD)
(Assess Dx, Acute, Assess Dx, Terror, Lifespan, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
83
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Four
Symposium
San Antonio B
Innovative Interventions: How to Make Therapy More Accessible
Chair (Freedman, Sara, PhD)
Discussant (Kassam-Adams, Nancy, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
GETSmart: Guided Use of Smart Phone Apps to Reduce PTSD Symptom Severity
(Roy, Michael, MD, MPH; Highland, Krista, PhD; Costanzo, Michelle, PhD)
(Clin Res, Prevent, Tech, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
A Self-directed Parenting Program for Military Families: Outcomes of the After Deployment, Adaptive Parenting Tools Online Program
(Gewirtz, Abigail, PhD, LP)
(Tech, Fam/Int, Prevent, Mil/Vets, Lifespan, Global)
iVR - An Internet Based Virtual Reality Early Intervention for PTSD
(Freedman, Sara, PhD)
(Prevent, Prevent, Tech, Adult, Industrialized)
A Parent-led Intervention to Promote Pediatric Injury Recovery: Initial Results
(Marsac, Meghan, PhD; Weiss, Danielle, MS; Kohser, Kristen, MSW; Kassam-Adams, Nancy, PhD)
(Prevent, Acc/Inj, Acute, Health, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Symposium
Houston A
Enhancing Quality of Online Information to Support Treatment Engagement
Chair (Hamblen, Jessica, PhD)
M
Using Graphics to Communicate Information about PTSD Treatment Effectiveness to Patients
(Harik, Juliette, PhD; Grubbs, Kathleen, PhD; Schnurr, Paula, PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Res Meth, Tech, Adult, Industrialized)
Customizing an Online PTSD Treatment Decision Aid to Improve Patient-Centered Care
(Merrick, Cybele, MA; Bippart, Victoria)
(Practice, Tech, Train/Ed/Dis, Adult, Industrialized)
Online Interventions to Promote PTSD Treatment Engagement for a Community Sample of OEF/OIF/OND Reserve/ National Guard and Active
Component Servicewomen
(Sadler, Anne, PhD; Mengeling, Michelle, PhD; Torner, James, PhD; Booth, Brenda, PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Tech, Adult, Industrialized)
Preferences for Decision Making Involvement and Information About PTSD Treatment: A Nationally Representative Online Survey of Adults
Who Screened Positive for PTSD
(Hamblen, Jessica, PhD; Hundt, Natalie, PhD; Bernardy, Nancy, PhD; Norman, Sonya, PhD)
(Tech, Practice, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
84
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Four
Panel
Presentation
Dallas A1
Interprofessional Perspectives on Trauma-informed Care
Discussant (Gradus, Jaimie, ScD)
(McBain, Sacha, Doctoral Student; Gradus, Jaimie, ScD; McKinney, Robert, LCSW; Stokes, Yehudis, RN; Vasquez, Jan, MPH)
Presentation
Level
I
(Pub Health, Clin Res, Practice, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Paper Session
Houston B
Neuroimaging Two Paper Session
Moderator: (Elzinga, Bernet, PhD)
Cerebral Networks Underlying Hypersensitivity to Salient Sounds in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
(Naegeli, Christoph, MSc; Zeffiro, Thomas, MD, PhD; Hassanpour, Katayun, MD; Schick, Matthis, MD; Orr, Scott, PhD; Mueller-Pfeiffer,
Christoph, MD)
M
(Bio Med, Neuro, Adult, Industrialized)
Neither Here nor There: Traumatic Stress, Oscillation, and the Role of the Cerebellum
(Minshew, Reese, PhD; D’Andrea, Wendy, PhD; Siegle, Greg, PhD)
I
(Clin Res, CPA, Neuro, Adult, Industrialized)
Positive Outcomes of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation in a Rodent Model of PTSD
(Legrand, Marc, PhD Student; El-Hage, Wissam, PhD, MD)
M
(Tech, Anx, Bio Med, Bio/Int, Theory, N/A, N/A)
Childhood Maltreatment and Social Functioning Later in Life: a Neurobiological Approach
(Elzinga, Bernet, PhD; van Schie, Charlotte, PhD Candidate; van Harmelen, Anne-Laura, PhD; Crone, Eveline, PhD)
M
(Bio Med, Bio Med, CSA, Chronic, Neuro, Lifespan, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
85
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Thursday, November 10, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Four
Paper Session
Houston C
Presentation
Level
Treatment Two Paper Session
Moderator: (Greene Megaw, Meredith, MA, MHC)
M
Effective Treatments for PTSD: A Meta-analytic Review
(Maddoux, John, MA)
Presentation
Level
(Practice, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Train/Ed/Dis, Adult, N/A)
M
Evidence-based Psychotherapy Utilization Among Iraq and Afghanistan Combat Veterans with PTSD
(Myers, Ursula, MS, PhD Student; Norman, Sonya, PhD; McKnight, Aaron, Undergraduate; Angkaw, Abigail, PhD)
(Clin Res, Practice, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
Dissemination of Community-based TF-CBT in Singapore
(Kwek, Jean, MPsych; Soh, Lynn, MSc; Lim, Xin Yi, MPsych; Sim, Jasmine, BSc Hons Psychology; Teo, Mercy, MSW; Fitzgerald, Monica, PhD)
M
(Commun, Clin Res, Comm/Int, Train/Ed/Dis, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
I
Utilizing Online Role-Plays with Emotionally Responsive Virtual Patients to Train Mental Health Students in Conducting Prolong
Exposure Therapy
(Greene Megaw, Meredith, MA, MHC; Albright, Glenn, PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Anx, Practice, Tech, Train/Ed/Dis, Prof, N/A)
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Author Attended Poster Session One (Cash Bar)
Grand Hall
6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Welcome Reception with SIG Endorsed Posters
Dallas B/C
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
86
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11
Location
7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m.
Coffee and Tea Service
Grand Hall
7:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Registration Desk Open
Grand Hall
7:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Exhibits Open
Grand Hall
7:30 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Bookstore Open
Grand Hall
Presentation
Level
8:30 a.m. – 8:50 a.m.
ISTSS Award Presentations
8:50 a.m. – 9:50 a.m.
Keynote Address
Dallas B/C
Epigenetic Regulation of Stress Genes and Their Role In Stress-related Psychiatric Disorders:
FKBP5 as an Example
(Binder, Elisabeth, MD PhD)
Dallas B/C
M
(Bio Med, Gen/Int, Genetic, Lifespan, Global)
Friday, November 11, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session Five
Invited
Symposium
Dallas B/C
Moving from Research to Practice to Meet the Needs of Trauma-exposed Populations Across the Globe
Chair (Jensen, Tine, PhD)
Discussant (Schnurr, Paula, PhD)
I
Don’t Forget the Brokers! One Potential Strategy for Increasing Reach of Trauma-focused Evidence-based Treatments (EBTs) for Youth and
their Families
(Hanson, Rochelle, PhD; Saunders, Benjamin, PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Practice, Commun, Child Welfare, Industrialized)
Testing a Comprehensive Model of Implementation for EBPs for PTSD: A National Investigation in 38 US VA Residential Settings across Three
Yearly Time Points
(Cook, Joan, PhD; Simiola, Vanessa, MA; Thompson, Richard, PhD; Schnurr, Paula, PhD; Ruzek, Josef, PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Train/Ed/Dis, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Transferring Knowledge to Practice: Implementing TF-CBT in Norwegian Child Mental Health Clinics
(Skar, Ane-Marthe, PhD; Ormhaug, Silje, PhD; Granly, Lene, Sr Clin Psychologist; Jensen, Tine, PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Assess Dx, Practice, Complex, Train/Ed/Dis, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Implementation of Cognitive Processing Therapy in the Democratic Republic of Congo
(Kaysen, Debra, PhD, ABPP; Stappenbeck, Cynthia, PhD; Topolska, Monika, BA; Robinette, Katie, MPH; Maroy, Viviane, BA; Bolton, Paul, MB BS)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Clin Res, Commun, Global, Rape, Adult, W & C Africa)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
87
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session Five
Symposium
Dallas A1
Harnessing eHealth Technology to Improve Outcomes for PTSD Patients: A Public Health Approach to Treatment
Chair (Wilson, Sarah, PhD)
Discussant (Beckham, Jean, PhD)
Presentation
Level
I
A Preliminary Investigation of a Relapse Prevention Mobile Phone-based Application to Maintain Smoking Abstinence among Individuals with
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
(Hicks, Terrell, BS)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Pub Health, Sub/Abuse, Tech, Adult, Industrialized)
Reach, Adoption, and Implementation of a Web-based Alcohol Intervention for Veterans with Problem Drinking and PTSD
(Brief, Deborah, PhD; Enggasser, Justin, PhD; Helmuth, Eric, PhD; Rubin, Amy, PhD; Roy, Monica, PhD; Solhan, Marika, PhD; Schreiner, Amy,
PhD; Heilman, Meagan, MA; Rosenbloom, David, PhD; Keane, Terence, PhD)
(Clin Res, Sub/Abuse, Tech, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
Tailored Online Multiple Behavior Interventions Can Reduce Symptoms of PTSD in Veterans
(Jordan, Patricia, PhD)
(Res Meth, Anx, Depr, Tech, Mil/Vets, N/A, Industrialized)
Prolonged Exposure for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Non-inferiority Trial of Treatment Delivered in Person versus Home-Based
Telemedicine
(Gilmore, Amanda, PhD; Tuerk, Peter, PhD; Ruggiero, Kenneth, PhD; Acierno, Ron, PhD)
(Tech, Clin Res, Pub Health, Tech, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
Symposium
Dallas A2
Theoretical Predictors of the Effectiveness of Web Interventions for Trauma
Chair (Yeager, Carolyn, PhD Student)
Discussant (Ruzek, Josef, PhD)
I
Understanding Engagement with a Trauma Recovery Web Intervention Using the Health Action Process Approach (HAPA) Framework
(Yeager, Carolyn, PhD Student; Benight, Charles, PhD)
(Tech, Clin Res, Pub Health, Adult, Industrialized)
Changes Self-appraisal and Mood Utilizing a Web-based Recovery System on Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms: A Laboratory Experiment
(Benight, Charles, PhD; Shoji, Kotaro, PhD; Yeager, Carolyn, PhD Student; Mullings, Austin, MA Student; Dhamija, Svati, MS, PhD Student;
Boult, Terrance, PhD)
(Tech, Affect/Int, Clin Res, Pub Health, Adult, Industrialized)
Pre-treatment Difficulties and Resources as Predictors of Therapist Working Alliance in Online PTSD Treatment
(Littleton, Heather, PhD; Layh, Marlee, BS, BA; Decker, Melissa, MA PhD Student; Grills, Amie, PhD)
(Clin Res, Rape, Tech, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
88
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session Five
Symposium
Dallas D1
Updates from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium for PTSD: GWAS, EWAS, Expression, and Imaging
Co-chairs (Amstadter, Ananda, PhD; Nugent, Nicole, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Genomics of PTSD from Large-scale Genome-wide Association Studies (GWAS) across Military and Civilian Cohorts
(Nievergelt, Caroline, PhD; Davie, Shareefa, PhD; Duncan, Laramie, PhD; Maihofer, Adam, MS; Ratanatharathorn, Andrew, MA, PhD Student;
Daly, Mark, PGDip Psych; Liberzon, Israel, MD; Ressler, Kerry, MD, PhD; Koenen, Karestan, PhD; PGC PTSD workgroup)
(Bio Med, Bio Med, Gen/Int, Health, Illness, Adult, Global)
DNA Methylation at NRG1 May Be an Epigenetic Biomarker of PTSD in Civilian Cohorts
(Ratanatharathorn, Andrew, MA, PhD Student; Kuan, Pei-Fen, PhD; Armstrong, Don, PhD; Boks, Marco, MD, PhD; Logue, Mark, PhD; Maihofer,
Adam, MS; Luft, Benjamin, MD; Bromet, Evelyn, PhD; Miller, Mark, PhD; Ressler, Kerry, MD, PhD; Koenen, Karestan, PhD; Guffanti, Guia, PhD;
Hauser, Michael, PhD; Kimbrel, Nathan, PhD; Vermetten, Eric, MD, PhD; Stein, Murray, MD, MPH, FRCPC; Baker, Dewleen, MD; Nievergelt,
Caroline, PhD; Smith, Alicia, PhD; Uddin, Monica, PhD; PGC-PTSD, Epigenetics Workgroup, MD, PhD)
(Bio Med, Genetic, Adult, N/A)
Altered Subcortical Volumes in PTSD: Findings from PGC-ENIGMA PTSD
(Morey, Rajendra, MD; Lancaster, Sarah, BA; Dennis, Emily, PhD; McLaughlin, Katie, PhD; Peverill, Matthew, PhD; Sheridan, Margaret, PhD;
Harpaz-Rotem, Ilan, PhD; Levy, Ifat, PhD; Wrocklage, Kristen, PhD; Abdallah, Chadi, MD; Thompson, Paul, PhD; Thomaes, Kathleen, MD;
Veltman, Dick, MD, PhD; Koch, Saskia, MSc; Geuze, Elbert, PhD; Stein, Dan, BSc(Med), MBChB, FRCPC, FRSSAf, PhD, DPhil; Ipser, Jonathan,
PhD; Ressler, Kerry, MD, PhD; Stevens, Jennifer, PhD; van Rooij, Sanne, PhD; Logue, Mark, PhD)
(Bio Med, Bio Med, Neuro, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
89
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session Five
Symposium
Dallas D2
Factors Influencing Long-term Functional Recovery among Warzone-deployed Service Members
Chair (Morissette, Sandra, PhD)
Discussant (Keane, Terence, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Long-term Trajectories of Functional Impairment among Iraq/Afghanistan Veterans
(Kimbrel, Nathan, PhD; Meyer, Eric, PhD; DeBeer, Bryann, PhD; Gulliver, Suzy, PhD; Morissette, Sandra, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Chronic, Complex, Depr, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Associations between DSM-5 Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptom Clusters and Functional Impairment Over Time in Female and
Male War Veterans
(Meyer, Eric, PhD; Konecky, Brian, PhD; Kimbrel, Nathan, PhD; Marx, Brian, PhD; Schumm, Jeremiah, PhD; Gulliver, Suzy, PhD; Morissette,
Sandra, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Mil/Vets, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
The Effects of Spouse/Partner Functioning Over Time on Soldier Post-deployment Outcomes
(Erbes, Christopher, PhD LP; Polusny, Melissa, PhD; Arbisi, Paul, PhD, ABPP; DeGarmo, David, PhD; Kramer, Mark, PhD; Vogt, Dawne, PhD)
(Prevent, Fam/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Examining the Longitudinal Associations among Functional Impairment, Quality of Life Outcomes, and PTSD Status with OEF/OIF Veterans
(Marx, Brian, PhD; Bovin, Michelle, PhD; Lee, Daniel, MS; Green, Jonathan, PhD; Parker-Guilbert, Kelly, PhD; Rosen, Raymond, PhD; Keane,
Terence, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Clin Res, QoL, Res Meth, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Symposium
Dallas D3
Increasing our Understanding of Subclinical PTSD Symptoms
Chair (Franklin, C, PhD)
M
Defining Subthreshold PTSD in the DSM-IV Literature: A Look Toward DSM-5
(Franklin, C, PhD; Piazza, Vivian, PhD; Chelminski, Iwona, PhD; Zimmerman, Mark, MD)
(Assess Dx, Anx, Practice, Adult, Industrialized)
The Structure of Subclinical PTSD: Factor or Fiction?
(Cuccurullo, Lisa-Ann, PsyD; Walton, Jessica, PhD; Ball, Jacqueline, PhD; Vaught, Amanda, PsyD; Chambliss, Jessica, MS; Maieritsch, Kelly,
PhD; Franklin, C, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
Efficacy of a Brief Computerized Intervention on Subclinical Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms
(Raines, Amanda, MS, PhD Student; Schmidt, Norman, PhD)
(Clin Res, Anx, Clin Res, Prevent, Adult, N/A)
A Comparison of Evidence-Based Trauma-focused Treatment Outcomes in a Diverse, Multi-era Sample of Veterans Experiencing Subthreshold
vs. Threshold PTSD
(Lamp, Kristen, PhD; Astin, Millie, PhD; Rauch, Sheila, PhD, ABPP; Norrholm, Seth, PhD; Bradley, Bekh, PhD)
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
90
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session Five
Symposium
San Antonio A
The Treatment of Co-occuring PTSD and Substance-related Disorders
Chair (Kehle-Forbes, Shannon, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
A Randomized Clinical Trial of Sequential Versus Integrated Treatment for Veterans with Co-occurring PTSD and Substance Use Disorders
(Kehle-Forbes, Shannon, PhD; Drapkin, Michelle, PhD; Foa, Edna, PhD; Koffel, Erin, PhD; Polusny, Melissa, PhD; Van Horn, Deborah, PhD;
Yusko, David, PsyD; Oslin, David, MD)
(Clin Res, Sub/Abuse, Adult, Industrialized)
Integrated Treatment of PTSD and Addiction in Veterans Using Prolonged Exposure
(Back, Sudie, PhD; Killeen, Therese, PhD, RN; Badour, Christal, MA, PhD Student; Flanagan, Julianne, PhD; Korte, Kristina, PhD; Brady,
Kathleen, MD, PhD)
(Clin Res, Sub/Abuse, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
Role of Alcohol Use Disorder in PTSD Treatment Engagement among Treatment Seeking Veterans
(Norman, Sonya, PhD; Myers, Ursula, MS, PhD Student; Angkaw, Abigail, PhD)
(Clin Res, Sub/Abuse, Adult, Industrialized)
Concurrent Varenicline and Prolonged Exposure for Patients with Nicotine Dependence and PTSD: A Randomized Controlled Trial
(Asnaani, Anu, PhD; Rosenfield, David, PhD; Zandberg, Laurie, PsyD; Gariti, Peter, PhD; Imms, Patricia, RN; Foa, Edna, PhD)
(Clin Res, Health, Pub Health, Sub/Abuse, Adult, Industrialized)
Symposium
San Antonio B
Welcoming Adjustment Disorder to the Trauma and Stressor Related Disorders
Chair (O’Donnell, Meaghan, PhD)
Discussant (Creamer, Mark, PhD)
M
Self-help Interventions for Adjustment Disorder: A Randomized Waiting-list Controlled Study
(Maercker, Andreas, PhD, MD)
(Clin Res, Pub Health, Adult, Global)
A Longitudinal Study of Adjustment Disorder after Trauma Exposure
(O’Donnell, Meaghan, PhD; Nathan, Alkemade, PhD; Creamer, Mark, PhD; McFarlane, Alexander, MD; Silove, Derrick, MD, PhD; Bryant,
Richard, PhD; Felmingham, Kim, PhD; Steel, Zachary, PhD; Forbes, David, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Acc/Inj, Adult, Industrialized)
New Revision of Adjustment Disorder in ICD-11: Factor Structure Study in Lithuania
(Kazlauskas, Evaldas, PhD; Eimontas, Jonas, MA, PhD Student; Zelviene, Paulina, MA, PhD Student)
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Global, Theory, Adult, Industrialized)
Panel
Presentation
Houston A
An Analysis of Technology and Mobile Applications for Facilitating EMDR Treatment of PTSD with Dissociative Features
(Marotta-Walters, Sylvia, PhD, ABPP; Jain, Kshipra, PhD Student; Dinardo, Jeff, PhD Student; Friday, Amanda, PhD Student; Kaur, Preet,
PhD Student)
M
(Practice, Complex, Tech, Train/Ed/Dis, Prof, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
91
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session Five
Workshop
Presentation
Dallas A3
Concerted Care for Foster Children: Results of the Anne E. Casey Bridging the Way Home Study
(Brown, Adam, PsyD; Saxe, Glenn, MD; McCauley, Kelly, LCSW)
Paper Session
Houston B
Symptomology/ Classification One Paper Session
Moderator: (Mitchell, Karen, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
(Clin Res, Chronic, Complex, Train/Ed/Dis, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Latent Classes of PTSD Symptoms in Veterans Undergoing Residential PTSD Treatment
(Sripada, Rebecca, PhD; Hoff, Rani, PhD, MPH; Pfeiffer, Paul, MD; Ganoczy, Dara, MPH; Blow, Fred, PhD; Bohnert, Kipling, PhD)
M
(Assess Dx, Aggress, Health, Pub Health, Adult, Industrialized)
Longitudinal Measurement Invariance of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Deployed Marines
(Contractor, Ateka, PhD; Bolton, Elisa, PhD; Gallagher, Matthew, PhD; Nash, William, MD; Litz, Brett, PhD)
A
(Assess Dx, Res Meth, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Longitudinal Cortex Features in PTSD Patients Following Motor Vehicle Accidents: A Cohort Study
(Wang, Zhen, MD PhD; Hu, Hao, PhD Student; Su, Shanshan, Clinician in Psychiatry; Wang, Qian, PhD, MSc; Xiao, Zeping, PhD, MD)
I
(Clin Res, Acc/Inj, Acute, Neuro, Adult, E Asia & Pac)
Network Models of DSM-5 Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Implications for ICD-11
(Mitchell, Karen, PhD; Wolf, Erika, PhD; Bovin, Michelle, PhD; Rosen, Raymond, PhD; Keane, Terence, PhD; Marx, Brian, PhD)
M
(Assess Dx, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Paper Session
Houston C
Emotions Paper Session
Moderator: (Krause-Utz, Annegret, PhD)
Emotion Dysregulation as a Prospective Predictor of PTSD Following Sexual Assault
(Franz, Molly, Doctoral Student; Hein, Christina, Doctoral Student; Jaffe, Anna, Doctoral Student; Messman-Moore, Terri, PhD; Gratz, Kim,
PhD; DiLillo, David, PhD)
I
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Rape, Adult, Industrialized)
Investigating Perceived Effectiveness of Therapies Used by Survivors of Rape and Sexual Assault Using a Mixed Method Approach
(Weingarten, Christine, BA; Einolf, Christopher, PhD)
M
(Train/Ed/Dis, CSA, DV, Rape, Adult, Industrialized)
Effects of Intimate Partner Violence, Mental Health, and Social Support on Perinatal Health
(Scrafford, Kathryn, PhD Student; Miller-Graff, Laura, PhD; Grein, Katherine, BA)
M
(Clin Res, DV, Health, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
The Effectiveness of an Emotional Working Memory Training in Patients with Borderline Personality Disorder
(Krause-Utz, Annegret, PhD; Walther, Julia-Caroline, MA; Schweizer, Susanne, PhD; Elzinga, Bernet, PhD; Bohus, Martin, MD)
M
(Clin Res, Chronic, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Complex, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
92
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11
Location
10:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Poster Viewing Session Two
11:30 a.m. – 1:15 p.m.
Lunch on your own
11:45 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.
Student Lunch Meeting
Grand Hall
Chapparell (Hotel 38th Fl)
Friday, November 11, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Six
Master
Methodologist
Dallas B/C
The Ultimate Skinner Box: Virtual Reality as a Tool for the Prevention, Assessment and Treatment of PTSD
(Rizzo, Albert, PhD)
Symposium
Dallas A2
Challenges in Development of Scalable, Effective Training for Mental Health Providers
Chair (Ruzek, Josef, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
(Tech, Clin Res, Adult, Global)
I
Understanding the Neurobiology of Trauma to Improve Psychiatric Care: Design and Evaluation of an eLearning Module for the Continuing
Professional Development of Family Physicians
(Ross, Dana, MD, FRCPC; Kim, Sarah, BSc; Lax, Leila, PhD; Taylor, Valerie, MD, FRCPC; Gupta, Renu, MD; Sockalingam, Sanjeev, MD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Bio Med, Chronic, Health, Tech, Family Physicians, Global)
Measuring Outcomes of Online Training for PTSD Providers: Use of Standard Patient (SP) Methodology as a Tool for Objective Outcome
Assessment
(Rosen, Raymond, PhD; Graham, Benjamin, PhD; Ruzek, Josef, PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Clin Res, Practice, Prof, Industrialized)
A Model for Web-facilitated Consultation to Support Online Clinician Training
(Ruzek, Josef, PhD; Rosen, Raymond, PhD; Graham, Benjamin, PhD; Hoyman, Lisa, MS; Sharma, Shivani, BS; Humphrey, Sharon, MS)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Practice, Tech, Prof, Industrialized)
Evaluating Clinicians’ Use of a Web-based Training in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for PTSD: Impact on Outcomes and Correlation with
Self-reported Use
(Marceau, Lisa, MPH; Coleman, Julia, MPH candidate; Graham, Benjamin, PhD; Wilkinson, Ashley, MPH; Kato, Bernet, PhD; Rosen, Raymond,
PhD; Ruzek, Josef, PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Practice, Media, Tech, Prof, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
93
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Six
Symposium
Dallas A3
Youth Positive Adaptation in the Aftermath of Trauma and Loss: Implications for Intervention and Public Policy
Chair (Kaplow, Julie, PhD)
Discussant (Pynoos, Robert, MD, MPH)
Presentation
Level
M
Violence Exposure and the Social Contract: Examining Trends among Youth Victimization, Civic Engagement, and Beliefs about Government
over Thirty-Nine Years
(Oosterhoff, Benjamin, PhD; Kaplow, Julie, PhD, ABPP; Layne, Christopher, PhD; Pynoos, Robert, MD, MPH)
(Social, Comm/Int, Comm/Vio, Pub Health, Social, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Positive Parenting Improves Adult Emotion Regulation for Parentally Bereaved Children
(Danvers, Alexander, Doctoral Student; Sandler, Irwin, PhD; Shiota, Michelle, PhD; Tien, Jenn-Yun, PhD; Scott, Brandon, PhD)
(Res Meth, Affect/Int, Death, Fam/Int, Grief, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Toward an Understanding of “Good Grief” in Bereaved Youth: The Protective Roles of Parenting, Spirituality, and Meaning-making in Postbereavement Adaptation
(Kaplow, Julie, PhD, ABPP; Layne, Christopher, PhD; Oosterhoff, Benjamin, PhD; Goldenthal, Hayley, MA; Arky, Todd, BA; Gaffney, Donna,
Dsc; Pynoos, Robert, MD, MPH)
(Prevent, Comm/Int, Death, Fam/Int, Theory, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Multidimensional View of Factors Impacting PTSD Symptoms in Salvadorian Youth Exposed to Violence
(Houltberg, Benjamin, PhD; Rojas-Flores, Lisseth, PhD; Currier, Joseph, PhD; Herrera, Sofia, PhD; Cui, Lixian Cui, PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Comm/Int, Child/Adol, Latin Amer & Carib)
Symposium
Dallas D1
Movement in Treatment of PTSD: Incorporating Exercise in Treatment
Chair (Vermetten, Eric, MD, PhD)
Discussant (Roy, Michael, MD, MPH)
I
Exploring the Promotion of Sport and Physical Fitness Following a Traumatic Injury: The Canadian Armed Forces and the Role of the Soldier
On Program
(Coulthard, Julie, PhD; Woycheshin, David, PhD)
(Commun, QoL, Prevent, Mil/Vets, Military, Industrialized)
Exercise Augmentation of Exposure Therapy for PTSD: Rationale and Pilot Efficacy Data
(Powers, Mark, PhD; Lee-Furman, Eunjung, BA; Medina, Johnna, PhD; Burns, Stephanie, BA; Kauffman, Brooke, PhD; Monfils, Marie, PhD;
Asmundson, Gordon, PhD; Diamond, Allison, PhD; McIntyre, Christa, PhD; Smits, Jasper, PhD)
(Clin Res, Bio/Int, Rape, Mil/Vets, Theory, Adult, Industrialized)
Exercise Augmentation Compared to Usual Care for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Randomised Controlled Trial
(Rosenbaum, Simon, PhD)
(Pub Health, Bio/Int, Theory, Adult, Industrialized)
Walk & Talk: Multi-modular Motion-assisted Memory Desensitization and Reconsolidation (3MDR) for the Treatment of Treatment-resistant
Patients with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
(van Gelderen, Marieke, MSc; Nijdam, Mirjam, PhD; Vermetten, Eric, MD, PhD)
(Clin Res, Practice, Tech, Mil/Vets, Theory, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
94
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Six
Symposium
Dallas D3
Understanding the Associations between Trauma Exposure and Suicide Risk in Veterans: Using Multiple Methods to Hone in on
Novel Risk Factors
Chair (DeBeer, Bryann, PhD)
Discussant (Bryan, Craig, PsyD)
Presentation
Level
M
Using Machine Learning to Predict Suicidal Ideation in OEF/OIF Veterans
(Gradus, Jaimie, ScD; King, Matthew, PhD; Galatzer-Levy, Isaac, PhD; Street, Amy, PhD)
(Res Meth, Mil/Vets, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Understanding Suicidal Self-directed Violence among Veterans with Military Sexual Trauma
(Monteith, Lindsey, PhD; Bahraini, Nazanin, PhD; Matarazzo, Bridget, PsyD; Soberay, Kelly, MA, LPC; Gerber, Holly, BA; Barnes, Sean, PhD)
(Clin Res, Depr, Rape, Mil/Vets, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Improving Suicide Risk Assessment among Psychiatrically Hospitalized Veterans with PTSD
(Barnes, Sean, PhD; Forster, Jeri, PhD; Monteith, Lindsey, PhD; Bahraini, Nazanin, PhD)
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Adult, N/A)
Factors that Mediate and Moderate the Relationship Between PTSD, Depression, and Suicidal Ideation in a Military Sexual Trauma Sample
(Holliday, Ryan, MA; Holder, Nicholas, BS; Wilblin, Jessica, BA; Clem, Matthew, MEd; Suris, Alina, PhD, ABPP)
(Clin Res, Depr, Rape, Mil/Vets, Prof, Industrialized)
Symposium
San Antonio A
Emotion Regulation Strategies as Predictors of Posttraumatic Stress and Depression
Co-chairs (Pfaltz, Monique, PhD; Michael, Tanja, PhD)
Discussant (Schnyder, Ulrich, MD)
M
Emotion Recognition and Expressive Suppression in Traumatized Individuals with and without Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
(Pfaltz, Monique, PhD; Passardi, Sandra, MSc; Plichta, Michael, PhD; Wingenbach, Tanja, MSc; Hassanpour, Katayun, MD; Mueller-Pfeiffer,
Christoph, MD; Michael, Rufer, MD; Schnyder, Ulrich, MD)
(Clin Res, Acute, Affect/Int, Assess Dx, Chronic, Adult, Industrialized)
Emotion Regulation Strategies in Severely Traumatised Refugees – a Follow-up Study
(Morina, Naser, MA; Bryant, Richard, PhD; Schick, Matthis, MD; Schnyder, Ulrich, MD; Nickerson, Angela, PhD)
(Clin Res, Refugee, Torture, Civil/War, Adult, Industrialized)
A Prospective Study of Pre-trauma Risk Factors for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Depression
(Wild, Jennifer, DPsych(Clin); Smith, Kirsten, Clinical Psychologist; Thompson, Erin, DPsych(Clin); Bear, Francine, BSc Hons Psychology;
Lommen, Miriam, PhD; Ehlers, Anke, PhD)
(Prevent, Cog/Int, Depr, Health, Illness, Adult, Industrialized)
Intrusive Memories of Experimental Trauma: Findings from Experimental Research
(James, Ella, PhD; Holmes, Emily, PhD )
(Prevent, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Prevent, Sleep, Adult, N/A)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
95
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Six
Symposium
San Antonio B
Identifying Influential PTSD Symptoms, Trauma Exposure, and Social Perceptions on Use of Intimate Partner Aggression or Parent-toChild Aggression: Recent Research Findings and Clinical Implications
Co-chairs (Macdonald, Alexandra, PhD, Creech, Suzannah, PhD)
Discussant (van Voorhees, Elizabeth, PhD)
Presentation
Level
A
Trauma Exposure and Aggression Towards Partners and Children: Differential Contextual Influences of Fear and Anger
(Marshall, Amy, PhD; Roettger, Michael, PhD; Mattern, Alexandra, BA; Feinberg, Mark, PhD; Jones, Damon, PhD)
(Clin Res, Aggress, CPA, DV, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Social Skills Deficits as a Mediator between Returning Veterans’ PTSD Symptoms and Use of Intimate Partner Aggression
(LaMotte, Adam, BA; Taft, Casey, PhD; Weatherill, Robin, PhD; Eckhardt, Christopher, PhD)
(Clin Res, Aggress, Cog/Int, DV, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Anger, Hostility, and Aggression among US Veterans Receiving Residential PTSD Treatment
(Schumm, Jeremiah, PhD; Birkley, Erica, PhD; Chard, Kathleen, PhD; Eckhardt, Christopher, PhD)
(Clin Res, Aggress, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Examining PTSD Symptoms as a Predictor of Intimate Partner Violence Intervention Outcomes
(Macdonald, Alexandra, PhD; Creech, Suzannah, PhD; Benzer, Justin, PhD; Poole Laposta, Gina, PhD; Murphy, Christopher, PhD; Taft, Casey,
PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, DV, Adult, Industrialized)
Panel
Presentation
Dallas A1
What the Heck is Trauma-informed Care Anyway? Unraveling the Mystery One State at a Time
Discussant: (Agosti, Jen, MPP)
(Hanson, Rochelle, PhD; Lang, Jason, PhD; Ake, George, PhD; Donisch, Katelyn, MPH; Gewirtz, Abigail, PhD LP; Agosti, Jen, MPP)
Workshop
Presentation
Dallas D2
Addressing Perpetration and Moral Injury in Cognitive Processing Therapy
(Healy, Ellen, PhD; Bassett, Gwendolyn, LCSW)
I
(Train/Ed/Dis, Commun, Pub Health, Social, Child/Adol, N/A)
M
(Practice, Aggress, Cog/Int, Rape, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
96
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Six
Paper Session
Houston B
Presentation
Level
Intergenerational /Parenting One Paper Session
Moderator: (O’Toole, Brian, PhD)
Prenatal Stress Related Variations of the Epigenome Across Three generations: Maternal and Grandmaternal Exposure to Community and
Intimate Partner Violence During Pregnancy
(Serpeloni, Fernanda, PhD Student; Radtke, Karl, MSc; Henning, Frederico, PhD; Hecker, Tobias, PhD; Elbert, Thomas, PhD; Nätt, Daniel, PhD)
M
(Bio Med, Comm/Vio, DV, Genetic, Intergen, Child/Adol, Global)
M
Considering Postpartum Depression in the Intergenerational Transmission of Maltreatment and its Mental Health Sequelae
(Choi, Karmel, MA)
(Prevent, CPA, Depr, Dev/Int, Intergen, Lifespan, Industrialized)
I
The Relation among PTSD Symptom Clusters and Parenting Stress
(Calvert, Maegan, MS, PhD Student; Petretic, Patricia, PhD; Berman, Ilana, BA; Lentz, Mariah, Undergraduate)
(Assess Dx, CPA, CSA, DV, Intergen, Adult, Industrialized)
A
Intergenerational Transmission of PTSD in Australian Vietnam Veterans and Their Children
(O’Toole, Brian, PhD)
(Pub Health, Mil/Vets, Intergen, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Paper Session
Houston C
Disaster –Related Paper Session
Moderator: (Løvstad, Marianne, PhD)
M
Community Unemployment and Disaster-related Stressors Shape Risk for Posttraumatic Stress in the Longer-term Aftermath of
Hurricane Sandy
(Lowe, Sarah, PhD; Sampson, Laura, BA; Gruebner, Oliver, PhD; Galea, Sandro, MD, DrPH)
(Pub Health, Acute, Nat/Dis, Adult, Industrialized)
Reducing the Future Risk of Trauma: Harnessing EU Policy Strategies and International Treaties to Advance Population and Disaster Mental
Health
(Reifels, Lennart, PhD)
I
(Global, Nat/Dis, Prevent, Pub Health, Social, Prof, Global)
Exposures, PTSD and Lower Respiratory Symptoms among Rescue/Recovery Workers and Community Members after the 9/11 World Trade
Center Attacks - a Longitudinal Mediation Analysis
(Wyka, Katarzyna, PhD; Stellman, Steven, PhD, MPH; Jordan, Hannah, MD, MPh)
M
(Pub Health, Bio Med, Health, Illness, Prevent, Adult, Industrialized)
Psychological Outcome in Patients Hospitalized with Physical Injuries Caused by the Terror Attacks in Norway July 22, 2011 —
Relationship to Medical and Psychological Factors
(Løvstad, Marianne, PhD, Stanghelle, Johan, PhD, Manum, Grethe, PhD, Wisløff-Aase, Kristin, MD, Hafstad, Gertrud, PhD, Schanke,
Anne-Kristine, PhD)
M
(Bio Med, Acc/Inj, Bio Med, Health, Terror, Lifespan, Industrialized)
1:45 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
www.istss.org
Internship and Postdoctoral Program Networking Fair
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
Chapparell (Hotel 38th Fl)
97
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Seven
Master
Clinician
Dallas B/C
Compassion Focused Therapy: Is Compassion an Antidote to Shame and an Effective Treatment of Complex PTSD?
(Lee, Deborah, PhD)
Invited Panel
Houston A
The PTSD Definition in DSM-5 and ICD-11: Evolution or Devolution?
(O’Donnell, Meaghan, PhD; Kilpatrick, Dean, PhD; Maercker, Andreas, PhD, MD; Hoge, Charles, MD)
Presentation
Level
M
(Practice, Complex, Adult, Global)
I
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Adult, Global)
Symposium
Dallas A2
Innovative Technological Advances in Child Trauma Prevention, Early Intervention, and Treatment
Chair (Jaycox, Lisa, PhD)
Discussant (Hoffman, Julia, PsyD)
I
A Tablet-based Approach to Enhance Child Engagement and Provider Fidelity in Trauma-focused CBT
(Hanson, Rochelle, PhD; Davidson, Tatiana, PhD; Saunders, Benjamin, PhD; Danielson, Carla, PhD; Adams, Zachary, PhD; Cohen, Judith, MD;
Deblinger, Esther, PhD; Ruggiero, Kenneth, PhD)
(Clin Res, Tech, Train/Ed/Dis, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Helping Kids Cope: A Mobile App to Ready Families for the Next Disaster
(Brymer, Melissa, PhD, PsyD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Nat/Dis, Prevent, Tech, Child/Adol, Global)
TF-CBT Triangle of Life
(Mannarino, Anthony, PhD; Cohen, Judith, MD)
(Clin Res, CSA, Child/Adol, Global)
Life Improvement for Teens: An Online Curriculum for Stress and Trauma in High School Students
(Jaycox, Lisa, PhD; Hehman, Chris, BS; Ayer, Lynsay, PhD; Mahmud, Ammarah, MPH; Woolley, Melissa, MA; Vona, Pamela, BS; Stein, Bradley,
MD PhD)
(Prevent, Prevent, Tech, Train/Ed/Dis, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
98
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Seven
Symposium
Dallas D1
Trauma, PTSD, and Women’s Reproductive Health
Chair (Nillni, Yael, PhD)
Discussant (Rasmusson, Anne, MD)
Presentation
Level
I
Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms Induced by Childbirth: Real or Illusionary?
(Dekel, Sharon, PhD; Pitman, Roger, MD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Gender, Adult, Global)
PTSD and Depression Across the First Postpartum Year and Their Additive Influences on Maternal-infant Bonding
(Choi, Karmel, MA; Roos, Annerine, PhD; Sikkema, Kathleen, PhD; Vythilingum, Bavanisha, MD; Stein, Dan, BSc(Med), MBChB, FRCPC, FRSSAf,
PhD, DPhil)
(Prevent, Depr, Fam/Int, Global, Gender, Lifespan, E & S Africa)
Traumatic Experiences Predict Prospective Emotional Reactivity to Ovarian Steroid Changes: Evidence from Three Prospective Studies
(Eisenlohr-Moul, Tory, PhD)
(Bio Med, Bio Med, CPA, CSA, Gender, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Differences in Ovarian Hormone Steroids across the Menstrual Cycle among Women with and without PTSD
(Nillni, Yael, PhD; Irvine, John, PhD; Webb, Andrea, PhD; Resick, Patricia, PhD, ABPP; Orr, Scott, PhD; Rasmusson, Ann, MD;
Pineles, Suzanne, PhD)
(Bio Med, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Symposium
Dallas D3
Refining our Understanding of the Associations among Trauma Exposure, Posttraumatic Symptoms, and Risks for Youth Justice
Involvement
Chair (Kerig, Patricia, PhD)
Discussant (Ford, Julian, PhD)
M
Integrating Traumatic Stress Screening and Risk Assessments of Justice-involved Youth: Enhancing Identification of Delinquency Risk
(Cruise, Keith, PhD; Holloway, Evan, MA; Ford, Julian, PhD; Grasso, Damion, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Aggress, Comm/Vio, Child/Adol, N/A)
The Role of Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms in the Sexual Revictimization Trajectories of Justice-involved Youth
(Chaplo, Shannon, Doctoral Student; Kerig, Patricia, PhD; Modrowski, Crosby, MS, PhD Student)
(Clin Res, CSA, Gender, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Is Non-Suicidal Self-injury Related to PTSD Symptoms of Overmodulation or Undermodulation in Traumatized Justice-involved Adolescents?
(Modrowski, Crosby, MS, PhD Student; Chaplo, Shannon, Doctoral Student; Kerig, Patricia, PhD; Mozley, Michaela, BS)
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Aggress, Dev/Int, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Increasing Specificity in Our Understanding of the Associations among Trauma Exposure, Posttraumatic Stress Reactions, and Risk Factors for
Boys and Girls Involved in the Justice System
(Kerig, Patricia, PhD; Chaplo, Shannon, Doctoral Student)
(Assess Dx, CPA, CSA, Health, Gender, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
99
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Seven
Symposium
San Antonio A
Disseminating Prolonged Exposure and Cognitive Processing Therapy into Community Settings
Chair (Charney, Meredith, PhD)
Discussant (Riggs, David, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Using Technology to Support Sustained Implementation of Evidence Based Treatments through Consultation and Education for
Veterans in Community Settings
(Norman, Sonya, PhD; McKee, Todd, MDIv; Hamblen, Jessica, PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Train/Ed/Dis, Mil/Vets, Prof, Industrialized)
Piloting A Two-level Training and Consultation Model of Prolonged Exposure Therapy for PTSD
(Zwiebach, Liza, PhD; Rauch, Sheila, PhD, ABPP; Rothbaum, Barbara, PhD, ABPP)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Affect/Int, Commun, Adult, N/A)
Evidence-based Therapy Training for Community Providers Treating Military Service Members
(Charney, Meredith, PhD; Baier, Allison, BS; Chow, Louis, PhD; Clair-Hayes, Kathy, LICSW; Morrison, Emma, MA; Simon, Naomi, MD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Practice, Commun, Train/Ed/Dis, Prof, Industrialized)
The Cognitive Processing Therapy Learning Collaborative: Intensive Training of Community Clinicians in North Carolina
(LoSavio, Stefanie, PhD; Dillon, Kirsten, PhD; Resick, Patricia, PhD, ABPP)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Commun, Tech, Prof, Industrialized)
Symposium
San Antonio B
Core Belief Disruptions Contributing to Posttraumatic Growth in Japan, Australia, and Puerto Rico
Chair (Tedeschi, Richard, PhD)
I
Core Belief Disruption and Posttraumatic Growth Following the Great East Japan Earthquake
(Taku, Kanako, PhD)
(CulDiv, Cog/Int, Cul Div, Death, Nat/Dis, Adult, Industrialized)
Core Belief Disruption, Grief, Traumatic Stress and Posttraumatic Growth in Women who Have Experienced Pregnancy Loss
(Shakespeare-Finch, Jane, PhD)
(Clin Res, Practice, Cog/Int, Death, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Religious Cognition and Experience Leads to Rumination and Core Belief Disruption in Puerto Rican Trauma Survivors Reporting
Posttraumatic Growth
(Orejuela, Ana, PhD Candidate)
(CulDiv, Cog/Int, Adult, Global)
Panel
Presentation
Dallas A1
Handling Traumatic Imagery: The Need for Exposure Mitigation Strategies in Journalism and the Wider Consequences for Social Media
Consumption
Discussant (Brewin, Chris, PhD)
(Rees, Gavin, MA; Cohen Silver, Roxane, PhD; Dubberley, Sam, MA, eMBA; Wardle, Claire, PhD; Feinstein, Anthony, PhD, MD; Brewin, Chris,
PhD)
I
(Journalism, Pub Health, Tech, Terror, Train/Ed/Dis, Lifespan, Global)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
100
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Seven
Panel
Presentation
Dallas A3
Family Immigration Detention in the U.S. : the New and Shameful American Internment Camps
(Keller, Allen, MD; Joscelyne, Amy, PhD; Winchester, Amanda, MPH; Ryan, Johnathan, JD)
Case Study
Presentation
Dallas D2
Through the Door: Complex Symptom Presentations of a New Generation of Veterans
(Zingman, Maggie, PhD)
Paper Session
Houston B
Symptomology/ Classification Two Paper Session
Moderator: (Shea, M. Tracie, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
(Social, Fam/Int, Rights, Refugee, Gender, Lifespan, Industrialized)
M
(Practice, Chronic, Complex, Mil/Vets, Adult, Global)
Mediation Effect of Combat Exposure on Post-deployment Physical Symptoms through Generalized Anxiety, Panic Disorder, Depression, and
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Canadian Armed Forces Members
(Richer, Isabelle, PhD; Born, Jennifer, MSc; Zamorski, Mark, MD)
M
(Pub Health, Anx, Depr, Health, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Latent Class and Transition Analysis of PTSD Symptoms among a Sample of National Guard Soldiers
(Bohnert, Kipling, PhD; Sripada, Rebecca, PhD; Ganoczy, Dara, MPH; Valenstein, Marcia, MD)
M
(Pub Health, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
The Psychosocial Costs of Comorbidity: PTSD and Chronic Conditions Among Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans
(Lee, Sharon, MA PhD Student; Park, Crystal, PhD; Hoff, Rani, PhD, MPH)
I
(Pub Health, Health, Illness, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Different Types of Combat Experiences and Associated Symptoms in OEF and OIF National Guard and Reserve Veterans
(Shea, M. Tracie, PhD; Presseau, Candice, MA; Finley, Shauna, PhD; Reddy, Madhavi, PhD; Spofford, Christopher, PhD)
M
(Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
101
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Seven
Paper Session
Houston C
Presentation
Level
Sexual Assault/ Military Assault Paper Session
Moderator: (Wilson, Laura, PhD)
Effects of Sexual Victimization History, Sexual Attitudes, and Psychopathology on Women’s Responses to Increasingly Coercive Sexual Social
Situations
(Nason, Erica, PhD; Yeater, Elizabeth, PhD; Bottera, Angeline, BA)
M
(Prevent, Rape, Social, Gender, Adult, N/A)
The Role of PTSD Symptom Clusters in Sexual Functioning in Women with a History of Sexual Assault
(Kelley, Erika, PhD; Dardis, Christina, PhD; Gidycz, Christine, PhD)
M
(Clin Res, Health, Rape, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Exploring Provider Gender Preference and Perceptions of Providers in Male and Female Veterans who have Experienced Military Sexual Trauma
(McBain, Sacha, Doctoral Student; Garneau-Fournier, Jade, BS, MS; Torres, Tammy, BS, MS; Turchik, Jessica, PhD)
M
(Practice, Mil/Vets, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
The Prevalence of Sexual Revictimization: A Meta-analytic Review
(Wilson, Laura, PhD; Freud, Jennifer, Undergraduate; Fraine, Shawn, Undergraduate; Ellis, Robyn, Undergraduate; Walker, Hannah,
Undergraduate)
M
(Social, CSA, Rape, Gender, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Friday, November 11, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Eight
Invited Panel
Dallas B/C
ISTSS Treatment Guidelines
(Bisson, Jonathan, MD; Cloitre, Marylene, PhD; Goldbeck, Lutz, PhD; Lewis, Catrin, PhD; Roberts, Neil, DPsych(Clin)
I
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Practice, Res Meth, Lifespan, Global)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
102
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Eight
Symposium
Dallas A1
Mental and Physical Health Sequelae of Trauma: Data from General Population, Military and Veteran Cohorts
Chair (Gradus, Jaimie, ScD)
Discussant (Galea, Sandra, MD, DrPH)
Presentation
Level
M
The Longitudinal Sequelae of Stress Disorders in the Population of Denmark
(Gradus, Jaimie, ScD; Körmendiné Farkas, Dóra, MSc; Svensson, Elisabeth, PhD; Lash, Timothy, Dsc; Toft Sørensen, Henrik, MD, PhD)
(Pub Health, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Psychiatric and Physical Health Morbidity Associated with Multiple Trauma Exposures in a U.S National Sample of Adolescents
(Basu, Archana, PhD; Liu, Howard, PhD Candidate; McLaughlin, Katie, PhD; Stolbach, Bradley, PhD; Koenen, Karestan, PhD)
(Pub Health, Complex, Health, Illness, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Short- and Long-term Longitudinal Outcomes of Military Deployment to the Iraq War: Findings from the Neurocognition
Deployment Health Study
(Vasterling, Jennifer, PhD; Proctor, Susan, Dsc; Aslan, Mihaela, PhD; Concato, John, MD, MPH)
(Pub Health, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Longitudinal Associations between Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Metabolic Syndrome Severity
(Marx, Brian, PhD; Wolf, Erika, PhD; Bovin, Michelle, PhD; Green, Jonathan, PhD; Mitchell, Karen, PhD; Stoop, Tawni, BA; Barretto, Kenneth,
BA; Jackson, Colleen, PhD; Lee, Lewina, PhD; Trachtenberg, Felicia, PhD; Rosen, Raymond, PhD; Keane, Terence, PhD)
(Pub Health, Assess Dx, Illness, Res Meth, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Symposium
Dallas D1
Translational Perspectives on the Clinical Application of Oxytocin Among Individuals with PTSD
Chair (Flanagan, Julianne, PhD)
Discussant (Olff, Miranda, PhD)
M
Augmenting Prolonged Exposure Therapy for PTSD with Intranasal Oxytocin: Safety, Feasibility, and Acceptability
(Flanagan, Julianne, PhD; Moran-Santa Maria, Megan, PhD; Messinger, Justin, BA; Back, Sudie, PhD)
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Bio/Int, Adult, Industrialized)
Intranasal Oxytocin Administration as Early Preventive Intervention for PTSD: Efficacy and Prescriptive Factors
(van Zuiden, Mirjam, PhD; Frijling, Jessie, MSc; Nawijn, Laura, MSc; Koch, Saskia, MSc; Bosch, Jos, PhD; Veltman, Dick, MD, PhD;
Olff, Miranda, PhD)
(Prevent, Acute, Bio Med, Clin Res, Bio/Int, Adult, Industrialized)
Childhood Trauma Alters the Effects of Oxytocin on Amygdala Reactivity to Fear in Individuals with PTSD
(Moran-Santa Maria, Megan, PhD; Flanagan, Julianne, PhD; Back, Sudie, PhD; Joseph, Jane, PhD)
(Bio Med, CPA, Clin Res, Neuro, Adult, N/A)
Effects of Oxytocin on Stress Reactivity and Craving Among Veterans with Co-Occurring PTSD and Alcohol Use Disorders
(Back, Sudie, PhD; Flanagan, Julianne, PhD; Moran-Santa Maria, Megan, PhD; Henschel, Aisling, BS; Messinger, Justin, BA; Brady, Kathleen,
MD, PhD; McGinty, Jacqueline, PhD)
(Clin Res, Bio/Int, Sub/Abuse, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
103
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Eight
Symposium
Dallas D3
Attention to Emotion in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Neurobiological Response to Positive Cues and Relationship to Recovery
Chair (Fani, Negar, PhD)
Discussant (Bradley, Bekh, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Anhedonia in Treatment-seeking Veterans: Reward Learning and Feedback-related Negativity
(Eskelund, Kasper, PhD, MSc; Karstoft, Karen-Inge, PhD, Cpsych; Andersen, Søren, PhD, Cpsych)
(Assess Dx, Depr, Bio/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Recruitment of Top-down Attentional Control over Time Following Trauma: A Mechanism for Resilience?
(Thornton, Laura, PhD)
(Bio Med, Cog/Int, Bio/Int, Neuro, Adult, Industrialized)
Attention Biases Toward Emotional Face Cues and Anhedonic PTSD Symptoms: An Eye-Tracking Study
(Briscione, Maria, BS; Fani, Negar, PhD; Cao, Minhnguyen, BS; Flowers, Nathaniel, BA; Kim, Ye Ji, BA; Lakshman, Maya, Undergraduate; Shin,
Jiyoon, Undergraduate; Norrholm, Seth, PhD; Jovanovic, Tanja, PhD; Ressler, Kerry, MD, PhD; Bradley, Bekh, PhD; Powers Lott, Abigail, PhD)
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Adult, N/A)
Attentional Control and Anhedonia in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
(Fani, Negar, PhD; Jovanovic, Tanja, PhD; Ressler, Kerry, MD PhD; Bradley, Bekh, PhD)
(Res Meth, Affect/Int, Bio Med, Cog/Int, Neuro, Adult, Industrialized)
Symposium
San Antonio A
Clarifying Connections between Cannabis Use and PTSD: Moving from the Laboratory to the Treatment Clinic
Chair (Dworkin, Emily, PhD)
Discussant (Bonn-Miller, Marcel, PhD)
M
Does PTSD Predict Marijuana Use? Event-level Relationships between PTSD and Marijuana Use among Young Sexual Minority Women
(Kaysen, Debra, PhD; Bedard-Gilligan, Michele, PhD; Rhew, Issac, PhD; Lee, Christine, PhD)
(Res Meth, Orient, Sub/Abuse, Adult, Industrialized)
Chronic Cannabis Use is Associated with Impaired Fear Extinction in Humans
(Papini, Santiago, MA; Ruglass, Lesia, PhD; Lopez-Castro, Teresa, PhD; Powers, Mark, PhD; Smits, Jasper, PhD; Hien, Denise, PhD, ABPP)
(Clin Res, Bio/Int, Adult, Industrialized)
Medicinal versus Recreational Cannabis Use: An Investigation of Characteristics and Correlates among Veterans with PTSD
(Loflin, Mallory, MA, PhD Student; Earleywine, Mitch, PhD; Bonn-Miller, Marcel, PhD)
(Clin Res, Social, Sub/Abuse, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
Associations between Cannabis Use and Treatment Outcomes Among Individuals with Co-occurring PTSD and Substance Use Disorders
Receiving Cognitive-behavioral Treatment
(Ruglass, Lesia, PhD; Hien, Denise, PhD, ABPP)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Practice, Sub/Abuse, Adult, N/A)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
104
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Eight
Symposium
San Antonio B
Tending to Issues of Diversity when Implementing Evidence-based Practices
Chair (Smith, Stefanie, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
A Randomized, Controlled, Pilot Study of a Single Session Psychoeducation Treatment for Urban, Culturally Diverse, Trauma-exposed Adults
(Ghafoori, Bita, PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Cul Div, Pub Health, Adult, N/A)
Implementing Evidence-based Practice: Considering Issues of Diversity within a Pilot Study
(Pinna, Keri, PhD; Vincent, Gabrielle, Undergraduate; Rodarte, Amanda, Undergraduate; Vincent, Rochelle, Undergraduate)
(CulDiv, CPA, Clin Res, Commun, Prevent, Adult, Industrialized)
The Treatment of Low-income, Culturally DIverse Individuals with Complex PTSD: A Randomized, Controlled, Pilot Study of Prolonged
Exposure (PE) Compared to Present Centered Therapy (PCT)
(Hansen, Marissa, PhD, MSSW; Ghafoori, Bita, PhD)
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Commun, Complex, Cul Div, Adult, Industrialized)
Factors Affecting the Implementation Fidelity of Trauma-focused Cognitive-behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT)
Using a Learning Collaborative Model
(Donisch, Katelyn, MPH; Bray, Chris, PhD; Gewirtz, Abigail, PhD LP)
(Clin Res, CPA, Chronic, Commun, Train/Ed/Dis, Prof, Industrialized)
Panel
Presentation
Dallas D2
Developing the Warrior Care Network: Strategies for National Academic Medical Center Collaboration
(Harvey, Margaret, PsyD; Rauch, Sheila, PhD, ABPP; Sornborger, Jo, PsyD; Zalta, Alyson, PhD)
Panel
Presentation
Houston A
How to Submit Graduate and Early Career Awards: What You Need to Know About NIH and VA Grants
Discussant (Wells, Stephanie, BA)
(Vogt, Dawne, PhD; Iverson, Katherine, PhD; Gutner, Cassidy, PhD; Wells, Stephanie, BA; Badour, Christal, MA PhD Student)
Workshop
Presentation
Dallas A2
Review of Mobile Apps for Clinical Practice: Recommendations for Client Treatment and for Therapist Self-care
(Hallett, Kristina, PhD, ABPP)
Media
Presentation
Dallas A3
Getting the Word Out on Complex Trauma: Use of Multimedia Resources to Support Education and Awareness for Youth and Families
and Across Systems
(Kisiel, Cassandra, PhD; Fehrenbach, Tracy, PhD; Habib, Mandy, PsyD; Spinazzola, Joseph, PhD)
I
(Train/Ed/Dis, Practice, Fam/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
I
(Train/Ed/Dis, Train/Ed/Dis, N/A, N/A)
I
(Practice, QoL, Prevent, Tech, Train/Ed/Dis, N/A, Industrialized)
I
(Train/Ed/Dis, Assess Dx, CPA, Complex, Media, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
105
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Friday, November 11, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Eight
Paper Session
Houston B
Presentation
Level
Intergenerational /Parenting Two Paper Session
Moderator: (Hiller, Rachel, PhD)
Prediction of Parental Psychopathology and Posttraumatic Growth from Resilience After a Child’s Admission to Intensive Care: a Longitudinal
Study.
(Rodriguez Rey, Rocio, PhD Candidate; Alonso-Tapia, Jesus, PhD; Colville, Gillian, PhD; Casanueva Mateos, Lidia, MD, PhD; Palacios, Alba,
MD; Kassam-Adams, Nancy, PhD)
M
Presentation
Level
(Prevent, Anx, Assess Dx, Fam/Int, Illness, Adult, Industrialized)
M
Differential Sensitization of Parenting on Early Adolescent Cortisol: Moderation by Profiles of Maternal Child Abuse and Stress
(Gamache Martin, Christina, MS, PhD Student; Kim, Hyoun, PhD; Fisher, Philip, PhD)
(Clin Res, Chronic, Fam/Int, Bio/Int, Lifespan, Industrialized)
M
The Course of Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms in Couples in Relation to Parental Emotions and Appraisal following Pediatric Burns
(Egberts, Marthe, MSc; van de Schoot, Rens, PhD; Geenen, Rinie, PhD; Van Loey, Nancy, PhD)
(Clin Res, Acc/Inj, Affect/Int, Fam/Int, Adult, Industrialized)
I
Parental Responses to Child Trauma: The Role of Trauma Specific Behaviours and Parenting Style in Facilitating Child’s Psychological
Adjustment
(Hiller, Rachel, PhD; Halligan, Sarah, PhD; Meiser-Stedman, Richard, PhD; Lobo, Sarah, BS, MS; Creswell, Cathy, PhD; Fearon, Pasco, PhD)
(Clin Res, Acc/Inj, Acute, Comm/Int, Fam/Int, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Paper Session
Houston C
Community Paper Session
Moderator: (Matteo, Rebecca, PhD)
M
Developing Trauma-informed Organizations and Systems: A Universal Measure of Organizational Trauma-informed Care
(Guarino, Kathleen, LMHC)
(Pub Health, Commun, Comm/Int, Pub Health, Lifespan, Industrialized)
I
Dissemination of a Trauma-focused School-based Intervention Using a Performance Feedback Data System
(Sapere, Heather, MA; Lang, Jason, PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, TechChild/Adol, Industrialized)
I
An Investigation of Psychological and Social Support Services within Regional Emergency and Disaster Preparedness and Planning:
Organization, Competence and Collaboration amongst Key Agencies
(Naslund, Monika, BBSc, MPsych)
(Social, Comm/Int, Prevent, Prof, Industrialized)
I
What People with PTSD Symptoms Do (and Don’t) Know about PTSD: A National Survey
(Matteo, Rebecca, PhD; Harik, Juliette, PhD; Hermann, Barbara, PhD; Hamblen, Jessica, PhD)
(Social, Practice, Comm/Int, Train/Ed/Dis, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
6:45 p.m. – 7:45 p.m.
www.istss.org
Author Attended Poster Session Two (Cash Bar)
Grand Hall
ISTSS Business Meeting
Dallas D3
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
106
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12
Location
7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m.
Coffee and Tea Service
Grand Hall
7:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.
Registration Desk Open
Grand Hall
7:30 a.m. – Noon
Exhibits Open
Grand Hall
7:30 a.m. – 1:15 p.m.
Bookstore Open
Grand Hall
Presentation
Level
8:30 a.m. – 8:50 a.m.
ISTSS Award Presentations
8:50 a.m. – 9:50 a.m.
Keynote Address
Dallas B/C
Supporting Vast Numbers of People in Communities Affected by Adversity: Lessons Learned (So Far)
(van Ommeren, Mark, PhD)
Dallas B/C
A
(Pub Health, Commun, Nat/Dis, Civil/War, Care, Lifespan, Global) Saturday, November 12, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session Nine
Invited
Symposium
Dallas B/C
Sleep and Nightmares in PTSD: Advances in Neuroscience and Treatment
Chair (Raskind, Murray, MD)
Discussant (Peskind, Elaine, MD)
M
Acute and Chronic Sleep Disruption: Interference with Neural Pathways Underlying Fear Learning and Extinction
(Germain, Anne, PhD)
(Clin Res, Bio/Int, Sleep, Adult, Global)
Nocturnal Arousal and Trauma and Stress-related Sleep Disturbance
(Mellman, Thomas, MD)
(Clin Res, Bio/Int, Sleep, Adult, Global)
Imagery Rehearsal Therapy for Recurrent Nightmares in Combat-related PTSD
(Ross, Richard, MD PhD)
(Clin Res, Bio/Int, Sleep, Adult, Global)
Higher Pretreatment Blood Pressure is Associated with Greater Nightmare and other PTSD Symptom Reduction to Prazosin
(Raskind, Murray, MD)
(Clin Res, Bio/Int, Sleep, Adult, Global)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
107
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session Nine
Symposium
Dallas A1
Predictors of Trauma-related Stress in High Risk Occupations
Chair (Drevo, Susan, MA, PhD Student)
Discussant (Newman, Elana, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Pathways to Posttraumatic Stress among a Sample of Journalists
(Drevo, Susan, MA, PhD Student; Newman, Elana, PhD; Brummel, Bradley, PhD; Parker, Kelsey, MA, PhD Student)
(Journalism, Prevent, Journalists, Global)
Predictors of Resilience in a 6-year Prospective Longitudinal Cohort Study of New York and Bay Area Police Officers
(Marmar, Charles, MD; Galatzer-Levy, Isaac, PhD; Neylan, Thomas, MD; Yehuda, Rachel, PhD; Henn-Haase, Clare, PsyD; Purchia, Emily, MPH)
(Pub Health, Bio Med, Health, Genetic, Adult, Industrialized)
Treating PTSD from Traumatic Loss in the Military: The Role of Depression, Guilt, and Anger
(Jacoby, Vanessa, PhD; Hale, Willie, PhD; Dillon, Kirsten, PhD; Pruiksma, Kristi, PhD; Dondanville, Katherine, PsyD; Wachen, Jennifer, PhD;
Yarvis, Jeffrey, PhD; Resick, Patricia, PhD, ABPP; Hembree, Elizabeth, PhD; Litz, Brett, PhD; Mintz, Jim, PhD; Peterson, Alan, PhD; YoungMcCaughan, Stacey, PhD)
(Clin Res, Chronic, Death, DeprAdult, Industrialized)
Symptoms of PTSD and Disability: Bidirectional Longitudinal Relationship in World Trade Center Disaster Workers
(McAleavey, Andrew, PhD; Wyka, Katarzyna, PhD; Difede, JoAnn, PhD)
(Pub Health, QoL, Res Meth, Terror, Adult, Industrialized)
Symposium
Dallas A2
Using Web-based Platforms to Support the Use of Trauma-informed Evidence-based Practices
Chair (Stein, Bradley, MD PhD)
M
Using a Web-based Platform to Train Graduate Students in a Trauma-informed Evidence-based Intervention: Lessons from the SSET Website
(Vona, Pamela, BS; Jaycox, Lisa, PhD; Wong, Marleen, PhD; Stein, Bradley, MD PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Tech, N/A, Industrialized)
A Randomized Implementation Trial of TF-CBT for Adjudicated Teens in Residential Treatment Facilities
(Cohen, Judith, MD)
(Clin Res, Chronic, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Use of a Web-based, EBT-specific Implementation Tool to Support a Statewide Child Mental Health Training, Treatment and
Monitoring Program
(Hagele, Dana, MD, MPH; Amaya-Jackson, Lisa, MD, MPH; DeRosier, Melissa, PhD; Potter, Donna, LCSW; Glienke, Beverly, MA; Fiore, Ashley,
MSW, LCSW; Alvord, Ashley, MPH)
(Tech, Tech, Train/Ed/Dis, Prof, Industrialized)
Virtual Training in Cognitive Processing Therapy-Cognitive for Military/Veteran Behavioral Health Providers
(Schuyler, Ashley, MPH; Atuel, Hazel, PhD; Ursich, Luci, PhD; Berg, Dax, BA; Kintzle, Sara, PhD, LCSW; Castro, Carl, PhD)
(Res Meth, Cog/Int, Tech, Train/Ed/Dis, Mil/Vets, Prof, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
108
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session Nine
Symposium
Dallas A3
Use of Technology to Enhance Sexual Violence Prevention Programs
Co-chairs (Rowe, Lorelei, PhD; Jouriles, Ernest, PhD)
Discussant (Messman-Moore, Terri, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Using Video Technology to Help Prevent Adolescent Relationship Violence: A School-based Effectiveness Trial of TakeCARE,
a Video Bystander Program
(Sargent, Kelli, BA; Rosenfield, David, PhD; McDonald, Renee, PhD; Jouriles, Ernest, PhD; Messman-Moore, Terri, PhD)
(Clin Res, Prevent, Rape, Train/Ed/Dis, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Virtual Reality Technology in Bystander Program Evaluation – Evidence Among College Students
(Krauss, Alison, PhD Student; Sargent, Kelli, BA; Bridges, Kate, BA; McDonald, Renee, PhD; Jouriles, Ernest, PhD)
(Clin Res, Prevent, Rape, Tech, Train/Ed/Dis, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Virtual-reality Enhanced Assertiveness Training Program for Teen Girls: Who Benefits the Most?
(Boyers, Grace, PhD Student; Rowe, Lorelei, PhD; McDonald, Renee, PhD; Jouriles, Ernest, PhD)
(Prevent, Prevent, Rape, Child/Adol, N/A)
Symposium
Dallas D3
Innovative Assessment and Treatment Approaches to Post-conflict Mental Health in Low and Middle Income Countries
Chair (Tay, Alvin, PhD)
M
Peritraumatic Reaction Trajectories during War: A Proximal Intensive Assessment (Pia) Study of Gender, Mental Health Status and Exposure
(Gelkopf, Marc, PhD; Greene, Talya, MPH, PhD; Lapid, Liron, MA; Greenapple, Shulamit, PhD Candidate)
(Assess Dx, Chronic, Res Meth, Civil/War, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Tracing Trajectories of Trauma-related Symptoms in Two Large Cohort Studies Conducted in Post-conflict Timor-Leste and Sri Lanka
(Tay, Alvin, PhD; Jayasuriya, Rohan, MD; Jayasuriya, Dinuk, PhD; Silove, Derrick, MD, PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Civil/War, Adult, E Asia & Pac)
A Wait-list Controlled Trial of a Trauma-focused CBT Treatment for Intermittent Explosive Disorder in Post-conflict Timor Leste
(Hewage, Kalhari, DPsych(Clin); Steel, Zachary, PhD; Mohsin, Mohammed, PhD, MSc; Tay, Alvin, PhD; Silove, Derrick, MD, PhD)
(Clin Res, Aggress, Clin Res, Torture, Civil/War, Adult, E Asia & Pac)
The Electronic Refugee Mental Health Assessment Tool (ER-MHAT): a Novel Tablet Based Platform for Collecting Complex Survey Data in
Epidemiological Mental Health Surveys in Low-income Countries
(Tay, Alvin, PhD; Dueter, Dominik, MS; Reichersdoerfer, Marcel, MS)
(Tech, Assess Dx, Pub Health, Tech, Adult, E Asia & Pac)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
109
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session Nine
Symposium
San Antonio A
Enhanced Collaborative Care for PTSD in the Military: Reach, Impact, and Cost Effectiveness
Chair (Belsher, Bradley, PhD)
Discussant (Zatzick, Douglas, MD)
Presentation
Level
A
PTSD, Depression and Suicidal Ideation in a Veteran Cohort: Results from the Mind Your Heart Study
(Arenson, Melanie, BS; Neylan, Thomas, MD; Whooley, Mary, MD; Maguen, Shira, PhD; Cohen, Beth, MD, MAS)
(Clin Res, Depr, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
The Cost-effectiveness of a Collaborative Care Approach to Treating Depression and Post-traumatic Stress Disorder in Military Personnel
(Lavelle, Tara, PhD; Jaycox, Lisa, PhD; Kommareddi, Mallika, MPH; Engel, Charles, MD, MPh; Belsher, Bradley, PhD; Freed, Michael, PhD,
EMT-B)
(Pub Health, Clin Res, Practice, Care, Adult, Industrialized)
Population-based Impact of an Enhanced Collaborative Care Intervention in the Military Health System (MHS)
(Belsher, Bradley, PhD; Engel, Charles, MD, MPh; Novak, Laura, BS; Evatt, Daniel, PhD; Liu, Xian, PhD; Freed, Michael, PhD, EMT-B; Jaycox,
Lisa, PhD; Zatzick, Douglas, MD; Bray, Robert, PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Depr, Care, Adult, Industrialized)
Alcohol Misuse and Co-occurring PTSD in Military Primary Care: Identification and Population Impact
(Evatt, Daniel, PhD; Belsher, Bradley, PhD; Beech, Erin, MA; Stewart, Lindsay, BA; Novak, Laura, BS; Liu, Xian, PhD; Jaycox, Lisa, PhD; Bray,
Robert, PhD; Freed, Michael, PhD, EMT-B; Engel, Charles, MD, MPh)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Depr, Sub/Abuse, Care, Adult, Industrialized)
Symposium
San Antonio B
Innovative Approaches to Improving PTSD Treatment: Using Technology to Aid Public Health
Chair (Bernardy, Nancy, PhD)
Discussant (Norman, Sonya, PhD)
M
The Use of Technology to Improve PTSD Care in Rural Areas
(Bernardy, Nancy, PhD; Sherrieb, Kathleen, MD, DrPH; Montano, Macgregor, PharmD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Clin Res, Comm/Int, Train/Ed/Dis, Adult, Industrialized)
Education Preferences among Community Mental Health and Primary Care Providers Treating PTSD
(Finley, Erin, PhD; Noel, Polly, PhD; Haro, Elizabeth, BS; Bernardy, Nancy, PhD; Lee, Shuko, MS; Garcia, Hector, PsyD; Pugh, Mary Jo, PhD, RN;
Pugh, Jacqueline, MD)
(Tech, Commun, Train/Ed/Dis, Mil/Vets, Prof, Industrialized)
Using Videoconferencing to Provide PTSD Consultation across Rural Communities
(Jeffreys, Matthew, MD; Grogan, Jessica, PhD; McKee, Todd, MDIv; Friedman, Matthew, MD, PhD; Norman, Sonya, PhD)
(Train/Ed/Dis, Train/Ed/Dis, Self-Care, Mil/Vets, Prof, Industrialized)
Engaging Primary Care Providers in VA Community Clinics to Provide Evidence Based Pharmacotherapy for PTSD
(Spoont, Michele, PhD; Bass, Deanna, MD; Osei-Bonsu, Princess, PhD, MPH; O’Dougherty, Maureen, PhD; Hagedorn, Hildi, PhD; Friedman,
Matthew, MD, PhD; Felker, Bradford, MD; Post, Edward, MD, PhD)
(Commun, Practice, Tech, Train/Ed/Dis, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
110
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session Nine
Symposium
Houston A
The Social Self: Contributions of Disruptions in Emotion and Physiology to Relational Processes in Trauma
Chair (D’Andrea, Wendy, PhD)
Presentation
Level
I
Fighting for Feeling: Body Awareness Mediates the Relationship between Trauma Exposure and Interpersonal Problems
(D’Andrea, Wendy, PhD; Van Cleave, Treva, MA; Fehertoi, Nicholas, MA; Freed, Steven, MA, PhD Student; DePierro, Jonathan, PhD; Nieves,
Nadia, MA)
(Bio Med, Affect/Int, Complex, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Facing Fear: Autonomic and Neural Activity in PTSD During Conscious and Subconscious Processing of Facial Fear Expressions
(Rabellino, Daniela, PhD; D’Andrea, Wendy, PhD; Siegle, Greg, PhD; Frewen, Paul, PhD; Densmore, Maria, BSc; Theberge, Jean, PhD; Lanius,
Ruth, MD, PhD)
(Bio Med, Affect/Int, Cog/Int, Bio/Int, Neuro, Adult, Industrialized)
Moral Reasoning in PTSD: Longstanding Effects of Childhood Trauma Exposure and the Impact of Moral Injury
(McKinnon, Margaret, PhD; Nazarov, Anthony, PhD; Frewen, Paul, PhD; Jetly, Rakesh, MD, FRCPC; Wright, David, MD; Hood, Heather, PhD,
Cpsych; O’Connor, Charlene, PhD, Cpsych; Moniz, Sandy, PhD, Cpsych; Lanius, Ruth, MD, PhD)
(Clin Res, Chronic, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
On the Effectiveness of an Attachment- and Trauma-informed Intervention Aimed at Improving the Quality of the Mother-toddler
Relationship: Group Attachment Based Intervention (GABI)
(Steele, Miriam, PhD)
(Clin Res, CPA, Dev/Int, Fam/Int, Intergen, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Panel
Presentation
Dallas D2
Research on Implementation of CPT and PE in the U.S. Veterans Health Administration: Synthesis of Findings from 19 Studies
(Rosen, Craig, PhD; Matthieu, Monica, PhD, LCSW, CTS; Cook, Joan, PhD; Wiltsey Stirman, Shannon, PhD)
Workshop
Presentation
Dallas D1
The Intersection of PTSD and Eating Disorders: Personal and Professional Perspectives
(Setliff, Stephanie, MD; Schaefer, Jenni, BS)
M
(Train/Ed/Dis, Clin Res, Practice, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
M
(Practice, Anx, Assess Dx, Bio Med, Rape, Lifespan, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
111
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 10:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Concurrent Session Nine
Paper Session
Houston B
Presentation
Level
Refugees Paper Session
Moderator: (Piwowarczyk, Lin, MD, MPH)
Epidemiology of Exposure to Trauma and Loss in Relation to Psychopathology for Internally Displaced Colombian Women
(Schultz, James, PhD, Espinel, Zelde, MD, MA, MPH)
I
(Global, Assess Dx, Global, Refugee, Gender, N/A, Latin Amer & Carib)
The Effectiveness of Psychosocial Interventions in Young War-traumatized Refugees – Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
(Nocon, Agnes, PhD, MSc; Unterhitzenberger, Johanna, PhD; Eberle-Sejari, Rima, DPsych(Clin); Rosner, Rita, PhD(c))
M
(Clin Res, Refugee, Civil/WarChild/Adol, Global)
Interpersonal Psychotherapy Intervention for Highly Traumatized Colombian Women “Victims of the Armed Conflict”
(Espinel, Zelde, MD, MA, MPH; Shultz, James, PhD)
M
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Global, Refugee, GenderN/A, Latin Amer & Carib)
Elder Asylum Seekers and Refugees Seeking Treatment
(Piwowarczyk, Lin, MD, MPH; Sato, Jennifer, MA)
M
(CulDiv, Rights, Refugee, Civil/War, CareOlder, Global)
Paper Session
Houston C
Military One Paper Session
Moderator: (Cohen, Beth, MD, MAS)
Longitudinal Association of PTSD and Physical Function in Military Veterans: Data from the Mind Your Heart Study
(Ahmadian, Ashkan, BA; Neylan, Thomas, MD; Whooley, Mary, MD; O’Donovan, Aoife, PhD; Metzler, Thomas, MA; Cohen, Beth, MD, MAS)
M
(Bio Med, Bio Med, Health, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Procedural and Interactional Justice During Military Deployment: is Perceived Justice a Protective Factor for the Development of PTSD?
(Elrond, Andreas, PhD Student; Høgh, Annie, PhD; Andersen, Søren, PhD, Cpsych)
M
(Prevent, Health, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Impact of Military Service on Longevity among World War II American Veterans of Japanese Ancestry
(Willis, Emy, BA; Mackintosh, Margaret-Anne, PhD; Schaper, Kim, MA; White, Lon, MD, MPH)
I
(Bio Med, Mil/Vets, Aging, Older, Industrialized)
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Cardiovascular Fitness: Findings from the Mind Your Heart Study
(Rollins, Allman, MD; Frigaard, Martin, MA; Whooley, Mary, MD; Neylan, Thomas, MD; Walker, Benjamin, MD; Cohen, Beth, MD, MAS)
I
(Bio Med, Bio Med, Health, Prevent, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
11:30 a.m. – 1:15 p.m.
www.istss.org
Lunch on your own
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
112
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12
11:45 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Location
SIG Meetings
Aging, Trauma, and the Life Course SIG
Dallas D2
Dissemination and Implementation SIG
Dallas A1
Intergenerational Transmission of Trauma and Resilience SIG
Dallas A2
Military SIG
Dallas A3
Trauma Assessment and Diagnosis SIG
Dallas D3
Saturday, November 12, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Ten
Master
Clinician
Dallas B/C
Treating PTSD through the Internet – Efficacy, Treatment Principles and Challenges of the Virtual Therapeutic Relationship with the
PTSD Patients
(Knaevelsrud, Christine, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Global, Media, Tech, Lifespan, Global)
Symposium
Dallas A1
Designing and Implementing Broad Reach Early Trauma Focused Interventions for Public Health Dissemination
Chair (Zatzick, Douglas, MD)
M
Watchful Waiting: Can an eHealth Approach Address the Challenge of Ongoing Screening Post-trauma?
(Kassam-Adams, Nancy, PhD; Marsac, Meghan, PhD; Kohser, Kristen, MSW; Winston, Flaura, MD, PhD)
(Prevent, Acc/Inj, Acute, Tech, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Designing Technologies to Increase the Reach of Early Post-trauma Intervention
(Ruzek, Josef, PhD)
(Tech, Prevent, Pub Health, Adult, Industrialized)
Increasing Community Capacity to Respond to Disasters
(Watson, Patricia, PhD)
(Prevent, Nat/Dis, Tech/Dis, Train/Ed/Dis, Civil/War, Lifespan, Global)
Embedding Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Within Care Management to Effectively Reduce Early PTSD Symptoms
(Darnell, Doyanne, PhD; O’Connor, Stephen, PhD; Wagner, Amy, PhD; Wang, Jin, PhD; Russo, Joan, PhD; Zatzick, Douglas, MD)
(Prevent, Prevent, Pub Health, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
113
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Ten
Symposium
Dallas D1
Neural Advances in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Chair (Liddell, Belinda, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Structural Connectivity Analysis on Diffusion Spectrum Imaging Data Using Low Rank plus Sparse Decomposition for the Studies of Traumatic
Brain Injury and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
(Chen, Jingyun, PhD; Baete, Steven, PhD; Yau, Po Lai, PhD; Blessing, Esther, PhD, MD; Gonzalez, Bryan, BSc; Qian, Meng, PhD; Li, Meng, MSc;
Abu-Amara, Duna, MPH; Boada, Fernando, PhD; Marmar, Charles, MD)
(Assess Dx, Neuro, Adult, N/A)
Amygdala Down-Regulation Using Real Time fMRI in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
(Nicholson, Andrew, BSc; Rabellino, Daniela, PhD; Paret, Christian, PhD; Densmore, Maria, BSc; Frewen, Paul, PhD; Schmahl, Christian, MD;
Lanius, Ruth, MD, PhD)
(Bio Med, Bio/Int, Neuro, Adult, Industrialized)
Neural Changes Associated with Increasing Self-efficacy in PTSD
(Brown, Adam, PhD; Titcombe, Roseann, MD PhD; Chen, Jingyun, PhD; Rahman, Nadia, BA; Bryant, Richard, PhD; Marmar, Charles, MD)
(Bio Med, Bio Med, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Neural Correlates of Emotional Numbing and Dissociation Symptoms in Survivors of Torture
(Liddell, Belinda, PhD; Das, Pritha, PhD; Felmingham, Kim, PhD; Malhi, Gin, PhD; Nickerson, Angela, PhD; Askovic, Mirjana, BSc Hons
Psychology; Aroche, Jorge, BBSc, MPsych; Coello, Mariano, BBSc, MPsych; Bryant, Richard, PhD)
(Bio Med, Chronic, Clin Res, Torture, Neuro, Adult, Global)
Symposium
Dallas D2
Addressing Self-conscious Emotions in Trauma Related Treatment with Military Veterans
Chair (Capone, Christy, PhD)
Discussant (Norman, Sonya, PhD)
M
Self-compassion Focused Treatment for Co-occurring PTSD and Substance Use Disorders in Veterans with Posttraumatic Guilt
(Eaton, Erica, PhD; Capone, Christy, PhD; Shea, M. Tracie, PhD)
(Clin Res, Health, Sub/Abuse, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
Guilt, Shame, and Anger as Mediators of the Relationship between Moral Injury and PTSD
(Bolton, Elisa, PhD; Jordan, Alexander, PhD; Eisen, Ethan, MPhil; Nash, William, MD; Litz, Brett, PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Complex, Dev/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult, Global)
Acute Shame, Substance Use and Suicidal Ideation in Veterans
(Cameron, Amy, PhD)
(Practice, Complex, Grief, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Moral Injury and the Justice-involved Veteran
(Gauthier, Justin, PhD; Cosden, Merith, PhD)
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Mil/Vets, Theory, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
114
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Ten
Symposium
Dallas D3
The Use of Innovative Assessment Methods to Examine Psychopathology and Treatment Effects in Traumatized Participants in Daily Life
Chair (Santangelo, Philip, PhD)
Presentation
Level
I
Observed Emotion Regulation Patterns in Early Responses to Trauma and their Relation to Later PTSD and Depression
(Carlson, Eve, PhD; Cloitre, Marylene, PhD; Macia, Kathryn, PhD Student)
(Clin Res, Acc/Inj, Affect/Int, Assess Dx, Prevent, Adult, Industrialized)
PTSD, Emotional Valence and Instability in Civilians Exposed to Conflict: A Proximal Intensive Assessment Study
(Greene, Talya, MPH, PhD; Gelkopf, Marc, PhD; Carlson, Eve, PhD; Lapid, Liron, MA)
(Res Meth, Chronic, Civil/War, Adult, Industrialized)
Sleep Disturbances in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
(Woodward, Elizabeth, PhD Student; Ehlers, Anke, PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Practice, Sleep, Adult, Industrialized)
On the Association between Momentary Dissociation and Concurrent Affect in Traumatized Participants in Daily Life: An E-diary Study
(Santangelo, Philip, PhD; Priebe, Kathlen, MSc; Friedmann, Franziska, MA, PhD Student; Steil, Regina, PhD; Bohus, Martin, MD; Ebner-Priemer,
Ulrich, PhD)
(Res Meth, CPA, CSA, Chronic, Complex, Adult, Industrialized)
Symposium
San Antonio A
Advances in the Study of Intimate Partner Violence
Chair (Yalch, Matthew, PhD Candidate)
Discussant (Levendosky, Alytia, PhD)
A
Psychological Aggression in Newlywed Couples: How Individual and Couple-level Factors Predict Perpetration
(Jarnecke, Amber, MS; Tan, Kenneth, MS; Sprunger, Joel, PhD Candidate; South, Susan, PhD)
(Clin Res, Aggress, DV, Adult, Industrialized)
Attention Toward Aggression-promoting Cues in Partner Violent Individuals
(Sprunger, Joel, PhD Candidate; Massa, Andrea, BA; Dyar, Darby, BS; Eckhardt, Christopher, PhD; Parrott, Dominic, PhD)
(Res Meth, Affect/Int, Aggress, Cog/Int, DV, Adult, N/A)
Intimate Partner Violence, Parenting Support, and Maternal Parenting across Time
(Bernard, Nicola, MA Student; Kobayashi, Jade, BA; Levendosky, Alytia, PhD; Bogat, G. Anne, PhD)
(Clin Res, Chronic, DV, Lifespan, Industrialized)
A Five Factor Model Approach to Resilience and Vulnerability Factors of Women Exposed to Intimate Partner Violence
(Yalch, Matthew, PhD Candidate; Levendosky, Alytia, PhD; Lannert, Brittany, PhD)
(Res Meth, Chronic, DV, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
115
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Ten
Symposium
San Antonio B
The Influence of Social Resources on Adjustment Following Trauma
Chair (Felix, Erika, PhD)
Discussant (Benight, Charles, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Social Resources and Mental Health in Victims of Childhood Violence: Social Support, Social Support Barriers, Shame, other People’s
Withdrawal and Loneliness
(Thoresen, Siri, PhD; Aakvaag, Helene, MA, PhD Student; Stensland, Synne, MD, PhD; Strøm, Ida, PhD; Myhre, Mia, MD, PhD; Hjemdal, Ole, MA)
(Social, CPA, CSA, Chronic, Comm/Int, Adult, Industrialized)
Social Cognitive Dynamics following Mass Community Violence: How Social Barriers Alter Pathways to Adaptation
(Smith, Andrew, MA, PhD Student; Felix, Erika, PhD; Benight, Charles, PhD; Jones, Russell, PhD)
(Pub Health, Cog/Int, Comm/Int, Comm/Vio, Theory, Adult, Industrialized)
Socio-contextual Influences on Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms following Mass Violence
(Felix, Erika, PhD)
(Pub Health, Comm/Vio, Health, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
The Moderating Effects of Different Sources of Social Support on the Relationship between Disaster Exposure and Depression in China
(Hall, Brian, PhD; Sou, Kalon, MSc; Chen, Wen, PhD; Chang, Kay, PsyD; Latkin, Carl, PhD)
(Global, Depr, Nat/Dis, Adult, E Asia & Pac)
Panel
Presentation
Dallas A3
Getting the Word Out on How to Care for Traumatized Children
(Brymer, Melissa, PhD, PsyD; Griffin, DeAnna, MA; Briggs-King, Ernestine, PhD; Gurwitch, Robin, PhD)
Workshop
Presentation
Dallas A2
Practical Implications from a Study of Bereaved Parents, Siblings and Friends following a Terror Event
Discussant (Indart, Monica, PsyD)
(Dyregrov, Atle, PhD; Dyregrov, Kari, PhD)
I
(Train/Ed/Dis, Comm/Int, Dev/Int, Pub Health, Lifespan, N/A)
M
(Prevent, Death, Terror, Grief, Lifespan, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
116
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Concurrent Session Ten
Paper Session
Houston B
Presentation
Level
Child Trauma Paper Session
Moderator: (Lauterbach, Dean, PhD)
Cumulative Childhood Adversity and Revictimization on the Street: The Experience of Mentally Ill Homeless Individuals in Five Canadian Cities
(Edalati, Hanie, PhD; Nicholls, Tonia, PhD; Crocker, Anne, PhD; Roy, Laurence, PhD; Patterson, Michelle, PhD)
A
(Clin Res, CPA, CSA, Chronic, Pub Health, Adult, N/A)
One Question Can Predict Outcome In Trauma-Focused CBT: “Do You Think We Have Found A Good Way to Work on Your Difficult Thoughts
and Feelings?”
(Ormhaug, Silje, PhD; Jensen, Tine, PhD)
I
(Clin Res, Affect/Int-CPA-CSA-Clinical Practice, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Agreement on Child Traumatic Stress Symptoms after Pediatric Burn Injury: The Role of Parents’ own Stress Reactions
(Egberts, Marthe, MSc; van de Schoot, Rens, PhD; Geenen, Rinie, PhD; Van Loey, Nancy, PhD)
M
(Assess Dx, Acc/Inj, Fam/Int, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Trajectories of Self-regulation Symptoms Among Child Maltreatment Survivors: Findings from a Multisite Study
(Lauterbach, Dean, PhD; Allen, Brian, PsyD; Poehacker, Stefanie, Doctoral Student; Phillips, David, Doctoral Student)
M
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, CPA, Chronic, Res Meth, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Paper Session
Houston C
Military Two Paper Session
Moderator: (Reddy, Madhavi, PhD)
PTSD Care among Veterans with and without Co-occurring Substance Use Disorders
(Mansfield, Alyssa, PhD, MHA, MPH; Greenbaum, Mark, MS, MA; Schaper, Kim, MA; Banducci, Anne N., PhD; Rosen, Craig, PhD)
I
(Practice, Sub/Abuse, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Interaction of Oxytocin Receptor Gene and Social Support in Predicting Resilience in U.S. Military Veterans
(Sippel, Lauren, PhD; Han, Shizhong, PhD; Southwick, Steven, MD; Krystal, John, MD; Gelernter, Joel, MD; Pietrzak, Robert, PhD)
I
(Clin Res, Comm/Int, Pub Health, Mil/Vets, Genetic, Adult, Industrialized)
Effectiveness of Prazosin on PTSD Symptoms During Prolonged Exposure (PE) Therapy with Veterans
(Myers, Ursula, MS, PhD Student; Keller, Stephanie, PhD; Tuerk, Peter, PhD)
I
(Clin Res, Practice, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Modulating Extinction of Conditioned Fear by Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation in Combat Veterans with PTSD
(Reddy, Madhavi, PhD; van ‘t Wout, Mascha, PhD; Shea, M. Tracie, PhD)
A
(Tech, Bio/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult, N/A)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
117
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Eleven
Master
Methodologist
Dallas B/C
Spotify Mental-health for Depression and Anxiety: Personalise, Engage & Connect
(Riper, Heleen, PhD)
Symposium
Dallas A2
PTSD Coach around the World: a Global Perspective on a Smartphone App Designed for Self-management of PTSD Symptoms
Chair (van der Meer, Christianne, PhD Candidate)
Discussant (Ruzek, Josef, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
(Clin Res, Anx, Pub Health, Res Meth, Tech, Lifespan, Industrialized)
M
Development and Pilot-testing of the Swedish Version of the PTSD Coach
(Arnberg, Filip, PhD; Cernvall, Martin, PhD; Bergh Johannesson, Kerstin, PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Prevent, Tech, Adult, Industrialized)
Effectiveness of the Dutch PTSD Coach to Reduce Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms in Trauma-exposed Health Care Professionals
(van der Meer, Christianne, PhD Candidate; Bakker, Anne, PhD; Holmersma, Annemarijn, MSc; van Buschbach, Susanne, MSc; Tariq, Saleha,
MSc; Olff, Miranda, PhD)
(Tech, Clin Res, Trauma-exposed Health Care Professionals, Industrialized)
A Program of Research on the PTSD Coach Mobile App
(Kuhn, Eric, PhD; Hoffman, Julia, PsyD; Possemato, Kyle, PhD; Kanuri, Nitya, BA; Miner, Adam, Doctoral Student; Owen, Jason, PhD, MPH;
Ramsey, Kelly, BA; Taylor, C., MD; Ruzek, Josef, PhD)
(Clin Res, Pub Health, Tech, Adult, Industrialized)
“Coach PTBS” – a German App for Combat-Related Mental Stress Disorders: Usability and Applicability
(Schellong, Julia, PhD, MD; Lorenz, Patrick, Dipl Psych; Glathe, Caroline, MA; Schopp, Matthias, MA, MSc; Zimmermann, Peter, PD, MD;
Weidner, Kerstin, PD, MD)
(Tech, Dev/Int, Prevent, Tech, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
118
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Eleven
Symposium
Dallas A3
Utilizing Implementation Science to Develop Trauma-informed Child Welfare Systems
Chair (Dean, Kristin, PhD)
Discussant (Rogers, Edwin, PhD, ABPP)
Presentation
Level
M
Implementing the Resource Parent Curriculum to Strengthen Trauma-informed Parenting in the Child Welfare Community
(Dean, Kristin, PhD)
(Commun, Train/Ed/Dis, Foster Parents, Industrialized)
Breaking Down Silos: Developing Trauma-informed Care through a Community Based Learning Collaborative
(Moser, Michele, PhD)
(Commun, CPA, Comm/Int, Complex, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Using Improvement Science to Implement Trauma-informed Screening for Young Children in Child Welfare
(Hoffmann, Melissa, PhD)
(Commun, Train/Ed/Dis, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Staying Strong with Schools: A School Based Intervention for Military Connected Children
(Bui, Eric, MD, PhD; Zakarian, Rebecca, BA; Kelly, Hope, BA; Simon, Naomi, MD; Ohye, Bonnie, PhD)
(Commun, Clin Res, Commun, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Symposium
Dallas D1
Quality of Parenting and Neurobiological Outcomes in Traumatized Children
Co-chairs (Jovanovic, Tanja, PhD, Vance, Alexander, BA)
Discussant (Bradley, Bekh, PhD)
I
Latent Profile Analysis of Parenting Behavior in a Traumatized Population
(Nugent, Nicole, PhD; Cross, Dorthie, PhD; Vance, Alexander, BA; Bradley, Bekh, PhD; Jovanovic, Tanja, PhD)
(Bio Med, CPA, Res Meth, Intergen, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Negative Parenting and Child Autonomic Nervous System Responses
(Vance, Alexander, BA; Cross, Dorthie, PhD; Nugent, Nicole, PhD; Bradley, Bekh, PhD; Jovanovic, Tanja, PhD)
(Bio Med, Bio Med, CPA, Fam/Int, Bio/Int, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Exposure to Violence and Parenting Quality Influence Inhibition-related Activation in the Developing Brain
(van Rooij, Sanne, PhD; Stevens, Jennifer, PhD; Kim, Ye Ji, BA; Ely, Timothy, BSc; Jovanovic, Tanja, PhD)
(Bio Med, Dev/Int, Bio/Int, Intergen, Neuro, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Hyperactive Defense-Survival Circuitry and Brain Volumes: A 3-Generation Study
(Grillon, Christian, PhD; Warner, Virginia, Dr.P.H.; Bansal, Ravi, PhD; Hao, Xuejun, PhD; Liu, Jun, PhD)
(Pub Health, Anx, CPA, Depr, Pub Health, Lifespan, N/A)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
119
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Eleven
Symposium
Dallas D2
From Epidemiology to Treatment Delivery and Dissemination: The Influence of Conditions Comorbid with PTSD
Chair (Walter, Kristen, PhD)
Discussant (Davis, Joanne, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
Sleep Disturbance, PTSD and Depression: Leveraging Client Preferences for Treatment Modality in the Face of Comorbidity
(Gutner, Cassidy, PhD; Pedersen, Eric, PhD; Drummond, Sean, PhD)
(Clin Res, Depr, Sleep, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
Using Explicit Case Formulation to Improve Cognitive Processing Therapy for PTSD
(Nixon, Reginald, PhD; Bralo, Danielle, BSc Hons Psychology)
(Clin Res, Practice, Cog/Int, Complex, Adult, Industrialized)
Response to Cognitive Processing Therapy in Veterans with and without Obstructive Sleep Apnea
(Mesa, Frank, PhD)
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Practice, Illness, Sleep, Adult, Industrialized)
Prevalence of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Psychological Comorbidities among Active-duty Service Members in 2006–2013, and
Implications for Treatment
(Walter, Kristen, PhD; Levine, Jordan, MPH; Highfill-McRoy, Robyn, MPH, MA; Navarro, Melissa, BA/BS; Thomsen, Cynthia, PhD)
(Pub Health, Mil/Vets, Adult, Industrialized)
Symposium
Dallas D3
What Do Recent Studies Tell Us about the Distinguishability of PTSD and Complex PTSD in ICD-11?
Chair (Hyland, Philip, PhD)
M
An Assessment of the Construct Validity of ICD-11 Complex PTSD across Multiple Trauma Samples
(Hyland, Philip, PhD; Shevlin, Mark, PhD; Elklit, Ask, MSc; Murphy, Jamie, PhD; Vallières, Frédérique, PhD; Garvert, Donn, MS; Cloitre,
Marylene, PhD; Brewin, Chris, PhD; Bisson, Jonathan, MD; Roberts, Neil, DPsych(Clin); Karatzias, Thanos, PhD, Cpsych; Fyvie, Claire,
DPsych(Clin); Downes, Anthony, PhD; Jumbe, Sandra, PhD)
(Assess Dx, CSA, Rape, Res Meth, Gender, Adult, Industrialized)
A Comparison of Complex PTSD and Borderline Personality Disorder
(Bisson, Jonathan, MD; Downes, Anthony, PhD; Jumbe, Sandra, PhD; kitchiner, Neil, PhD; Roberts, Neil, DPsych(Clin))
(Assess Dx, Practice, Complex, Adult, Industrialized)
PTSD and Complex PTSD in Male-perpetrated Intimate Partner Violence
(Gilbar, Ohad, PhD Candidate; Dekel, Rachel, PhD; Ben-Porat, Anat, PhD)
(Assess Dx, Aggress, Complex, DV, Adult, Industrialized)
Investigating the Proposed ICD-11 Complex Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Diagnosis in a Sample of Refugees and Asylum-seekers in
Switzerland
(Hecker, Tobias, PhD; Huber, Stephanie, MSc; Maier, Thomas, MD; Maercker, Andreas, PhD, MD)
(Clin Res, Chronic, Refugee, Torture, Civil/War, Adult, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
120
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Eleven
Symposium
San Antonio A
Ambulatory Tracking Reveals Dynamic Links among PTSD Dimensions, Health and Biology
Chair (Ruggero, Camilo, PhD)
Discussant (Kotov, Roman, PhD)
Presentation
Level
A
Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Symptom Cascades may Represent a Novel Point of Intervention: Results from Daily Monitoring Study
of World Trade Center (WTC) Responders
(Ruggero, Camilo, PhD; Liu, Keke, MS)
(Res Meth, Assess Dx, Practice, Res Meth, Tech, Adult, Industrialized)
Daily Association between Cortisol Rhythms and PTSD Symptoms in World Trade Center (WTC) Responders: The Role of Daily Stressors
(Liu, Keke, MS; Ruggero, Camilo, PhD)
(Res Meth, Anx, Bio Med, Adult, Industrialized)
Daily Smartphone Diaries Embedded into a Clinical Trial for the Treatment of Chronic PTSD: Importance of Symptom Spikes and
Variability on Outcomes
(Callahan, Jennifer, PhD, ABPP; Gonzalez, Adam, PhD; Mahaffey, Brittain, PhD)
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Practice, Adult, Industrialized)
PTSD and Physical Health: Temporal Dynamics and Links with Inflammation
(Kotov, Roman, PhD; Waszczuk, Monika, PhD; Ruggero, Camilo, PhD)
(Bio Med, Assess Dx, Health, Illness, Tech, Adult, Industrialized)
Symposium
San Antonio B
War and Political Violence in South and Southeast Asia: Trauma, Ongoing Stressors, and Culturally-based Expressions of Distress
Chair (Lambert, Jessica, PhD)
M
The Impact of Torture on Survivors in Southern Thailand: a Study of Trauma Related Symptoms and Culturally Specific
Manifestations of Distress
(Bunn, MA, LCSW, Mary, PhD Student; Engstrom, Dr. David, PhD)
(Res Meth, Complex, Cul Div, Torture, Adult, E Asia & Pac)
Identifying Local Expressions of Positive/Negative Change and Psychological Distress Among Survivors of War in Sri Lanka
(Jayawickreme, Nuwan, PhD; Jayawickreme, Eranda, PhD; Blackie, Laura, PhD; Lacasse, Justin, DO)
(CulDiv, Chronic, Cul Div, Refugee, Civil/War, Adult, S Asia)
Toward Understanding the Mental Health Status of War and Disaster Affected Widows in Sri Lanka: An Application of COR Theory
(Lambert, Jessica, PhD)
(Global, Cul Div, Civil/War, Gender, Adult, S Asia)
Panel
Presentation
Dallas A1
The Long-term Impact of Man-made Disasters on Community Mental Health and Resilience: The Great East Japan Earthquake, Tsunami,
Nuclear Disaster and Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill
Discussant: (Watson, Patricia, PhD)
(Walker, Douglas, PhD; Uchiyama, Tokio, MD, PhD; Maeda, Masaharu, MD, PhD; Watson, Patricia, PhD)
M
(Pub Health, Cul Div, Tech/Dis, Lifespan, Industrialized)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
121
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Eleven
Workshop
Presentation
Houston A
Improving Compliance and Outcome in Clients with Trauma Symptoms and Dysregulated (Addictive/Impulsive) Behavior
(Wupperman, Peggilee, PhD)
Paper Session
Houston B
Refugees/Terror Attacks Paper Session
Moderator: (Kristensen, Christian, PhD)
Presentation
Level
M
(Practice, Affect/Int, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Sub/Abuse, Adult, N/A)
Culturally Informed Community Based Strategies Addressing Mental Health Stigma among Somali Refugees Residing in Bokolmayo, Melkadida
and Kobe Refugee Camps in Dolo Ado, Ethiopia
(Bezu, Tadu, BS, MS; Bekele, Hailu, MPH; Yusuf, Abdulwasi, BS, MS; Mulugeta, Sisay, BS, MS)
I
(Commun, Depr, Sub/Abuse, Train/Ed/Dis, Care, Lifespan, E & S Africa)
Relationship between Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms, Self-perceived Mental Health Service Needs and Actual Utilization of Mental Health
Services among Survivors of the Utøya Terrorist Attack
(Stene, Lise, MD, PhD; Dyb, Grete, MD, PhD)
M
(Pub Health, Health, Prevent, Pub Health, Terror, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Loneliness in Survivors of the Utøya Shooting: the Role of Posttraumatic Stress Reactions, Somatic Symptoms, Social Barriers and Support
(Stensland, Synne, MD, PhD; Thoresen, Siri, PhD; Hafstad, Gertrud, PhD; Dyb, Grete, MD, PhD)
M
(Prevent, Acute, Dev/Int, Fam/Int, Terror, Lifespan, Industrialized)
Prevalence and Associated Factors to Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Haitian Immigrants in South of Brazil
(Brunnet, Alice, MSc; Kristensen, Christian, PhD; Bolaséll, Laura, Undergraduate)
I
(Cul Div, Cul Div, Ethnic, Global, Adult, Latin Amer & Carib)
www.istss.org
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
122
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Daily Schedule
Saturday, November 12, 2:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Concurrent Session Eleven
Paper Session
Houston C
Presentation
Level
Biological/Medical Paper Session
Moderator: (Lee, Royce, MD)
Lifetime Adversity, Perceived Stress and the Microbiome
(Schüssler-Fiorenza Rose, Sophia Miryam, MD, PhD; Zhou, Wenyu, PhD; Slavich, George, PhD; Rego, Shannon, MS, CGC;
Snyder, Michael, PhD)
I
(Bio Med, Bio/Int, Aging, Genetic, Adult, Industrialized)
Implication of NOTCH1 Gene in Comorbid Anxiety and Depression Symptoms in a Sample of Sexual Abuse Victims
(Steine, Iris, PhD Candidate; Zayats, Tetyana, PhD; Stansberg, Christine, PhD; Mrdalj, Jelena, PhD; Grønli, Janne, Associate Professor;
Pallesen, Ståle, Professor)
M
(Bio Med, Rape, Genetic, Adult, Industrialized)
Genetic Contribution of Rare and Common Variants on PTSD Outcomes in Adolescents Following Natural-disaster Exposure
(Sheerin, Christina, PhD; Williamson, Vernell, PhD; Bountress, Kaitlin, PhD; Vladimirov, Vladimir, PhD; Ruggiero, Kenneth, PhD; Amstadter,
Ananda, PhD)
M
(Bio Med, Nat/Dis, Genetic, Child/Adol, Industrialized)
Effects of Trauma Related Central Corticotropin Releasing Hormone on Threat Processing
(Lee, Royce, MD)
A
(Bio Med, Bio/Int, Neuro, Adult, Industrialized)
Saturday, November 12, 4:15 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Closing Plenary Session
Invited Panel
Dallas B/C
What I Have Changed My Mind About and Why
(Schnurr, Paula, PhD; Berliner, Lucy, MSW; Ruzek, Josef, PhD; Kilpatrick, Dean, PhD; Bryant, Richard, PhD; Rizzo, Skip, PhD)
M
(Pub Health, Pub Health, Tech, Lifespan, Industrialized)
5:30 p.m.
www.istss.org
Meeting Adjourns
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
123
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Thursday Poster Session One Distribution Map
Grand Hall
Assessment/Diagnosis
Training/Education/Dissemination
Assessment/Diagnosis
223 224 225 226 227 228
229 230 231 234
235 236 237 238
240 241 242 243
244 245 246 247
248 249 251 252 253 254 255 256
222 219 218 217 216 215
214 213 212 211
210 209 206 205
272 271 270 269
268 267 266 265
264 263 262 261 260 259 258 257
Technology
Clinical Practice
193 194 195 196
197 198 199 200
201 202 203 204
273 275 277 278
192 191 190 189
188 187 186 185
184 183 182 181
Clinical Intervention/Research
Biological/Medical
279 280 281 283
284 285 286 287
301 300 299 298
297 296 295 293
292 291 290 289 Methodology
Global
Vicarious Traumatization & Therapist Self Care
Culture/Diversity
167 168 169 170
171 172 173 174
177 178 179 180
302 303 304 306
166 165 164 163
162 161 160 159
158 157 156 155
329 327 326 325
Research
Community-based Programs Social Issues/Public Policy
308 309 310 311
Multi-Media
313 314 315 316
324 323 322 321
320 319 318 317
Prevention/Early Intervention
Ethics
141 143 144 145
146 147 148 149
150 151 153 154
330 331 332 333
334 335 336 337
339 340 341 342
140 138 136 135
134 133 132 131
130 129 128 126
356 355 354 353
352 351 350 349
348 345 344 343
Public Health
113 114 115 116
112 111 110 109
117 118 119 121
122 123 124 125
108 107 106 105
104 103 102 101
Fire
Exits
Student Poster Award Finalists
FX
Entrance
FX
Global
STREE
ENTRA
297 – 302
Culture/Diversity
303 – 306
Community-based
Programs
DOWN
DOWN
308 – 311
Thursday Poster Distribution
Student Poster Award Finalists
101 – 118
Clinical Intervention/Research
REGISTRATION
REGISTRATION
119 – 216
Technology
217 – 219
Training/Education/Dissemination
222 –ENTRANCE
228
Social
Issues/Public
Policy
UP
UP
ENTRANCE
Assessment/Diagnosis
229 – 255
DUMPSTER
Multi-Media
315
Ethics
Research Methodology
285 – 293
Public Health
LOUNGE
LOUNGE
ELEV.
MACH. RM.
WF
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
316 – 332
FX
333
EXIT
www.istss.org
295 – 296
EXIT
Vicarious Traumatization & Therapist Self Care
WF
UNISEX
270 – 284
UNISEX
Biological/Medical
WF
FX
334 – 356
EXIT
Prevention/Early Intervention
WF
EXIT
256 – 269
ELEV.
MACH. RM.
Clinical Practice
Fire
Exits
313 – 314
124
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
Student Poster Award Finalists
Author Attended Poster Session One
Thursday, November 10
5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
Poster Organization
Each poster is scheduled for either Author Attended Poster
Session One on Thursday, the Featured Poster Presentations
at the Welcome Reception or Author Attended Poster Session
Two on Friday and includes a time period when the presenting
author is available to answer questions.
Posters are organized in the conference program by poster
number on each day. The presenting author is bolded. A floor
map showing the layout of posters is on page 117.
Key:
Poster # Number (Primary keyword, Secondary Keywords,
Population type) Presentation Level – Region Keyword
type descriptions can be found on page 61.
Regions and Population Types can be found on page 62.
Presentation levels and descriptions can be found on
page 62.
Session One: Thursday, November 10
Poster Setup: 8:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m.
Poster Viewing: 10:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Author Attended Poster Session: 5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Poster Dismantle: 6:30 p.m.
Poster Dismantle
Immediately following your scheduled poster session,
display materials must be taken down and removed. Items
not removed by the appointed poster dismantle time will be
disposed of and are not the responsibility of ISTSS.
Access the Abstracts
Visit the ISTSS Website and download the Session Abstract
Book and the Poster Abstract Book
Use the Itinerary Builder to plan your meeting
THU 101
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Chronic, Practice, Complex, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
Premature Termination Factors among Children Receiving
Trauma-Focused Treatment at a Child Advocacy Center
Steinzor, Cazzie, Wamser-Nanney, Rachel
THU 102
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Complex, Civil/War, Child/Adol)
M - M East & N Africa
Resilience as a Predictive Factor of Therapeutic Change
Joachim, Brandon, D’Andrea, Wendy, Bergholz, Lou, Freed
Steven
THU 103
(Clin Res, Bio Med, Prevent, Pub Health, Tech, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Role of Coping Self-efficacy on Parasympathetic Response
to an Online Intervention
Devane, Amanda, Shoji, Kotaro, Boult, Terrance, Benight,
Charles
THU 104
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Clin Res, Practice, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Emotion Regulation as a Mechanism of Change in
Group-Delivered Unified Protocol for Veterans Diagnosed
with PTSD
Sherrill, Andrew, Varkovitzky, Ruth
THU 105
(Clin Res, Cul Div, Global, Civil/War, Adult)
M - S Asia
Reconsolidation Blockade (RB) for the Treatment of Torture
Survivors: A Randomized Control Trial in Nepal
Descamps, Melanie, Kienzler, Hanna, Sharma, Bhogendra,
Sapkota, Ram P., Pedersen, Duncan, Brunet, Alain
Download the meeting app
THU 106
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Sub/Abuse, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Use of the AUDIT Screener in a Trauma-Exposed Sample:
Comparing the Predictive Value of Phone and Computer
Administration Techniques
Dutton, Courtney, Bujarski, Sarah, Lang, Katelyn, Bermudez,
Andrea, Timmerman, Jesse, Feldner, Matthew
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
125
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 107
(Train/Ed/Dis, Clin Res, Health, Rape, Gender, Adult)
I - Industrialized
THU 113
(Journalism and Trauma, Health, Social, Journalists)
M - Global
Prevalence and Correlates of Sexual Dysfunction among
Male and Female Veterans who Have Experienced Military
Sexual Trauma
Detweiler, Laura, Garneau-Fournier, Jade, McBain, Sacha,
Torres, Tammy, Turchik, Jessica
THU 108
(Assess Dx, Acc/Inj, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
THU 114
(Social, CSA, Rape, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
Associations between Pain, Morphine Use, and
osttraumatic Stress after Pediatric Injury
Hildenbrand, Aimee, Kassam-Adams, Nancy, Barakat, Lamia,
Kohser, Kristen, Marsac, Meghan
THU 109
(Practice, Chronic, Health, Social, Gender, Adult)
I - N/A
Examining the Relationships among Interpersonal
Violence, Re-experiencing Symptoms, and Self-injury in a
Sample of Incarcerated Women
Kaplan, Stephanie, DeCou, Christopher, Cole, Trevor, Lynch,
Shannon
Intrusive Thoughts, Avoidance, and Hyperarousal in
Sexually Abused Teenage Girls: the Impact of Shame and
Self-blame
Alix, Stéphanie, Hébert, Martine, Cossette, Louise, Cyr,
Mireille, Frappier, Jean-Yves
THU 115
(Social, CPA, CSA, Chronic, Pub Health, N/A)
I - Industrialized
Mentions of “Trauma-Informed” in Legislative Proposals
Introduced Before U.S. Congress: A Content Analysis
Lewis, Michael, Purtle, Jonathan
THU 116
(CulDiv, Health, Orient, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
THU 110
(Bio Med, Affect/Int, Bio/Int, Neuro, Police)
M - Industrialized
Intranasal Oxytocin Administration Improves Neural
Sensitivity for Social Reward in Patients with PTSD
Nawijn, Laura, van Zuiden, Mirjam, Koch, Saskia, Frijling,
Jessie, Veltman, Dick, Olff, Miranda
Combat Exposure and Minority Stress among LGB Military
Service Members
Bliss, Whitney, Evans, Wyatt, Rincon, Christina, Balsam,
Kimberly
THU 117
(Commun, Assess Dx, Practice, Care, Adult)
M - Industrialized
THU 111
(Bio Med, Fam/Int, Health, Mil/Vets, Theory, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Relationship Conflict as a Mediator between Trauma
Exposure and Health Outcomes in Soldiers
Oseland, Lauren, Nelson Goff, Briana
The Real Deal: Trauma Symptoms in Primary Care
Jackson, Selena, Langhinrichsen-Rohling, Jennifer, Johns,
Keri
THU 118
(Commun, Commun, DV, Fam/Int, Gender, Lifespan)
I - Industrialized
THU 112
(Bio Med, Acc/Inj, Acute, Bio Med, Prevent, Adult)
I - Industrialized
A Post-Trauma Evaluation of PTSD Clusters Following
Hydrocortisone Treatment
Garcia, Monica, Junglen, Angela, Wise, Anna, Delahanty,
Douglas, Ostrowski, Sarah
www.istss.org
Does Social Support Mitigate the Relationship between
Trauma Exposure and Post-traumatic Stress among
Journalists?
Patel, Anushka, Drevo, Susan, Parker, Kelsey, Brummel,
Bradley, Newman, Elana
The Effect of Childhood Adversity and Prenatal Intimate
Partner Violence on Breastfeeding Intent, Initiation, and
Early Cessation
Scheid, Caroline, Miller-Graff, Laura, Morand, Susan, Trujillo,
Mayson
Presenting Author is Bolded
126
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
Clinical/Intervention Research
THU 125
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Chronic, Practice, Dev/Int, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
THU 119
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Aggress, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
The Roles of Trauma Exposure, Callousness-Unemotional
Traits, and Rejection Sensitivity in the Aggressive Behavior
of Justice-Involved Youth: A Moderated Mediation Model
Mozley, Michaela, Modrowski, Crosby, Kerig, Patricia
THU 121
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Cog/Int, Health, Mil/Vets, Child/Adol)
M - N/A
The Impact of Coping Self-Efficacy on Visual Intrusions
after Trauma
Rahman, Nadia, Horesh, Danny, Kapel, Rony, Bryant, Richard,
Marmar, Charles, Brown, Adam
THU 122
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Health, Illness, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
An Exploration of the Relationship among Posttraumatic
Stress Symptoms, Pain Catastrophizing, and Pain
Symptoms in a Pediatric Amplified Pain Population
Weiss, Danielle, Hildenbrand, Aimee, Kennedy, Traci, Miller,
Kimberly, Sherker, Jennifer
Examination of the Interaction of Age and Placement Status
as it Impacts Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms in a Sample of
Polyvictimized Youth
Sprang, Ginny, Ascienzo, Sarah
THU 126
(Clin Res, Acc/Inj, Aggress, DV, Adult)
I - N/A
The Association between Emotion Regulation Difficulties
and Attachment in Predicting Risk for Victimization among
Female IPV Survivors
Hodges, Mikhaella, Dadouch, Zena, Lilly, Michelle
THU 128
(Clin Res, Acute, Affect/Int, Adult)
I - N/A
Positive Affect in the Daily Life of World Trade Center
Responders with PTSD: No Evidence of Restriction
Dornbach-Bender, Allison, Ruggero, Camilo, Liu, Keke,
Shteynberg, Yuliya
THU 129
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Anx, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Role of Rumination in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Connell, Nicholas, Lacour, Alyssa, Daigle, Caitlin, McDermott,
Michael
THU 123
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Depr, QoL, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
The Effect of Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral
Therapy on Quality of Life of Children and Adolescents with
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Randomized-Control Trial
Pfeiffer, Elisa, Sachser, Cedric, Tutus, Dunja, Goldbeck, Lutz
THU 124
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Comm/Vio, Sub/Abuse, Gender, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
The Moderating Effect of Trauma Exposure on Alcohol Use
and Academic Performance in College Students
Tomascak, Shannon, Pugach, Cameron, Allwood, Maureen
THU 130
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Chronic, Sub/Abuse, Gender, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Role of Anger and Emotional Avoidance in the Relation
between Child Emotional Abuse and Substance Use
Problems in Adult Men
Kaufman, Julia, Eshelman, Lee, Messman-Moore, Terri
THU 131
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Adult)
M - N/A
Attentional Control, Emotion Regulation Strategies, and
PTSD Symptomatology
Mercer, Mary Catherine, London, Melissa, Lilly, Michelle
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
127
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 132
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Cog/Int, Depr, Adult)
I - N/A
THU 140
(Clin Res, Anx, CPA, CSA, Theory, Adult)
M - N/A
Reappraisal-focused Expressive Writing Reduces
Experiential Avoidance and Depression Symptoms for
Victims of Interpersonal Transgressions
Warnke, Andrew, Pickett, Scott
THU 133
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Complex, QoL, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Know Pain, Know Gain: The Relationship between Trauma
Exposure, Pain, and Self-regulation
Doukas, Ashley, Schmidt, Andria, Gregory, Wesley, Litwin,
Hillary, D’Andrea, Wendy
THU 134
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Practice, Cog/Int, Theory, Adult)
M - Industrialized
A Trauma Analogue Study Investigating the Role of
Attentional Shifting in the Effectiveness of Emotion
Regulation Strategies
London, Melissa, Mercer, Mary Catherine, Alderks, Adelaide,
Gustafson, Holly, Lilly, Michelle
THU 135
(Clin Res, Aggress, Rape, Gender, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Moderating Impact of Masculinity on Men’s Anger and
Risky Sexual Behavior after Rape
Eshelman, Lee, Messman-Moore, Terri
THU 141
(Clin Res, Anx, CSA, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Parenting Childhood Victims of Sexual Abuse:
A Comparative Study of Mothers with and without Histories
as Victims
Kaplan, Talia, Yasik, Anastasia, Popiel, Maryann, Maynor,
Whitney, Salbod, Stephen, Velayo, Richard, Baker, Christine
THU 143
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Pub Health, Res Meth, Adult)
M - Latin Amer & Carib
Prevalence Analysis of Traumatic Stress Disorder, Related
Events and the identification of a Symptomatic Triad in a
Clinical Sample from Chile
Salgado, Carolina, Bravo, Patricia, Iribarren, Carla, Fuentes,
Gabriel, Duque, Gloria
THU 144
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Sleep, Theory, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Predictive Power of Sleep Complaints and Mindfulness
for Dissociative Experiences
Malaktaris, Anne, Lynn, Steven
THU 136
(Clin Res, Aggress, Anx, Depr, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Validating the Seven-factor Hybrid Model of PTSD:
Differential Associations with External Correlates
Kramer, Lindsay, Dieujuste, Nathalie, Silverstein, Madison, Lee,
Daniel, Weathers, Frank
THU 138
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Comm/Int, Cul Div, Adult)
- Industrialized
Evidence-based Practices in Traumatized Individuals
Suffering from Severe Mental Illness and Diverted from Jail
Galovski, Tara, Gloth, Chelsea, Chappuis, Courtney
www.istss.org
Anxiety Sensitivity and Dissociation: A Structural
Equation Model Predicting Dispositional Traits and Adult
PTSD Symptom Severity from Childhood Trauma across
Developmental Stages and Parental Bonding
Yetzer, Andrea, Colon, Lisa, Taylor, Jerika, Pyszczynski, Tom,
Lac, Andrew
THU 145
(Clin Res, Chronic, Practice, Cog/Int, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Temporal Relationship between Coping Self-Efficacy
and Dissociation in Undergraduate Students
Mahoney, Colin, Melville, Erin, Benight, Charles
THU 146
(Clin Res, Chronic, Depr, Health, Gender, Adult)
I - N/A
The Role of Current and Past Intimate Partner Violence on
Depression Among Women
Jamison, Lacy, Howell, Kathryn, Thurston, Idia, Schwartz,
Laura, Decker, Kristina
Presenting Author is Bolded
128
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 147
(Clin Res, Chronic, DV, Health, QoL, Adult)
I - Global
THU 154
(Clin Res, Clin Res, QoL, Adult)
- Industrialized
Mental and Physical Health Trajectories after Leaving an
Abusive Partner: A Systematic Review
Szabo, Yvette, Newton, Tamara, Patton, Samantha
THU 148
(Clin Res, Chronic, DV, Pub Health, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Does Problem-solving Orientation Impact the Relationship
between Posttraumatic Cognitions and PTSD?
Dodson, Thomas, Tran, Han, Woodward, Matthew, Pickover,
Alison, Lipinski, Alexandra, Beck, J Gayle
THU 149
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Commun, DV, Gender, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Cognitive Processing Therapy among Survivors of Intimate
Partner Violence: Baseline Characteristics and Study
Completion in a Novel Population
Gallegos, Autumn, Pigeon, Wilfred, Cerulli, Catherine,
Heffner, Kathi
THU 150
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Comm/Vio, Health, Gender, Adult)
I - N/A
The Effects of Race, Gender, and Important Clinical
Correlates on PTSD Symptom Clusters in Community
Members following Ferguson Protests
Medoff, Nina, Taverna, Emily, Peterson, Zoe, Galovski, Tara
THU 151
(Clin Res, Clin Res, QoL, Prevent, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Effects of a Flexible TF-CBT on PTSD and Quality of Life
among Individuals with PTSD and Concomitant Problems
Guay, Stéphane, Fortin, Christophe, Fortin, Maxime
THU 153
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Gender, Adult)
- Industrialized
Roles of Dysregulated Anger on Outcomes and Therapeutic
Processes in Cognitive Processing Therapy
Mackintosh, Margaret-Anne, Willis, Emy, Sweeney, MargaretMary, Morland, Leslie
www.istss.org
Predictors of Quality of Life Outcomes Following Cognitive
Processing Therapy for Female Trauma Survivors
Wells, Stephanie, Herzberg Purdy, Kristin, Grubbs, Kathleen,
Wickramasinghe, Induni, Morland, Leslie, Mackintosh,
Margaret-Anne
THU 155
(Clin Res, DV, QoL, Rape, Gender, Adult)
- Industrialized
Predictors of Improved Sexual Functioning Following
Cognitive Processing Therapy for Women Enrolled in a
Randomized Controlled Trial
Tunze, Chloe, Chatfield, Miranda, Sohn, Min Ji, Wells,
Stephanie, Mackintosh, Margaret-Anne, Morland, Leslie
THU 156
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Health, Sub/Abuse, Tech, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Mobile Technology May Improve Smoking Cessation
Treatment Retention in Veteran Smokers with PTSD: An
Open Pilot Study
Herbst, Ellen, Kuhn, Eric, McCaslin, Shannon, Dickter,
Benjamin, Jones, Megan, Pennington, David
THU 157
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Sub/Abuse, Adult)
M - Industrialized
A Review of the Therapeutic Potential of Cannabinoids for
PTSD
Babson, Kimberly, Loflin, Mallory, Bonn-Miller, Marcel
THU 158
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Illness, Rape, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Restoring Emotional, Sexual, and Physical Empowerment
through CBT & Trauma-sensitive Care (RESPECT): A Chronic
Pelvic Pain Intervention
Tirone, Vanessa, Hobfoll, Stevan, Dugan, Sheila
THU 159
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Practice, Cog/Int, Adult)
A - Industrialized
The Relationship between Regulative Distress Tolerance,
Counterfactual Ruminative Thinking, and PTSD Symptom
Clusters
Claycomb, Meredith, Contractor, Ateka, Mitchell, Melissa,
Dranger, Paula, Elhai, Jon
Presenting Author is Bolded
129
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 160
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Chronic, Cog/Int, Adult)
A - Industrialized
THU 166
(Clin Res, Complex, Adult)
A - N/A
Assessing Differences in Anxiety Sensitivity’s Cognitions
between Individuals Exposed to One Vs. Multiple Traumas
Claycomb, Meredith, Lv, Xin, Byllesby, Brianna, Durham, Tory,
Charak, Ruby, Elhai, Jon
THU 161
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Complex, Adult)
I - N/A
THU 167
(Clin Res, CPA, CSA, Complex, Neglect, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Alterations in Sustained Attention in Emotion Conditions
Associated with Trauma Exposure and Symptoms
Stafford, Erin, Herzog, Sarah, D’Andrea, Wendy, Wood, Lucy,
Siegle, Greg
THU 162
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Gender, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Institutional Abuse (IA) and Implicit Motives of Power,
Affiliation, and Achievement - an Alternative Perspective
on Trauma-Related Psychological Responses
Weindl, Dina, Lueger-Schuster, Brigitte
THU 168
(Clin Res, CPA, CSA, Chronic, Adult)
I - N/A
World Assumptions, Gender, Personality, and Symptoms of
PTSD in Trauma-exposed Undergraduates
Dadouch, Zena, Hodges, Mikhaella, Lilly, Michelle
THU 163
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Health, Bio/Int, Res Meth, Adult)
M - Industrialized
A Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience Approach to
Trustworthiness Bias in Trauma-exposed Individuals
Lopez-Castro, Teresa, Radoncic, Vanja, Saraiya, Tanya, Hien,
Denise
THU 164
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Health, Pub Health, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Examining the Role of Perceived Stress in the Relation
between Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms and Physical
Health
Cantú, Norma, Connell, Nicholas, Salinas, Claire, Knox,
Madison, Lacour, Alyssa, McDermott, Michael
THU 165
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Posttrauma Cognitions Mediate the Relationship between
Coping Behaviors and PTSD Outcomes Following Combat
Trauma Exposure
Sheerin, Christina, Chowdhury, Nadia, Lind, Mackenzie,
Rapport, Lance, Berenz, Erin, Amstadter, Ananda
www.istss.org
Associations Between Self-reports of Executive Functioning
and PTSD Symptom Clusters
Rogel, Ainat, Suvak, Michael, Hodgdon, Hilary, Southwell,
Elizabeth, Spinazzola, Joseph, van der Kolk, Bessel
The Impact of Childhood Abuse on Prospective
Relationships between Resource Loss and Posttraumatic
Stress Disorder
Himmerich, Sara, Seligowski, Antonia, Reffi, Anthony, Orcutt,
Holly
THU 169
(Clin Res, CPA, CSA, Cul Div, Gender, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Differential Effects of Early Sexual Trauma and Negative
Family Environment on BPD Symptoms in African-American
Women
Clifford, Zachary, Bradley, Bekh, Jovanovic, Tanja1, Powers
Lott, Abigail
THU 170
(Clin Res, CPA, CSA, Health, QoL, Adult)
I - N/A
Childhood Abuse: Long-term Implications for
Interpersonal-related Quality of Life through Mental and
Physical Health Sequelae Experienced During Adulthood
Taverna, Emily, Vogt, Dawne, Smith, Brian
THU 171
(Clin Res, Cul Div, Rape, Orient, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Sexual Identity and Contextual Features of Sexual Assault
Experiences are Associated with Trauma Symptoms
Lopez, Gabriela, Yeater, Elizabeth
Presenting Author is Bolded
130
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 172
(Clin Res, Depr, Fam/Int, Adult)
M - Industrialized
THU 181
(Clin Res, Practice, Pub Health, Res Meth, Sleep, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Family Treatments for Veterans with PTSD: Exploring the
Role of Psychiatric Comorbidity in Symptom Improvement
Laws, Holly, Hoff, Rani
THU 173
Clin Res, Cog/Int, Fam/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
PTSD, Guilt and Shame from a Dyadic Perspective
Dekel, Rachel, Shoval-Zuckerman, Yael
THU 174
(Clin Res, Fam/Int, Self-Care, Adult)
- Industrialized
Survivor Guilt in the Aftermath of the Troubles: Preliminary
Insights
Tosone, Carol
Examining the Relationship Between Suicidal Ideation and
Sleep: Are Nightmares the Key?
Cogan, Chelsea, Davis, Joanne, Cranston, Christopher,
Pruiksma, Kristi
THU 182
(Clin Res, Practice, Sub/Abuse, Adult)
M - N/A
Looking Beyond Symptoms: Coping Changes in a
Randomized Controlled Trial of Concurrent Treatment for
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Alcohol Dependence
Fitzgerald, Hayley, Chazin, Daniel, Zang, Yinyin, Asnaani, Anu,
Zandberg, Laurie, Foa, Edna
THU 183
(Clin Res, Prevent, Train/Ed/Dis, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Capability for Suicide in Firefighters
Streeb, Nicole, Benight, Charles, Shoji, Kotaro
THU 177
(Clin Res, Depr, Adult)
I - N/A
Anger and Rumination Mediate Relations between
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Major Depression
Symptoms
Claycomb, Meredith, Elhai, Jon, Brough, Shawna
THU 178
(Clin Res, DV, Adult)
M - Industrialized
“You’re Fat and Ugly”: Combined Effects of Psychological
Maltreatment and Physical Violence on Body Image in a
Sample of Battered Women
Weaver, Terri, Elrod, Noel, Bosch, Jeane, Jaques, Michelle
THU 184
(Clin Res, Pub Health, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Type of Combat Exposure as a Predictor of Intensity of
Suicidal Ideation in Veterans with Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder
Kittel, Julie, Kimbrel, Nathan, Meyer, Eric, Horan, William,
Morissette, Sandra, DeBeer, Bryann
THU 185
(Clin Res, QoL, Pub Health, Social, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Effect of Dog Adoption on Loneliness in Veterans with
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Jeffreys, Matthew, Peterson, Alan, Mintz, Jim, Copeland,
Laurel, Young-McCaughan, Stacey, Stern, Stephen
THU 179
(Clin Res, Health, Social, Adult)
M - Global
Perceived Barriers and Facilitators to Mental Health Service
Utilization in Adult Trauma Survivors: A Systematic Review
Kantor, Viktoria, Knefel, Matthias, Lueger-Schuster, Brigitte
THU 186
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Rape, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Sexual Victimization History and Labeling Others’
Experiences as Rape: Does Vulnerability Play a Role?
Pinciotti, Caitlin, Conley, Sara, Faleer, Hannah, Orcutt, Holly
THU 180
(Clin Res, Practice, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Role of Personality Traits in the Post-Trauma Outcomes
of Combat Veterans: An Examination of Posttraumatic
Stress and Posttraumatic Growth
Paige, Lauren, Bergmann, Jeffrey, Renshaw, Keith, Heinz,
Adrienne
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
131
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 187
(Clin Res, Rape, Gender, Adult)
I - N/A
THU 193
(Clin Res, Anx, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - N/A
The Relationship between Military Sexual Trauma and
Maladaptive Emotion Regulation Behaviors
Thomas, Katie, Hannan, Susan, Allard, Carolyn
THU 188
(Clin Res, Rape, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Role of Borderline Personality Disorder in Cognitive
Processing Therapy for Female Veterans with Military
Sexual Trauma-related Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Holder, Nicholas, Holliday, Ryan, Pai, Anushla, Suris, Alina
THU 189
(Clin Res, Rape, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - N/A
The Association between Military Sexual Harassment and
PTSD among Veterans of the Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan:
An Examination of Moderating Factors
Vento, Stephanie, Gradus, Jaimie, Street, Amy
THU 190
(Clin Res, Rape, Mil/Vets, Gender, Adult)
I - N/A
Specific Trauma Types and their Association with
Employment Status and Occupational Functioning among
Female Veterans
Bartlett, Brooke, Mitchell, Karen, Smith, Brian, Iverson,
Katherine
THU 191
(Clin Res, Res Meth, Train/Ed/Dis, Theory, Adult)
M - N/A
Rumination and Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms:
A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Szabo, Yvette, Warnecke, Ashlee, Newton, Tamara, Valentine,
Jeffrey
THU 192
(Clin Res, Tech, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Home Based Treatment for PTSD with Veterans:
Predictors of Treatment Completion
Yoder, Matthew
www.istss.org
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms and Suicidality:
The Mediating Role of Anxiety Sensitivity Cognitive
Concerns
Raines, Amanda, Walton, Jessica, McManus, Eliza, Franklin, C,
Cuccurullo, Lisa-Ann, Uddo, Madeline
THU 194
(Clin Res, Anx, Depr, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- N/A
False Safety Behavior Elimination Treatment Group for
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Raines, Amanda, Vidaurri, Desirae, Walton, Jessica, Franklin,
C, McPhillips, Kaitlyn, Uddo, Madeline, Schmidt, Norman
THU 195
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Depr, QoL, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- N/A
Mindfulness for the Treatment of PTSD: The Effectiveness
of a Group Mindfulness Intervention
Cuccurullo, Lisa-Ann, McManus, Eliza, Walton, Jessica,
Chambliss, Jessica, Uddo, Madeline, Franklin, C
THU 196
(Clin Res, Sleep, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- N/A
The Adaptation of CBT-I for Veterans Diagnosed with
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Walton, Jessica, Thompson, Karin, Cuccurullo, Lisa-Ann,
McManus, Eliza, Raines, Amanda, Franklin, C
THU 197
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Rape, Res Meth, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Shame and Guilt in Trauma: Implications from a
Comprehensive Literature Review
Grout, Kathleen, Teng, Ellen
THU 198
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Longer Term Responses to Treatment in UK Veterans with
PTSD
Murphy, Dominic
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 199
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Practice, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - N/A
THU 205
(Clin Res, CPA, Chronic, Health, Res Meth, Lifespan)
A - Industrialized
Exploring Emotion Regulation Difficulties and PTSD in
Military Veterans
Chase, Tannah, Stanley, Melinda, Barrera, Terri, Exline, Julie,
Pargament, Kenneth, Teng, Ellen
THU 200
(Clin Res, Bio Med, Sleep, Mil/Vets, Adult)
A - Industrialized
Childhood Maltreatment and Borderline Personality Traits
in Young Adults: A Type and Timing Specific Analysis
Khan, Alaptagin, McCormack, Hannah, Bolger, Elizabeth,
McGreenery, Cynthia, Polcari, Ann, Teicher, Martin
THU 206
(Clin Res, Clin Res, DV, Gender, Lifespan)
M - Industrialized
Low-Dose Sublingual Cyclobenzaprine (TNX-102 SL) in
Military-related PTSD: Results of a Randomized, Placebocontrolled Multicenter Trial
Sullivan, Gregory, Gendreau, Judy, Gendreau, R. Michael,
Jividen, Heather, Daugherty, Bruce, Lederman, Seth
THU 201
(Clin Res, Comm/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Trajectory of Mental Health among Mothers and
Children who Exposed to Intimate Partner Violence:
Prospective Longitudinal Study
Kamo, Toshiko, Kim, Yoshiharu, Ito, Madoka, Ujiie, Yuri,
Nakayama, Michi
THU 209
(Clin Res, Fam/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
The Role of Self-stigma and Self-forgiveness in Mental
Health Service Utilization among Returning Veterans
Carroll, Timothy, Currier, Joseph
THU 202
(Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
The Contribution of Wives’ Support to the Adjustment of
Military Veterans
Dekel, Rachel, Siegel, Alana, Fridkin, Shimon, Svetlitzky, Vlad
THU 210
(Clin Res, Depr, Sleep, Gender, Adult)
- Industrialized
Assessing the Unique Role of Spiritual Struggles in Risk for
Suicidal Behavior in U.S. Military Veterans
Currier, Joseph
THU 203
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Theory, Adult)
- Industrialized
Sleep Quality Accounts for Some of the Association
between Service Members’ PTSD Symptoms and Partners’
Depression
Summers, Chris, Carter, Sarah, Renshaw, Keith, Allen,
Elizabeth
Appraisals of Meaning and Meaning Making Processes after
Trauma Predict Spiritual Wellbeing and Trauma-Related
Distress
Park, Crystal
THU 204
(Clin Res, Illness, QoL, Lifespan)
I - Industrialized
Post-Traumatic Growth in Adolescent and Young Adult
Cancer Survivors: Real Change, Proxy or Coping?
Cho, Dalnim, Park, Crystal
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
Technology
THU 211
(Clin Res, Fam/Int, Mil/Vets, Lifespan)
- Industrialized
Intergenerational Memories of War and Mental Health
Issues in US Military Couples
Brown, Adam, Ferguson, Kim, Parnes, McKenna, Hirst, William
THU 212
(Clin Res, Fam/Int, Mil/Vets, Lifespan)
I - Industrialized
Trauma Centrality as a Mechanism for the Transmission of
Mental Health Issues in US Military Families
Brown, Adam, Ferguson, Kim, Parnes, McKenna, Hirst, William
THU 213
(Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Theistic Belief, Meaning Making, and Post Traumatic
Growth: A Mediational Analysis
Slagel, Brett, McCormick, Wesley, Currier, Joseph
THU 214
(Clin Res, Res Meth, Mil/Vets, Theory, Veterans)
M - N/A
Reaching Constructive Posttraumatic Growth: The Role of
Social Support for Military Veterans
Saltzman, Leia, Pat-Horenczyk, Ruth, Lombe, Margaret,
McNamara, Tay, Takeuchi, David
THU 217
(Tech, Practice, Media, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Collaborative Management of PTSD Treatment through
Smartphone Apps: What is Available and Accessible?
Brown, Elaine, Benzer, Justin, Creech, Suzannah, Kum, HyeChung, Sasangohar, Farzan
THU 218
(Tech, Practice, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Veteran Feedback on Between-session Practice Using a
Smartphone App
Grubbs, Kathleen, Conover, Kate, Kloezeman, Karen, Savage,
Ulysses, Mackintosh, Margaret-Anne
THU 219
(Tech, Clin Res, Practice, Prof)
I - Industrialized
Influence of Trauma-focused Video Game on Graduate
Students’ Perceptions of Trauma and Gameplay in
Treatment Settings
Kramer, Samantha, Levy, Rafael, Mangino, Michael, Demaria,
Thomas
THU 215
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Prof)
I - Industrialized
An Outcome Data System to Guide EBT Interventions
Allen, Steven, Mullin, Thomas, Ahern, Dennis
THU 216
(Clin Res, Practice, Sub/Abuse, Prof)
M - Industrialized
Treating Co-occurring PTSD and Substance Use in
Adolescents: Service Provider Perspectives from Australia
and the US
Barrett, Emma, Adams, Zachary, Mills, Katherine, Back, Sudie
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
Training/Education/ Dissemination
THU 222
(Train/Ed/Dis, Chronic, Complex, Train/Ed/Dis, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
Building and Sustaining Evidence-Informed Practice:
Findings from a Nationwide Survey on the Attachment,
Regulation, and Competency (ARC) Framework
Neubacher, Katrin, Blaustein, Margaret
THU 228
(Train/Ed/Dis, CPA, Clin Res, Fam/Int, Intergen, Prof)
- Industrialized
Integrating Technology Into A Learning Collaborative
to Disseminate and Help Implement a Trauma-informed
Intervention to Prevent Child Maltreatment: GABI (GABI©)
and the UDEMY platform
Armusewicz, Kelsey, Hoffmann, Sophia, Murphy, Anne
Assessment/Diagnosis
THU 223
(Train/Ed/Dis, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Increased Utilization of PE and CPT Over Time: A Case
Example from a Large VAMC PTSD Clinic
Hundt, Natalie, Thompson, Karin, Barrera, Terri, Miles,
Shannon, Cully, Jeffrey
THU 224
(Train/Ed/Dis, Anx, Cog/Int, Comm/Vio, Adult)
A - Latin Amer & Carib
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Academic Performance
in a Population of University Students
Pereira, Juliana, Netto, Liana, Cavalcanti-Ribeiro, Patrícia,
Koenen, Karestan, Sampaio, Aline S., Quarantini, Lucas
THU 229
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, CPA, CSA, Clin Res, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
Screening PTSD with the CPSS-5 and Addressing Barriers to
Assessment and Care
Tannahill, Hallie, Asnaani, Anu, Zang, Yinyin, Foa, Edna
THU 230
(Assess Dx, CPA, CSA, Clin Res, Fam/Int, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
Developing Culturally and Trauma Competent Mental
Health Graduate Students: Case Study in Latina America
Wycoff, Kirby
THU 231
(Assess Dx, Affect/Int, Depr, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
THU 225
(Train/Ed/Dis, Cog/Int, Prevent, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Using Research Results about Predictors of PTSD to Reduce
Stigma and Increase the Public’s Knowledge of PTSD
Reiland, Sarah
Examining the Role of Childhood Trauma on Negative
Affect in a Recently Hospitalized Adolescent Population
Brier, Zoe, Marraccini, Marisa, Brick, Leslie, Nugent, Nicole
THU 234
(Assess Dx, Acc/Inj, Acute, Assess Dx, Adult)
M - Industrialized
THU 226
(Train/Ed/Dis, CPA, Clin Res, Practice, Prof)
I - N/A
Clinicians’ Knowledge of, Training in, and Utilization of
Evidence-based Treatments for Child Maltreatment, and
Barriers to Training and Utilization: A Mixed Methods Study
McCarthy, Katherine, Samuelson, Kristin
Inconsistencies in the Reporting of Trauma Exposure
Characteristics among Acute Physical Injury Survivors
Larsen, Sadie, Pacella, Maria, Garfin, Dana, Hunt, Josh, Mota,
Natalie, deRoon-Cassini, Terri
THU 227
(Train/Ed/Dis, Ethics, Self-Care, Prof)
M - N/A
A Trauma Competency Self-evaluation Tool: Integrating the
New Haven Trauma Competencies into Clinical Training
Orliss, Micah, Long, Richelle
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 235
(Assess Dx, Bio Med, Depr, Genetic, Adult)
M - Industrialized
THU 242
(Assess Dx, Pub Health, Rape, Gender, Adult)
M - E Asia & Pac
Serotonin Transporter and Oxytocin Receptor Together
Moderate the Association between Depression Severity and
Perceived Limitations in Community Reintegration Ratings
Graham, David, Harding, Mark, Nielsen, David
THU 236
(Assess Dx, Pub Health, Rape, Res Meth, Social, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Use of Technology for Assessing Sexual Assault
Prevalence Rates: A Multi-method Comparison
Steward, Jennifer, Micol, Rachel, Shotwell Tabke, Chelsea,
Hancock, Kelsey, Scholl, James, Davis, Joanne
THU 237
(Assess Dx, Chronic, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Unique Associations between Childhood, Adult, or Military
Trauma and Eating Disorder Symptomatology in a Sample
of Female Veterans
Arditte, Kimberly, Bartlett, Brooke, Iverson, Katherine,
Mitchell, Karen
THU 238
(Assess Dx, Clin Res, Adult)
I - Industrialized
THU 243
(Assess Dx, Practice, Sub/Abuse, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Psychometric Properties of the Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder Checklist-5 (PCL-5) among Criminally-Involved
Substance Abusing Women
Merdijana, Kovacevic, Shotwell Tabke, Chelsea, Dorand,
Madisen, Rex, Ethan, Newman, Elana
THU 244
(Assess Dx, Acc/Inj, Depr, Adult) I - N/A
Chronic Pain is Associated with PTSD and Depression at 12
Months Post-Trauma
Renner, Erin, Michopoulos, Vasiliki, Rothbaum, Barbara,
Ressler, Kerry
THU 245
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Res Meth, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Assessment, Treatment, and Sensitivity to Change of Early
Maladaptive Schemas
Wetterneck, Chad
THU 240
(Assess Dx, Acute, Chronic, Complex, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Development and Validation of a Self-Report Measure of
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Complex PTSD
(CPTSD): The Complex Trauma Inventory
Litvin, Justin, Kaminski, Patricia
THU 241
(Assess Dx, Prevent, Pub Health, Res Meth, Care, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Operating Characteristics of the Single-item PTSD Screener
(SIPS)
Stewart, Lindsay, Evatt, Daniel, Harper, Elizabeth, Belsher,
Bradley, Beech, Erin, Freed, Michael
www.istss.org
Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms and Posttraumatic
Negative Cognition in Sexually Revictimized Women in
South Korea
Chang, Hyoung Yoon, Chung, Young-Ki, Noh, Jai Sung, Cha,
Kyeong Min
On the Assessment of Subthreshold PTSD: Convergent,
Discriminant, and Concurrent Validity According to Various
Definitions
Fink, David, Gradus, Jaimie, Tamburrino, Marijo, Liberzon,
Israel, Calabrese, Joseph, Keyes, Katherine
THU 246
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Res Meth, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Assessment Matters: How Controlling for Depression
Reveals Unique Associations between PTSD Dimensions,
Risk Factors and Outcomes
Ruggero, Camilo, Kotov, Roman
THU 247
(Assess Dx, Chronic, Pub Health, Refugee, Civil/War, Adult)
I - S Asia
Determinants of Mental Health and Resilience in an
Internally-displaced Population in Northern Sri Lanka
Thomas, Fiona, McShane, Kelly, Siriwardhana, Chesmal
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 248
(Assess Dx, Cog/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
THU 255
(Assess Dx, Practice, Global, Pub Health, Care, Child/Adol)
- N/A
The Relationship between Cognitive Functioning, Trauma
Centrality, and PTSD in Male OEF/OIF veterans
Hart, Roland, Rahman, Nadia, Bagrodia, Rohini, Kouri, Nicole,
Marmar, Charles, Brown, Adam
THU 249
(Assess Dx, Aggress, Sub/Abuse, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Clinical Practice
Cognitive Deficits Associated with Disinhibition among
OIF/OEF Veterans with PTSD
Hart, Roland, Newman, Jennifer, Marmar, Charles, Etkin, Amit
THU 251
(Assess Dx, QoL, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Reintegration Stress and Guilt among Veterans Pursuing
PTSD Treatment
Siegel, Emma, Myers, Ursula, Haller, Moira, Angkaw, Abigail,
Norman, Sonya
THU 256
(Practice, Anx, Clin Res, Gender, Adult)
M - N/A
A Prospective Study of Help-seeking among Female
Survivors of a Campus Shooting
Boykin, Derrecka, Pinciotti, Caitlin, Miller, Lindsay,
Himmerich, Sara, Orcutt, Holly
THU 257
(Practice, Comm/Int, Train/Ed/Dis, Adult)
I - Latin Amer & Carib
Results from Social Clinic For Trauma Victims Care, Based
on Somatic Experiencing Intervention in Bahia, Brazil
Netto, Liana, Passos, Solana
THU 252
(Assess Dx, Mil/Vets, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Assessing the Wartime Experiences of Vietnam-Era Women:
The Health of Vietnam-Era Women’s Study (HealthViEWS)
Sternke, Lisa Marie, Serpi, Tracey, Spiro III, Avron, Kimerling,
Rachel, Kilbourne, Amy, Magruder, Kathryn
THU 253
(Assess Dx, Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Influence of Trauma Type on Presentation of Self-Blame,
Shame, and Guilt
McManus, Eliza, Vidaurri, Desirae, Vaught, Amanda,
Cuccurullo, Lisa-Ann, Walton, Jessica, Franklin, C
THU 254
(Assess Dx, Fam/Int, Lifespan)
I - Industrialized
Parent vs. Self-Report of Emotion Regulation Difficulties in
Adolescents with Trauma Histories: A Concurrent Validity
Study
Bottera, Angeline, Jacoby, Vanessa, Scotti, Joseph, Krackow,
Elisa
www.istss.org
International Development and Validation of the Child and
Adolescent Trauma Screening Questionnaire (CATS)
Sachser, Cedric, Berliner, Lucy, Holt, Tonje, Jensen, Tine,
Jungbluth, Nathaniel, Risch, Elizabeth, Rosner, Rita, Goldbeck,
Lutz
THU 258
(Practice, Clin Res, Health, Rape, Gender, Adult)
- Industrialized
Perceptions of VHA Care among Veterans Exposed to
Military Sexual Trauma
Monteith, Lindsey, Dorsey Holliman, Brooke, Matarazzo,
Bridget, Soberay, Kelly, Gerber, Holly, Bahraini, Nazanin
THU 259
(Practice, Acc/Inj, Clin Res, Tech, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
Factors Impacting Treatment Retention in an Online
Chronic Pain Management Program for Military and
Veterans
Holens, Pamela
THU 260
Clin Res, Practice, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
Predictors of Mental Health Utilization and Psychotherapy
after Initial PTSD Diagnosis in a National Sample of Iraq and
Afghanistan Veterans
Smith, Noelle, Tsai, Jack, Pietrzak, Robert, Cook, Joan, Hoff,
Rani, Harpaz-Rotem, Ilan
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 261
(Practice, Complex, QoL, Terror, Adult)
M - Industrialized
THU 267
(Practice, Commun, Complex, Sub/Abuse, Adult)
M - N/A
What Do People Victim Of Terrorism Understand For
Psychological Well-being?
Gómez-Gutiérrez, M. Mar, Rodriguez, Manuel, Hervás,
Gonzalo, Marín, Carolina, Crespo, Maria, Vázquez, Carmelo
THU 262
(Practice, Assess Dx, Complex, Terror, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Postraumatic Stress Symtomathology and Psychological
Well-being in People Affected by the March 11 Attacks
Vázquez, Carmelo, Rodriguez, Manuel, Crespo, Maria, GómezGutiérrez, M. Mar, Hervás, Gonzalo, Marín, Carolina
THU 268
(Practice, CSA, Chronic, Complex, Rape, Adult)
M - N/A
Culturally-Tailored Treatment for Hispanic Victims of
Interpersonal Violence Using Group Cognitive Processing
Therapy in a Community-based Setting
Shealy, Kristen, Gomez, Martha, Eilers, Olivia, Davidson,
Tatiana, Rheingold, Alyssa, de Arellano, Michael
THU 269
(Practice, Acc/Inj, Acute, Illness, Lifespan)
M - Industrialized
THU 263
(Practice, Commun, Cul Div, DV, QoL, Adult)
I - N/A
Bilingual Intensive Case Management Services for Hispanic
Victims of Interpersonal Violence alongside Mental Health
Programs
Eilers, Olivia, Shealy, Kristen, Gomez, Martha, Davidson,
Tatiana, Rheingold, Alyssa, de Arellano, Michael
Young Children’s Acute Stress after Burn Injury:
Disentangling the Role of Injury Severity and Parental
Stress Reactions
Haag, Ann-Christin, Landolt, Markus
Biological/Medical
THU 264
(Practice, Practice, Commun, Cul Div, DV, Adult)
M - N/A
Increasing Access to Mental Healthcare for Hispanic
Victims of Interpersonal Violence
Eilers, Olivia, Shealy, Kristen, Gomez, Martha, Davidson,
Tatiana, Rheingold, Alyssa, de Arellano, Michael
THU 265
(Practice, Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Initial Results from a U.S. Army Intensive Outpatient
Program for PTSD: Comparing Groups With and Without
Additional Coping Skills Training
Hoyt, Tim, Barry, David, Edwards-Stewart, Amanda
THU 266
(Practice, Health, Sub/Abuse, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Influence of Trauma History and Transcendence on
Motivation for Substance Use in Undergraduates
Hurless, Nicole, Weaver, Terri
www.istss.org
Seeking Safety Therapy: Implementation for People with
SMI, PTSD, and Substance Use Disorders
Najavits, Lisa, Schmitz, Martha
THU 270
(Bio Med, Acute, Chronic, Bio/Int, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
Blunted Psychophysiological Reactivity in Children with
PTSD
Lipschutz, Rebecca, Glackin, Erin, Scheeringa, Michael
THU 271
(Bio Med, Acc/Inj, Adult)
A - N/A
Evaluative Conditioning in the Long-term after Severe
Accidental Injury
Oe, Misari, Schnyder, Ulrich, Mueller-Pfeiffer, Christoph,
Wilhelm, Frank, Martin-Soelch, Chantal
THU 272
(Bio Med, Clin Res, Illness, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Basal Dopamine Levels Associated with the Decrease in
HIV-PTSD Symptoms
Junglen, Angela, Delahanty, Douglas, Boarts, Jessica, Garcia,
Monica, Wise, Anna
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 273
(Bio Med, Acute, Illness, Bio/Int, Terror, Adult)
- Industrialized
THU 280
(Bio Med, Cog/Int, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Fifteen Years after 9/11: What Predicts Disrupted
Inflammatory Functioning in World Trade Center
Responders?
Horn, Sarah, Kautz, Marin, Bierer, Linda, Yehuda, Rachel,
Southwick, Steven, Pietrzak, Robert, Feder, Adriana
Negative World Views in Trauma Survivors: Evidence from
Event-related Potentials
Kimble, Matthew, Sripad, Abhishek, Fleming, Kevin, Fowler,
Rachel, Sobolewski, Sara
THU 281
(Bio Med, Cog/Int, Cul Div, Bio/Int, Adult)
M - Industrialized
THU 275
(Bio Med, Affect/Int, Bio Med, Health, Bio/Int, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Is a History of Interpersonal Violence Associated with
Emotional Modulation of Pain?
Hellman, Natalie, Sturycz, Cassandra, Payne, Michael, Lannon,
Edward, Shadlow, Joanna, Rhudy, Jamie
A Time to be Stressed? Time Perspectives and Cortisol
Dynamics among Healthy Adults
Olivera Figueroa, Lening, Juster, Robert, Morin Major, Julie,
Marin, Marie, Lupien, Sonia
THU 283
(Bio Med, Comm/Vio, DV, Health, Rape, Lifespan)
I - Latin Amer & Carib
THU 277
(Bio Med, Chronic, Bio/Int, Mil/Vets, Neuro, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Relationship Between PTSD Symptom Severity and
Cortical White Matter Integrity among Trauma Exposed
War Veterans Utilising Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI).
Romaniuk, Madeline
What Makes Us Paralyze? Tonic Immobility in Different
Types of Traumatic Events in the General Population
Kalaf, Juliana, Coutinho, Evandro, Ventura, Paula,
Mendlowicz, Mauro, Vilete, Liliane, Figueira, Ivan
THU 284
(Bio Med, Clin Res, Bio/Int, Tech, Mil/Vets, Military Special Forces)
M - Industrialized
THU 278
(Bio Med, Acc/Inj, Acute, Bio Med, Neuro, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Symptoms are
Associated with Greater Negative Emotional Reactivity and
Less Positive Emotional Reactivity.
Winters, Sterling, Stevens, Jennifer, Reddy, Renuka, Hudak,
Lauren, Rothbaum, Barbara, Ressler, Kerry
Heart Rate Variability: A Psychobiological Link between
Stress Resilience and Attachment
An, Eric, Nolty, Anne, Rensberger, Jared, Hennig, Natalie, Ock,
Shin, Buckwalter, Galen
THU 279
(Bio Med, Acc/Inj, Bio Med, Neuro, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Neural Correlates of Loss of Consciousness during
Vector Memory
Spadoni, Andrea, Taylor, Charles, Norman, Sonya, Simmons,
Alan
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
Research Methodology
THU 292
(Res Meth, Res Meth, Adult)
M - N/A
THU 285
(Res Meth, CPA, Dev/Int, Fam/Int, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
Behavior of Physically Abused Children and its Effects on
Parenting
Ewing, Emily, Okado, Yuko, Haskett, Mary
Anger Moderates PTSD Symptom Clusters’ Relationships
with Alcohol Consumption and Consequences
Durham, Tory, Claycomb, Meredith, Lv, Xin, Byllesby, Brianna,
Elhai, Jon
THU 293
(Res Meth, Res Meth, Adult)
I - Latin Amer & Carib
THU 286
(Res Meth, Assess Dx, Rape, Gender, Adult)
I - Industrialized
A Qualitative Examination of Veterans’ Experiences
Participating in Military Sexual Trauma Research:
Similarities and Differences by Gender
Gerber, Holly, Dorsey Holliman, Brooke, Monteith, Lindsey
THU 287
(Res Meth, CSA, Cog/Int, Gender, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Psychometric Properties of the Posttraumatic Growth
Inventory Brazilian Portuguese Version
Loreto, Thiago, Schäfer, Julia, Ramos, Victória, Kristensen,
Christian
Vicarious Traumatization and Therapist
Self-Care
Sexual Self-Schemas in a Childhood Sexual Abuse-Relevant
Online Forum: A Validation of Previous Findings from a
Laboratory Sample
Stanton, Amelia, Boyd, Ryan, Meston, Cindy
THU 289
(Res Meth, Mil/Vets, Neuro, Adult)
M - Industrialized
High-Fidelity Descriptions of the Brain Networks of
Individual Veterans with and without Traumatic Brain
Injury Using FMRI
Gordon, Evan, Gary, Bradley, Sweidan, Ramy, Petersen,
Steven, Dosenbach, Nico, Nelson, Steven
THU 290
(Res Meth, Res Meth, Adult)
M - N/A
THU 295
(Self-Care, Practice, Self-Care, Prof)
I - N/A
Implementing Schwartz Center Rounds to Reduce
Compassion Fatigue and Improve Compassion Satisfaction
Kimball Franck, Leslie, Al-Mateen, Cheryl, Friend-Kimble, ToShera, Crewe, Crystal
THU 296
(Self-Care, Cog/Int, Prof)
I - Industrialized
Pathways of Cognitive Integration and their Effect on
Vicarious Posttraumatic Growth
Morse-Karzen, Brooke, Benton, Laura, Kulb, Steven, Iaccino,
James, Barnes, Ozella
The Underlying Role of Anger in Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder
Durham, Tory, Byllesby, Brianna, Charak, Ruby, Claycomb,
Meredith, Lv, Xin, Elhai, Jon
THU 291
(Res Meth, Res Meth, Adult)
M - N/A
The Relationship between Posttraumatic Stress Disorder,
Anger, and Dissociative Symptoms
Durham, Tory, Byllesby, Brianna, Lv, Xin, Claycomb, Meredith,
Charak, Ruby, Elhai, Jon
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
Culture/Diversity
Global Issues
THU 297
(Global, Commun, Cul Div, Tech, Child/Adol)
I - Latin Amer & Carib
THU 303
(CulDiv, Assess Dx, Adult)
I - N/A
Conducting a Needs Assessment for Trauma-focused
Treatment for Youth via Telehealth in Honduras
de Arellano, Abigail, Stewart, Regan, Rheingold, Alyssa
THU 298
(Global, Cul Div, Nat/Dis, Adult)
I - Global
Examining the Role of Peri-traumatic Distress as a Mediator
in the Relationship between Extent of Disaster Exposure
and Psychiatric Functioning Cross-culturally
Overstreet, Cassie, Cooke, Megan, Hawn, Sage, Acierno, Ron,
Ruggiero, Kenneth, Amstadter, Ananda
THU 299
(Tech, Practice, Commun, Child/Adol)
I - N/A
THU 304
(CulDiv, Rape, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Sexual Assault Victimization Rates on Campus: Do Campus
Characteristics Matter?
Lanni, Daniel, Duong, Truc-Vi, Parkhill, Michele, Pickett, Scott,
Burgess-Proctor, Amanda
THU 306
(CulDiv, Commun, Comm/Int, Comm/Vio, Lifespan)
I - Industrialized
Evidence-based Trauma-focused Treatment for Youth
via Telehealth: Development and Implementation of the
Telemental Health Outreach Program in Schools (TOPS)
Stewart, Regan, Rheingold, Alyssa, Cristaldi, Kathryn,
McElligot, James, de Arellano, Michael
Mental Health Care for Culturally Diverse Victims of
Trauma and Violence: A Focus on a Community Based
Model
Garibay, Erika, Ghafoori, Bita
Community-Based Programs
THU 300
(Tech, Practice, Cul Div, Ethnic, Adult)
I - N/A
Providing Culturally Modified Prolonged Exposure Therapy
via Telehealth: Increasing Access to Trauma-focused
Treatment for Hispanic Populations
Orengo-Aguayo, Rosaura, Stewart, Regan, Lopez, Cristina,
Andrews, Arthur, de Arellano, Michael, Rheingold, Alyssa
THU 301
(Global, Comm/Int, Refugee, Lifespan)
M - W & C Africa
The Mental Health and Psychosocial Needs of Central
African Republic Refugees in Cameroon: Implications for
Program Development and Service Provision
Gupta, Sonali
THU 302
(Tech, Assess Dx, Prevent, Pub Health, Care, Adult)
I - Global
THU 308
(Commun, Assess Dx, Chronic, Complex, Res Meth, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
A Latent Class Analysis of Trauma Exposure Profiles among
Children and Adolescences
Renz Smith, Mara, Suvak, Michael, Hodgdon, Hilary, Martin,
Lia, Liebman, Rachel, Spinazzola, Joseph
THU 309
(Commun, Fam/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
Collaborating with Underserved Veteran Couples to
Promote Post-deployment Resilience
Nelson Goff, Briana, Oseland, Lauren
THU 310
(Commun, QoL, Rape, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Mobile Health Applications for Addressing Post-traumatic
Stress Disorder (PTSD): A Literature Review
Rodriguez Paras, Carolina, Sasangohar, Farzan, Benzer, Justin,
Creech, Suzannah, Kum, Hye-Chung, Lawley, Mark
www.istss.org
Spanish Translation and Adaptation of the Posttraumatic
Information Processing Survey
Valdez, Christine, Shumway, Martha, Fields, Laurie, Barrantes,
Milagritos, Biasetto, Cristina, Romo, Diana
Service Members’ Psychosocial Well-being after Reporting
Military Sexual Assault
Smith, Janelle, Loeffler, George, Millegan, Jeffrey, Ziajko,
Lauretta, Bowen, Michael
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 311
(Commun, Depr, Fam/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
A - N/A
THU 317
(Prevent, Acc/Inj, Prevent, Sub/Abuse, Tech, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Perceived Family Benefits of Volunteering among
Reintegrating Post-9/11 Veterans
Lawrence, Karen, Matthieu, Monica
Social Issues – Public Policy
THU 318
(Prevent, Acc/Inj, Acute, Illness, Adult)
M - Industrialized
THU 313
(Social, Depr, Social, Sub/Abuse, Gender, Adult)
I - N/A
Transitioning from Combat to Campus: Impact of Warfare
Exposure and Associated Mental Health Consequences on
School Enrollment and Functioning
Amoroso, Timothy, Taverna, Emily, Fox, Annie, Smith, Brian,
Vogt, Dawne
THU 314
Social, CSA, Practice, Train/Ed/Dis, Gender, Adult)
I - Global
Mother Blame and Just World Hypothesis in Child Sexual
Abuse Cases
Toews, Kelsi, Cummings, Jorden, Zagrodney, Jessica
The Association between Daily PTSD Symptoms and
Headache Pain in Recent Traumatic Injury Victims
Hruska, Bryce, Pacella, Maria, Delahanty, Douglas
THU 319
Prevent, Acc/Inj, Cul Div, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
“Sharing Things with People That I Don’t Even Know;”
Perceptions of Help-seeking for Psychological and
Emotional Distress in a Cohort of Black Injured Men in
Philadelphia
Jacoby, Sara, Webster, Jessica, Rich, John, Robinson, Andrew,
Richmond, Therese
THU 320
(Prevent, Acc/Inj, Commun, Neglect, Adult)
M - N/A
Multi-Media
THU 315
(Multi-Media, Nat/Dis, Tech, Terror, Self-Care, Lifespan)
I - N/A
Trauma Contagions: The Implications of Mass Media
Coverage and Social Media on Acute Stress and Vicarious
Trauma
Jain, Kshipra, Friday, Amanda
Predictors of Home Hazards for Latino Families: Points of
Intervention for Home Visitation Providers
Espeleta, Hannah, Bohora, Som, Slemaker, Alexandra, Heidari,
Zohal, Silovsky, Jane
THU 321
(Prevent, Practice, Death, Prevent, Grief, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Novel Application of Skills for Psychological Recovery as an
Early Intervention for Violent Loss Survivors
Williams, Joah, Rheingold, Alyssa
Prevention/Early Intervention
THU 316
(Prevent, Affect/Int, Dev/Int, DV, Child/Adol)
M - N/A
Profiles of Emotional Security in Children Exposed to
Intimate Partner Violence (IPV)
Garcia, Antonia, Smagur, Kathryn, Bogat, G. Anne,
Levendosky, Alytia
www.istss.org
The Association between Daily PTSD Symptoms and
Alcohol-related Variables in Recent Traumatic Injury
Victims
Hruska, Bryce, Pacella, Maria, Delahanty, Douglas
THU 322
(Prevent, Assess Dx, Chronic, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Prior Trauma Predicts Postconcussive Symptoms among
Traumatic Injury Survivors
Guiney, Roxanne, Colosi, Patricia L., Darnell, Doyanne, Wang,
Jin, Zatzick, Douglas
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 323
(Prevent, Sub/Abuse, Tech, Train/Ed/Dis, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Kicking the Habit: The Development of a Mobile App to
Address Substance Use Disorders (SUDs) among Veterans
with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Morabito, Danielle, Feldner, Matthew, Tiet, Quyen, Dutton,
Courtney, Roth, Walter, Bonn-Miller, Marcel
THU 324
(Prevent, Anx, Cog/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Examination of the Potential Mediating Role of Negative
Trauma Cognitions in the Relationship between Distress
Tolerance and PTSD Symptom Severity in OEF/OIF/OND
Combat Veterans
Chowdhury, Nadia, Lind, Mackenzie, Blanks, Angelica, Pickett,
Treven, Thomas, Suzanne, Amstadter, Ananda
THU 325
(Prevent, Prevent, Pub Health, Res Meth, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Circumstances Preceding Suicide in US Soldiers: A
Qualitative Analysis of Narrative Data
Skopp, Nancy, Holland, Kristin, Logan, Joseph, Alexander,
Cynthia, Floyd, Faye
THU 326
(Tech, Fam/Int, Tech, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
Survey to Experiences with Disabled People in Psychosocial
Acute Support
Schedlich, Claudia
THU 331
(Prevent, Acc/Inj, CPA, DV, Gender, Lifespan)
- N/A
Intimate Partner Violence Screening, Brief Intervention,
and Referral for Services in a Pediatric Surgery Clinic
Beebe, Rebecca, DiVietro, Susan, Grasso, Damion, Lapidus,
Garry, Clough, Meghan, Campbell, Brendan
THU 332
(Prevent, Clin Res, Commun, Health, Self-Care, Humanitarian Aid
Workers)
M - Global
Self-efficacy and Resilience in Humanitarian Aid Workers
Turner, Christine, Bosch, Donald, Ock, Shin, Nolty, Anne
Ethics
THU 333
(Ethics, Rape, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Ethics of Trauma-informed Research: Perceptions of
Participation among Victims of Sexual Assault
Gagnon, Kerry, DePrince, Anne
The Effect of During Deployment Communication on
Soldier Relationship and Mental Health Outcomes
Erbes, Christopher, Polusny, Melissa, Arbisi, Paul, Kramer,
Mark, Balderrama-Durbin, Christina, Vogt, Dawne
Public Health
THU 334
(Pub Health, Bio Med, Commun, Health, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
THU 327
(Prevent, Cul Div, Fam/Int, Terror, Civil/War, Lifespan)
- Industrialized
The Place of Maternal Communication in the Transmission
of Posttraumatic Symptoms across Generations among
Israeli Families Exposed to Political Violence
Zamir, Osnat, Gewirtz, Abigail, Dekel, Rachel, Lavi, Tamar,
Tangir, Gali
THU 329
(Prevent, Nat/Dis, Prevent, Train/Ed/Dis, Adult)
- Global
EUNAD – Recommendations Assisting Disabled in Case of
Disaster
Bering, Robert, Gerwinn, Florentine, Richter, Lena, Söhn,
Jennifer, Hobfoll, Stevan
www.istss.org
THU 330
(Prevent, Acute, Practice, Rights, Pub Health, Lifespan)
- Global
Rates of Physical Health Conditions among Children with
PTSD Enrolled in Missouri Healthcare Homes
Wamser-Nanney, Rachel, Heaps-Woodruff, Jodi, Parks,
Joseph
THU 335
Pub Health, Acc/Inj, Comm/Vio, Pub Health, Adult)
I - N/A
Development and Validation of the Health Care Costs Scale
for the Victims of Violent Crime with PTSD: Preliminary
Results
Fortin, Christophe
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 336
(Pub Health, Bio Med, Commun, Social, Care, Adult)
M - Industrialized
THU 343
(Pub Health, Acute, Sub/Abuse, Terror, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Increased ER and Hospital Utilization in a Health Home
Cohort with PTSD
Heaps-Woodruff, Jodi, Wamser-Nanney, Rachel, Parks,
Joseph
THU 337
(Pub Health, CPA, Global, Intergen, Lifespan)
- Latin Amer & Carib
THU 344
(Pub Health, Health, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Childhood Adversity in Barbados Predicts Personality
Pathology in the Next Generation
Hock, Rebecca, Bryce, Cyralene, Fischer, Laura, Fitzmaurice,
Garrett, Costa, Jr., Paul, Galler, Janina
THU 339
(Bio Med, Bio Med, CPA, DV, Lifespan)
- Industrialized
Differences in Engagement in VA Health Care among
Veterans with and without Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Javorka, McKenzie, Wong, Ava, Lewis, Eleanor, Zulman,
Donna, Kimerling, Rachel
THU 345
(Pub Health, Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Care, Adult)
- Industrialized
Maternal Trauma Experience on Infant Cortisol Reactivity
at 12 months
Gilchrist, Michelle, Martinez-Torteya, Cecilia
THU 340
(Pub Health, DV, Orient, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
Intimate Partner Violence among Women Veterans by
Sexual Orientation
Dardis, Christina, Shipherd, Jillian, Iverson, Katherine
THU 341
(Pub Health, Clin Res, Prevent, Pub Health, Tech, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Predictors of Engagement in Internet-based Intervention
BADI for Stress-related Disorders
Eimontas, Jonas, Kazlauskas, Evaldas, Gegieckaite, Goda,
Zelviene, Paulina
THU 342
(Pub Health, Sub/Abuse, Care, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Trauma Exposure, PTSD Prevalence and the Use of Mental
Health Services and Medication
Mazulyte, Egle, Kazlauskas, Evaldas, Gailiene, Danute
www.istss.org
The Use of Alcohol to Self-medicate Symptoms of
9/11-Related PTSD Among Adult World Trade Center
Health Registry Enrollees, 2015-16
Welch, Alice, Caramanica, Kimberly
Veteran Perspectives on Primary Care Treatment Services
for PTSD
Johnson, Emily, Possemato, Kyle, Webster, Brad, Greg,
Beehler, Wray, Laura
THU 348
(Practice, Pub Health, Train/Ed/Dis, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
A Program Evaluation of Who Receives Evidence-Based
Psychotherapy for PTSD
Possemato, Kyle, Webster, Brad, Steiger, Shawne, Higham,
Jane
THU 349
(Pub Health, Anx, Chronic, Comm/Int, Journalism, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Psychological Distress Following a Global Health Crisis: A
National Study of Americans’ Reactions to Ebola
Thompson, Rebecca, Garfin, Dana Rose, Holman, E. Alison,
Cohen Silver, Roxane
THU 350
(Pub Health, CPA, CSA, Chronic, Rape, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Broken Since it Happened: A Population Study of
Trauma-related Shame After Violence and Sexual Abuse
Aakvaag, Helene, Thoresen, Siri, Wentzel-Larsen, ToRe, Dyb,
Grete, Røysamb, Espen, Olff, Miranda
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session One Presentations
Thursday, November 10, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
THU 351
(Pub Health, Chronic, Complex, Health, Adult)
I - Industrialized
THU 354
(Pub Health, Assess Dx, Chronic, Rape, Social, Lifespan)
I - E & S Africa
Lifetime Trauma, Traumatic Distress and Healthcare
Outcome and Utilization in a Community OB/Gyn Sample
Petretic, Patricia, Calvert, Maegan, Berman, Ilana, Lentz,
Mariah
THU 352
(Pub Health, Health, Pub Health, Rape, Civil/War, Adult)
I - W & C Africa
High Percentage of Posttraumatic Stress in South African
College Students
Shapiro, David, Rees, Brian, Bandy, Carole, Sezibera, Vincent,
Talljaard, Lian, Dillbeck, Michael
THU 355
(Pub Health, Commun, Res Meth, Train/Ed/Dis, Theory, Prof)
M - Industrialized
A Qualitative Analysis of the Psychosocial Sequelae
Associated with Conflict-related Sexual Violence and
Resultant Pregnancy in Eastern Democratic Republic of
Congo
Mullen, Colleen, Onyango, Monica, Burkhardt, Gillian, Scott,
Jennifer, Greiner, Ashley, Albutt, Katherine, VanRooyen,
Michael, Bartels, Susan
Leveraging Knowledge of Worklife Experiences to create
Trauma Informed Systems Change
Loomis, Briana, Falvey, Cherie
THU 356
(Pub Health, Commun, Health, Train/Ed/Dis, Self-Care, N/A)
I - Industrialized
Creating a Trauma Informed Public Health Workforce:
Workforce Attitudes and the Impact of Committing to
Change
Khan, Hadia, Loomis, Briana, Sistiva, Diana
THU 353
(Pub Health, Comm/Int, Complex, Rape, Lifespan)
M - W & C Africa
Cumulative Trauma: Implications for Reproduction Choices
in a Sub-Saharan Sample
Orjiakor, Tochukwu, Ibeagha, Peace, Eze, John, Onu,
Desmond, Mbanefo, Ifunanya
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Welcome Reception with SIG
Endorsed Posters Distribution Map
Grand Hall
1
15
2
14
13
3
4
12
5
11
6
www.istss.org
7
8
9
10
146
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Welcome Reception with SIG Endorsed Posters
Thursday, November 10
6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Welcome Reception with SIG Endorsed Posters
Thursday, November 10
6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Poster Organization
Each poster is scheduled for either Author Attended Poster
Session One on Thursday, the Featured Poster Presentations
at the Welcome Reception, or Author Attended Poster Session
Two on Friday, and includes a one-hour time period when the
presenting author is available to answer questions.
Posters are organized in the conference program by poster
number on each day. The presenting author is bolded. A floor
map showing the layout of posters is available on page 138.
Key:
Poster # Number (Primary keyword, Secondary Keywords,
Population type) Presentation Level – Region Keyword
type descriptions can be found on page 61.
Regions and Population Types can be found on page 62.
Presentation levels and descriptions can be found on
page 62.
Aging, Trauma and the Life Course SIG
WR 101
(Clin Res, Health, Pub Health, Aging, Older)
I - Industrialized
Prevalence and Correlates of Elder Abuse Polyvictimization
in a Nationally Representative Sample
Racette, Elise, Williams, Joah, Acierno, Ron, HernandezTejada, Melba
WR 102
(Bio Med, Illness, Adult)
I - Industrialized
An Examination of Post-Traumatic Growth and its
Correlates in a Sample of Outpatients with Cardiac Disease
Magid, Kirby, El-Gabalawy, Renee, Maran, Anbukarasi, Serber,
Eva
Complex Trauma SIG
WR 103
(Bio Med, Affect/Int, Chronic, Complex, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Welcome Reception with SIG Endorsed Posters:
Thursday, November 10
Poster Setup: 5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Author Attended Poster Session: 6:30 p.m. – 7:15 p.m.
Poster Dismantle: 8:00 p.m.
Cardiac Vagal Regulation in Complex PTSD
Huskey, Alisa, Haws, Kyle, Lack, Caleb
Poster Dismantle
Immediately following your scheduled poster session,
display materials must be taken down and removed. Items
not removed by the appointed poster dismantle time will be
disposed of and are not the responsibility of ISTSS.
Reducing Barriers to Mental Health Care in Underserved
Populations: A Primary Care Integration Model
Rivers, Alison, Oransky, Matthew, Colon, Rachel, Cortes,
Susann
Access the Abstracts
Visit the ISTSS Website and download the Session Abstract
Book and the Poster Abstract Book
Diversity and Cultural Competence SIG
Use the Itinerary Builder to plan your meeting
Download the meeting app
www.istss.org
WR 104
(Commun, Chronic, Complex, Pub Health, Care, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
WR 105
(CulDiv, Clin Res, Sub/Abuse, Child/Adol)
M - N/A
Validating a Cultural Sensitivity Effectiveness Evaluation
Model for Risk Behavior Prevention Programs Designed
for African American Adolescents with Trauma Exposure:
Leveraging the “SiHLE” Program
Metzger, Isha, Stewart, Regan, Salami, Temiola, Tolbert,
Christina, de Arellano, Michael, Rheingold, Alyssa
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Welcome Reception with SIG Endorsed Posters
Thursday, November 10
6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Gender and Trauma SIG
WR 106
(CulDiv, Comm/Int, Refugee, Adult)
M - Global
Psychological Distress of Iraqi Refugees in the US: Trauma,
Resiliency, and Sense of Community
Lambert, Jessica, Donath, Samuel
Early Interventions SiG
WR 107
(Tech, Clin Res, Depr, Pub Health, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Gender and Age at Trauma Exposure Interaction in the
Development of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms
Following a Motor Vehicle Accident
Kobayashi, Ihori, Sledjeski, Eve, Delahanty, Douglas
WR 112
(Practice, Fam/Int, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Public Health Utilities of a Web-based Intervention for
Trauma Survivors
Mullings, Austin, Weisman, Pamela, Shoji, Kotaro, Boult,
Terrance, Benight, Charles
WR 108
(Clin Res, Anx, Depr, Prevent, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Impact of Social Support and Resilience on PTSD
and Depression: The Mediating Role of Posttraumatic
Cognitions
Tannahill, Hallie, Zang, Yinyin, Gallagher, Thea, McLean,
Carmen, Yarvis, Jeffrey, Foa, Edna
Family Systems SIG
WR 109
(Assess Dx, Acc/Inj, Fam/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Global
Couple Reports of Family Functioning following Combatrelated Injuries: Association of Individual Psychiatric
Symptoms with Family Function and within Couple
Agreement
Whaley, Gloria, Todd, Kelly, Herman, Michelle, Engle, Krista,
Cozza, Stephen
WR 110
(Pub Health, Dev/Int, Fam/Int, Nat/Dis, Lifespan)
I - Industrialized
Family Functioning Mediates Effect of Severity of Tornadorelated Exposure on Adolescent PTSD
Brown, Emily, Bountress, Kaitlin, Ruggiero, Kenneth,
Amstadter, Ananda
www.istss.org
WR 111
(Bio Med, Acc/Inj, Aging, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
PTSD as a Mediator between Trauma Exposure and
Attachment Behaviors in Married Adults: Uncovering
Unique Gender Differences
Oseland, Lauren, Schwerdtfeger Gallus, Kami, Beck, Austin,
Nelson Goff, Briana
Intergenerational Transmission of Trauma &
Resilience SIG
WR 113
(Prevent, Chronic, Complex, Intergen, Lifespan)
I - N/A
Relationships between Maternal Complex Trauma and
Child Dissociation
West, Anna, Lee, Suellen, Wilson, Christina, Padron, Elena,
Samuelson, Kristin
WR 114
(Practice, Intergen, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Intergenerational Effects of Parental Trauma on Young
Adult’s Interpersonal Functioning and Mental Health
Spiel, Shira, Szymanski, Kate, Huselid, Rebecca
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender (LGBT)
SIG
WR 115
(CulDiv, Cul Div, Depr, Fam/Int, Orient, Lifespan)
I – Industrialized
The Developmental Impact of Social Support Source on
Mental Health in LGB Adolescents and Young Adults
Wise, Anna, Smith, Brian, Armelie, Aaron, Boarts, Jessica,
Delahanty, Douglas
Presenting Author is Bolded
148
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Welcome Reception with SIG Endorsed Posters
Thursday, November 10
6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Psychodynamic Research and Practice SIG
WR 116
(Practice, Affect/Int, Anx, Theory, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Do Trauma Survivors Experience Shame after Fear? An
Experimental Examination
La Bash, Heidi, Papa, Anthony
WR 117
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Improvements in Mental and Behavioral Disengagement
during DCS-Enhanced Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy
for PTSD
Hunnicutt-Ferguson, Kallio, Wyka, Katarzyna, Peskin, Melissa,
Cukor, Judith, Difede, JoAnn
Research Methodology SIG
A Randomized Controlled Trial of Narrative Reconstruction
(NR) for PTSD
Gofman, Mordechai, Kivity, Yogev, Vidan, Zohar, Peri, Tuvia
Theory and Traumatic Stress Studies SIG
WR 118
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Cog/Int, Theory, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Changes in Trauma Narratives following Narrative
Reconstruction Psychotherapy and their Relationship with
Changes in PTSD Symptoms – A Controlled Trial
Vidan, Zohar, Gofman, Mordechai, Tuval-Mashiach, Rivka, Peri,
Tuvia
WR 119
(Tech, Clin Res, Prevent, Pub Health, Train/Ed/Dis, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Role of Cognitive Appraisals on the Effectiveness
of a Trauma Recovery Web Intervention for Reducing
Symptoms of Posttraumatic Distress
Yeager, Carolyn, Benight, Charles
Terrorism & Bioterrorism Related Trauma
SIG
WR 120
(Practice, Anx, Complex, Tech, Terror, Adult)
I - N/A
Stories Behind the Screen: A Pilot Study of Internet-based,
Therapist-assisted CBT in World Trade Center Responders
Greene, Andrea, Cahn, Leah, Cancelmo, Leo, Katz, Craig,
Pietrzak, Robert, Feder, Adriana
www.istss.org
WR 121
(Practice, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Tech, Terror, Adult)
I - N/A
WR 122
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Res Meth, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Network Analysis of PTSD Symptoms in College Students:
An Examination of Key Symptoms
Eddinger, Jasmine, McDevitt-Murphy, Meghan, Luciano,
Matthew, Bellet, Benjamin
WR 123
(Clin Res, Res Meth, Tech, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Analysis of PTSD Prevalence and Factor Structure in a
Trauma-exposed MTurk Sample
van Stolk-Cooke, Katherine, Price, Matthew
Trauma and Substance Use Disorders SIG
WR 124
(CulDiv, Comm/Int, Cul Div, Sub/Abuse, Intergen, Lifespan)
M - N/A
Applying an Ecological Framework to Understand the
Mechanisms Underlying the Effects of the Intergenerational
Transmission of Trauma on the Substance Using Behavior
of Black Emerging Adults
Pittman, Delishia, Kaur, Preet
WR 125
(Clin Res, Sub/Abuse, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms Improve After a
Brief Alcohol Intervention for OEF/OIF/OND Veterans
Luciano, Matthew, McDevitt-Murphy, Meghan
Presenting Author is Bolded
149
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Welcome Reception with SIG Endorsed Posters
Thursday, November 10
6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Trauma Assessment & Diagnosis SIG
WR 126
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Less is More? Assessing the Validity of the ICD-11 Model of
PTSD across Multiple Trauma Samples
Hansen, Maj, Hyland, Philip, Armour, Cherie, Shevlin, Mark,
Elklit, Ask
WR 127
(Assess Dx, Aggress, Assess Dx, Res Meth, Theory, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Development of the Posttraumatic Anger Scale
Sullivan, Connor, Jones, Russell
Traumatic Loss and Grief SIG
WR 128
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Death, Dev/Int, Theory, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Variations in Engagement Coping Based on Type of
Traumatic Experience
Hasselle, Amanda, Howell, Kathryn, Schwartz, Laura, Dormois,
Madeline
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
150
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Friday Poster Session Two Distribution Map
Grand Hall
Assessment/Diagnosis
Training/Education/Dissemination
Assessment/Diagnosis
226 227 228 229 230 231
233 234 235 236
237 238 239 240
241 242 243 245
246 247 248 249
222 221 220 217 215 213
212 211 210 209
208 207 206 205
277 275 274 273
272 271 269 268
Technology
250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257
267 265 264 263 262 261 259 258
Clinical Practice
Biological/Medical
193 194 195 196
197 198 199 200
201 202 203 204
278 279 280 281
282 283 284 285
286 287 288 289
192 191 190 189
188 187 186 185
184 183 182 181
304 303 302 301
300 298 297 294
293 292 291 290
Global
Culture/Diversity
Clinical Intervention/Research
Research
Methodology
Community-based Programs
168 169 171 172
173 174 175 176
177 178 179 180
305 306 307 308
167 166 165 164
163 162 161 158
157 156 153 152
329 328 327 326
309 310 311 312
Social Issues/Public Policy
313 314 315 317
325 324 323 322
321 320 319 318
Prevention/Early Intervention
Ethics
137 138 139 140
141 142 143 144
146 147 148 151
331 332 333 335
337 338 339 340
341 342 343 344
136 135 134 133
132 131 130 129
128 127 126 125
356 355 354 353
352 351 350 349
348 347 346 345
Public Health
113 114 115 116
117 118 119 120
121 122 123 124
112 111 110 109
108 107 106 105
104 103 102 101
FX
Fire
Exits
Entrance
FX
STREE
ENTRA
Friday Poster Distribution
Training/Education/Dissemination
297 – 301
220 – 221
Culture/Diversity
302 – 306
222 – 228
DOWN
DOWN
Community-based
Programs
307 – 311
UP
UP
ENTRANCE
ENTRANCE
229 – 255
Social Issues/Public Policy
Clinical Practice
257 – 269
WF
Biological/Medical
Prevention/Early Intervention
271 – 284
Ethics
285 – 294
Public Health
WF
WF
FX
317 – 332
FX
333
335 – 356
EXIT
Presenters’ names are in bold. Discussants’ names are underlined. Moderators’ names are in bold and underlined.
Guides to Keyword Abbreviations located on pages 61 – 62. (Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Population type, Presentation Level, Region)
EXIT
EXIT
EXIT
ELEV.
MACH. RM.
Research Methodology
WF
Fire
Exits
313 – 315
UNISEX
Assessment/Diagnosis
LOUNGE
DUMPSTER
ELEV.
MACH. RM.
Global
UNISEX
Technology
www.istss.org
101 – 217
REGISTRATION
REGISTRATION
LOUNGE
Clinical Intervention/Research
151
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
Clinical/Intervention Research
Author Attended Poster Session Two
Friday, November 11
5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
Poster Organization
Each poster is scheduled for either Author Attended Poster
Session One on Thursday, the Featured Poster Presentations
at the Welcome Reception, or Author Attended Poster Session
Two on Friday, and includes a time period when the presenting
author is available to answer questions.
Posters are organized in the conference program by poster
number on each day. The presenting author is bolded. A floor
map showing the layout of posters is on page 144.
Key:
Poster # Number (Primary keyword, Secondary Keywords,
Population type) Presentation Level – Region Keyword
type descriptions can be found on pag 61.
FRI 101
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Dev/Int, Child/Adol)
- Industrialized
Attachment Styles as Mediators of the Association between
Trauma Exposure and Angry versus Anxious Rejection
Sensitivity for Youth in the Justice System
Mozley, Michaela, Modrowski, Crosby, Kerig, Patricia, McGee,
Andrew
FRI 102
(Clin Res, Aggress, CPA, CSA, Clin Res, Child/Adol)
- Industrialized
“I Don’t Feel much Pity for Them”: Lower Empathic Concern
Predicts Aggression against Peers in Traumatized Justiceinvolved Adolescents
McGee, Andrew, Mozley, Michaela, Modrowski, Crosby, Kerig,
Patricia
Regions and Population Types can be found on page 62.
Presentation levels and descriptions can be found on
page 62.
Session Two: Friday, November 11
Poster Setup: 8:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m.
Poster Viewing: 10:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Author Attended Poster Session: 5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Poster Dismantle: 7:00 p.m.
Poster Dismantle
Immediately following your scheduled poster session,
display materials must be taken down and removed. Items
not removed by the appointed poster dismantle time will be
disposed of and are not the responsibility of ISTSS.
Access the Abstracts
Visit the ISTSS Website and download the Session Abstract
Book and the Poster Abstract Book
Use the Itinerary Builder to plan your meeting
Download the meeting app
www.istss.org
FRI 103
(Clin Res, CPA, CSA, Fam/Int, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
Trauma and Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms in Preschool
Foster Care Children: The Influence of Placement History
and Foster Family Environment
Vasileva, Mira, Petermann, Franz
FRI 104
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Clin Res, Comm/Vio, Dev/Int, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
Community Violence Exposure and Child Emotion
Regulation: The Role of Parental Supervision
Cao, Minhnguyen, Kim, Ye Ji, Vance, Alexander, Cross,
Dorthie, Jovanovic, Tanja, Bradley, Bek
FRI 105
(Clin Res, Comm/Int, Comm/Vio, Cul Div, Child/Adol)
I - E & S Africa
Children’s Support Seeking Following Trauma in the
Context of Extreme Adversity and High Risk
Hiller, Rachel, Halligan, Sarah, Tomlinson, Mark
Presenting Author is Bolded
152
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 106
(Clin Res, Comm/Vio, Child/Adol)
M - N/A
FRI 111
(Clin Res, Acute, Chronic, Fam/Int, Adult)
I - N/A
Organized Activities are Associated with Reduced Risk for
Psychological, Physical, and Academic Problems among
Violence-exposed Youth: Findings from a Population-based
Cohort Study
Ridings, Leigh, Oosterhoff, Benjamin, Goldenthal, Hayley,
Kaplow, Julie
Associations between Maternal PTSD, Trauma History, and
Family Interactions amongst African American Families
with Toddlers
Holemo, Natalie, Hose, Shari, Dorman, Hillary, Mufti, Fatima,
Ashtiani Raveau, Hasti, Bocknek, Erika
FRI 112
(Clin Res, Acute, Clin Res, Depr, DV, Adult)
I - N/A
FRI 107
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Commun, Sleep, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
Adolescent Nocturnal Fears: A Psychometric Evaluation of
the Fear of Sleep Inventory (FoSI)
Garcia, E’leyna, Akeeb, Ameenat,Hall Brown, Tyish, White,
Davene, Young, Michal
FRI 108
(Clin Res, Acc/Inj, Acute, Clin Res, Prevent, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Concurrent and Predictive Associations between
Avoidant Coping Strategies and PTSD Symptoms in a
Recently Traumatized Sample
Maples, Jessica, Michopoulos, Vasiliki, Rothbaum, Alex,
Rothbaum, Barbara, Ressler, Kerry
FRI 109
(Clin Res, Acc/Inj, Anx, Clin Res, Depr, Adult)
M - Global
The Effectiveness of a Flexible Cognitive-behavioral
Trauma-focus Therapy on Comorbidity Remission in a
Sample of Violent Crime Victims with PTSD: Preliminary
Report
Fortin, Christophe, Fortin, Maxime, Guay, Stéphane
FRI 110
Clin Res, Acute, Chronic, Fam/Int, Adult)
I - N/A
African American Fathers’ PTSD Symptom Clusters and
Family Interactions
Hose, Shari, Ashtiani Raveau, Hasti, Dorman, Hillary, Holemo,
Natalie, Bocknek, Erika, Mufti, Fatima
Depressive Symptoms in Victims of Crime: An Individual
Growth Curve Analysis
Lamothe, Josianne, Fortin, Christophe, Guay, Stéphane
FRI 113
(Clin Res, Acute, Practice, Death, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Complication of Traumatic Exposure on Suicide
Bereavement
Chiriboga, Eva, Egbert, Rachel, Iwanciw, Stefanie, Demaria,
Thomas
FRI 114
(Clin Res, Acute, Res Meth, Adult)
I - N/A
Personality Facets Unique to Post-traumatic Stress
Disorder in World Trade Center (WTC) Responders:
Evidence from Past Month and Ecological Momentary
Assessment Measures
Shteynberg, Yuliya, Captari, Laura, Liu, Keke, Kotov, Roman,
Ruggero, Camilo
FRI 115
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Shame as a Possible Mediator between Symptoms of PTSD
and Social Anxiety Disorder
Lipinski, Alexandra, Pickover, Alison, Woodward, Matthew,
Dodson, Thomas, Tran, Han, Beck, J Gayle
FRI 116
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Interactive Effects of PTSD Symptom Severity and Distress
Tolerance on Anger Response to Script Driven Imagery
Morabito, Danielle, Babson, Kimberly, Badour, Christal,
Feldner, Matthew
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
153
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 117
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, CPA, Chronic, Theory, Adult)
I - N/A
FRI 123
(Clin Res, Aggress, Cog/Int, DV, Adult)
M - Industrialized
I Lost Myself: Exposure to Childhood Trauma Predicts Loss
of Sensation and Temperature Drops on the Rubber Hand
Task
Van Cleave, Treva, D’Andrea, Wendy, Doukas, Ashley
FRI 118
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Chronic, Cog/Int, DV, Adult)
I - Industrialized
FRI 124
(Clin Res, Aggress, CPA, Chronic, Cul Div, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Association of Fear and Negative Self-view with PTSD
Symptoms: The Role of Dissociation
Tran, Han, Dodson, Thomas, Woodward, Matthew, Pickover,
Alison, Lipinski, Alexandra, Beck, J Gayle
FRI 119
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Cog/Int, Rape, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Childhood Trauma Severity and Impulsivity: The Mediating
Role of Anger
Schuhmann, Bailee, Paulus, Daniel, Banks, Kevin, Vujanovic,
Anka
FRI 125
(Clin Res, Anx, Comm/Int, Health, Refugee, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Labeling it as Rape: Role of Peritraumatic Emotions and
Type of Coercion
Bhuptani, Prachi, Messman-Moore, Terri, Gratz, Kim, DiLillo,
David
FRI 120
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Self-Care, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Extent and Impact of Post-migration Stressors during
Treatment of Trauma-affected Refugees
Bruhn, Maja, Rees, Susan, Mohsin, Mohammed, Silove,
Derrick, Carlsson, Jessica
FRI 126
(Clin Res, Anx, Health, Illness, Sleep, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Relationship between Emotional Intelligence and
PTSD Symptoms in Firefighters and Emergency Medical
Personnel
Rinker, Josh, Henning, Janna
FRI 121
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Fam/Int, QoL, Adult)
M - Industrialized
A Longitudinal Examination of Couples’ PTSD Symptoms
and Relationship Satisfaction
LaMotte, Adam, Wolf, Erika, Weatherill, Robin, Taft, Casey
FRI 122
(Clin Res, Aggress, DV, Sleep, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Sleep Problems and Pain Strengthen the Relationship
between PTSD Symptoms and Physical Aggression in
Returning Veterans
LaMotte, Adam, Taft, Casey, Milberg, William, Fortier,
Catherine, McGlinchey, Regina
www.istss.org
The Associations between Trauma, Posttraumatic
Stress Disorder Symptoms, and Potentially Dissociative
Experiences during Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration
LaMotte, Adam, Murphy, Christopher
The Mediating Role of Sleep Quality and Anxiety Sensitivity
in the Relationship between PTSD Symptoms and Physical
Health Complaints
Smith, Brian, Pacella, Maria, Harrington, Ellen, Delahanty,
Douglas
FRI 127
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Bio/Int, Adult)
M - N/A
The Roles of Coping Self-efficacy and Appraisals in the
Relationship between Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Symptoms and Perception of Cognitive Problems
Valadez, Racquel, Bartel, Alisa, Jordan, Josh, Samuelson,
Kristin
FRI 128
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Clin Res, Depr, QoL, Adult)
M - Latin Amer & Carib
The Impact of Posttraumatic Symptoms and of Comorbid
Mental Disorders on the Health-related Quality of Life
Treatment-seeking PTSD Patients
Pagotto, Luiz, Berger, William, Luz, Mariana, Araujo, Alexandre,
Figueira, Ivan, Mendlowicz, Mauro
Presenting Author is Bolded
154
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 129
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Cog/Int, Health, Adult)
I - N/A
FRI 135
(Clin Res, Chronic, Practice, Health, Terror, Adult)
- Industrialized
Somatization as a Mediator in Relationships Between mTBI,
PTSD, Chronic Pain, and Perception of Cognitive Problems
Bartel, Alisa, Samuelson, Kristin, Valadez, Racquel
FRI 130
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Practice, Cul Div, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Military Acculturation and Transition to the Civilian Setting
McCaslin, Shannon, Davenport-Becket, Colleen, Chapin,
Brad, Dinh, Julie, Choucroun, Gerard, Herbst, Ellen
FRI 131
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Chronic, Complex, Dev/Int, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Relationships between Early Childhood Trauma and
Trauma-Related Altered States of Consciousness
Khedari, Vivian, DePierro, Jonathan, D’Andrea, Wendy
FRI 136
(Clin Res, Chronic, Terror, Adult)
- Industrialized
Comprehensive Mind-Body Treatment: Addressing CoOccurring PTSD and Respiratory Symptoms in 9/11
Responders
Gonzalez, Adam, Mahaffey, Brittain, Park, Elyse, Kotov,
Roman, Bromet, Evelyn, Luft, Benjamin
FRI 137
(Clin Res, Chronic, Clin Res, Rape, Gender, Adult)
- Industrialized
FRI 132
(Clin Res, Chronic, Civil/War, Theory, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Relationship between Dissociative Experiences during
Conflict and Subsequent Posttraumatic Growth
Greene, Talya
FRI 133
(Clin Res, Chronic, Death, Grief, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Effect of Childhood Loss and Adulthood Loss on
Trauma Exposure, Resilience, and Grief: A Developmental
Perspective
Schwartz, Laura, Howell, Kathryn, Jamison, Lacy
FRI 134
(Clin Res, Chronic, Health, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Legacy of Childhood Victimization: Indirect Effects on
Adult Mental Health through Re-victimization
Scrafford, Kathryn, Grein, Katherine, Miller-Graff, Laura
www.istss.org
Association of PTSD, Depression and Anxiety Symptoms
with Systemic Inflammation in the WTC Terrorist Attack
Community Survivors with Severe Comorbid Medical
Conditions
Rosen, Rebecca, Ferri, Lucia, Rosen, Rebecca, Ferri, Lucia,
Reibman, Joan, Levy-Carrick, Nomi, Xu, Ning, Galatzer-Levy,
Isaac
Examination of the Moderating and Mediating Effects of
Social Support on the Association between Pre-College
Sexual Assault and College-Onset Victimization
Hawn, Sage, Lind, Mackenzie, Overstreet, Cassie, Conley,
Abigail, Kendler, Kenneth, Dick, Danielle, Amstadter, Ananda
FRI 138
(Clin Res, Chronic, Sub/Abuse, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Examination of the Mediating Influence of PTSD on the
Relation between Unit and Post-Deployment Social
Support: A Comparative Approach
Hawn, Sage, Brown, Emily, Overstreet, Cassie, Brown, Ruth,
McDonald, Scott, Amstadter, Ananda
FRI 139
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Commun, Cul Div, Adult)
M - E & S Africa
Collaborative Resiliency Training: A Culturally Versatile,
Evidence-based Approach to Post-Traumatic Resilience in
Individuals, Groups and Communities
Auerbach, Carl, Nattel, Jon
Presenting Author is Bolded
155
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 140
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Depr, Prevent, Adult)
I - Industrialized
FRI 147
(Clin Res, Acute, Practice, Cog/Int, Death, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Negative Cognitions and Depression in Treatment-Seeking
Recent Trauma Survivors
McCleary, Harry, Omofuma, Yimi, Detweiler, Laura, Vanden
Bussche, Alicia
FRI 141
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Health, Pub Health, Adult)
M - N/A
FRI 148
(Clin Res, Practice, Death, Grief, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Impact of Trauma History on Stress Recovery Patterns
Following a Music Intervention
Weaver, Terri, Kelton, Katherine, Santowski, Anna, Buchanan,
Tony, Kaufman, David
Suicidal Bereavement: Is it Traumatic Grief?
Iwanciw, Stefanie, Egbert, Rachel, Chiriboga, Eva, Demaria,
Thomas
FRI 151
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, DV, Health, Gender, Adult)
I - Industrialized
FRI 142
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Health, Pub Health, Care, Adult)
I - Industrialized
PTSD Treatment Modality Preference in an Online Sample:
Stated Reasons for Choice of Pharmacotherapy, Prolonged
Exposure Therapy, or Cognitive Processing Therapy
Sharma, Shankari, Roth, Maya, Gifford, Shannon, Monson,
Candice
FRI 143
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Practice, Cul Div, Adult)
I - N/A
Religious and Spiritual Struggles In Veterans with PTSD
Teng, Ellen, Chase, Tannah, Barrera, Terri, Stanley, Melinda,
Exline, Julie, Pargament, Kenneth
Is it the Thought that Counts?: Trauma-related Belief
Cognitions as a Mediator of Trauma Impact
Grein, Katherine, Makasiar, Mara, Scrafford, Kathryn, MillerGraff, Laura
FRI 152
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Rape, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Aspects of Social Support, Self-Blame, and PTSD: A
Mediation Model in Female and Male Sexual Assault
Survivors
Allen, Christy, Lilly, Michelle
FRI 153
(Pub Health, DV, Gender, Adult)
- Industrialized
FRI 144
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Updating Non-Trauma Associative Memories in
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Sachschal, Juliane, Woodward, Elizabeth, Ehlers, Anke
FRI 146
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Terror, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Relationship between Increased Self-Worth
and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Symptom
Improvement during Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy with
a Cognitive Enhancer
Peskin, Melissa, Wyka, Katarzyna, Cukor, Judith, Altemus,
Margaret, Lee, Francis, Difede, JoAnn
www.istss.org
Exploration of Blame, Responsibility, and Guilt in Suicide
Loss Survivors
Egbert, Rachel, Iwanciw, Stefanie, Chiriboga, Eva, Demaria,
Thomas
Intimate Partner Violence, Mental Health, and
Occupational Functioning Among OEF/OIF Veterans:
A Gender Comparison
Iverson, Katherine, Vogt, Dawne, Amoroso, Timothy, Maskin,
Rachel, Smith, Brian
FRI 156
(Clin Res, CPA, CSA, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Relationships between Sub-Types of Childhood Abuse and
Functions of Self-Harm
Gregory, Wesley, Doukas, Ashley, D’Andrea, Wendy
Presenting Author is Bolded
156
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 157
(Social, CPA, Pub Health, Social, Child/Adol)
- E & S Africa
FRI 165
(Clin Res, Complex, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Interpersonal Trauma and Mental Health: How Harsh
Discipline and Family Violence affects Adolescents in
Tanzania
Hecker, Tobias, Nkuba, Mabula, Elbert, Thomas, Hermenau,
Katharin
An Analysis of the Effectiveness of a Partial Hospitalization
Program for Complex PTSD using a Non-Sequential
Multifaceted, Prolonged Exposure-based Approach
Wetterneck, Chad
FRI 166
(Clin Res, CPA, CSA, Cog/Int, Prevent, Adult)
I - Industrialized
FRI 158
(Clin Res, Fam/Int, Gender, Adult)
- Industrialized
The Role of Demand-withdraw Communication in Intimate
Partner Violence Survivor Outcomes
Pickover, Alison, Lipinski, Alexandra, Woodward, Matthew,
Dodson, Thomas, Tran, Han, Beck, J Gayle
FRI 163
(Clin Res, Anx, Clin Res, Gender, Adult)
M - N/A
Posttraumatic Maladaptive Beliefs Scale: Enhancing
Prediction of PTSD in Adults following Adverse Childhood
Events
Berman, Ilana, Petretic, Patricia, Calvert, Maegan, Lentz,
Mariah
FRI 167
(Clin Res, CPA, CSA, Gender, Adult)
I - N/A
The Moderating Role of Self-compassion on the
Relationship between Shame and PTSD
Thelan, Alexandra, Boykin, Derrecka, Orcutt, Holly
FRI 164
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Rape, Gender, Adult)
M - N/A
Female Victims of Childhood Trauma, Sexual Motivations,
and the Moderating Role of Shame
Gustafson, Holly, Boykin, Derrecka, Orcutt, Holly
FRI 168
(Clin Res, CPA, Neglect, Sub/Abuse, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Clinical Utility of a Brief Self-compassion Intervention for
Reducing Risk among At-Risk College Women
Boykin, Derrecka, Pinciotti, Caitlin, Miron, Lynsey, Himmerich,
Sara, Miller, Lindsay, Orcutt, Holly
Childhood Trauma Severity and Alcohol Use in Acute-Care
Psychiatric Inpatients: The Mediating Role of Emotion
Regulation Difficulties
Dutcher, Christina, Paulus, Daniel, Schuhmann, Bailee, Smith,
Lia, Vujanovic, Anka
FRI 169
(Clin Res, CPA, Chronic, DV, Health, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Maternal Exposure to Childhood and Adulthood
Victimization and Prenatal Risk in a Sample of Pregnant
Women
Felix, Mario, Grasso, Damion
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
157
ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 171
(Clin Res, Death, Adult)
M - E Asia & Pac
FRI 177
(Clin Res, Rape, Sleep, Sub/Abuse, Adult)
- Industrialized
Different Attachment Type and Grief Response in Bereaved
Parents of the Sewol Ferry Accident: An Attachment Path
Model of Grief
Huh, Hyu Jung, Huh, Seung, Chae, Jeong-Ho
FRI 172
(Clin Res, Death, Grief, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Correlates of Suicidal Ideation in a Treatment-Seeking
Sample of Violent Loss Survivors
Williams, Joah, Rynearson, Ted, Rheingold, Alyssa
FRI 173
(Clin Res, Ethnic, Rape, Adult)
I - N/A
Who Reports Rape to the Police? The Impact of Race and
Violent Rape Experiences
Rhodes, Charla, Contractor, Ateka, Bolton, Elisa, Posner,
Daniel, Litz, Brett
FRI 174
(Clin Res, Fam/Int, Prevent, Sleep, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Characterizing Partner Sleep Functioning Over the Course
of Military Deployment
Miller, Katherine, Koffel, Erin, Kramer, Mark, Erbes,
Christopher, Arbisi, Paul, Polusny, Melissa
FRI 175
(Clin Res, Health, Bio/Int, Pub Health, Sub/Abuse, Adult) M - Industrialized
Trauma Exposure in the Context of Stress Reactivity and
Marijuana Use
Radoncic, Vanja
FRI 176
(Clin Res, Health, Pub Health, Sleep, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - N/A
Dysfunctional Beliefs about Sleep Mediates the
Relationship between Posttraumatic Stress and Insomnia
Severity in Gulf Coast Veterans
Sims, Brook, Currier, Joseph
Relationships between Trauma, Sleep Disturbances, PTSD,
and Symptoms of Alcohol Use Disorder in a Young Adult
Sample
Lind, Mackenzie, Baylor, Allison, Hawn, Sage, Overstreet,
Cassie, Rybarczyk, Bruce, Kendler, Kenneth, Dick, Danielle,
Amstadter, Ananda
FRI 178
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Sleep, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Examining the Relationships between Post-Trauma
Cognitions, Disturbed Sleep and PTSD in Combat-Exposed
Veterans
McNett, Sage, Lind, Mackenzie, Brown, Ruth, McDonald,
Scott, Pickett, Treven, Amstadter, Ananda
FRI 179
(Clin Res, Sleep, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Effects of Group Cognitive-behavioral Therapy for
Insomnia in Veterans with PTSD Receiving Residential
Treatment
DeViva, Jason, McCarthy, Elissa, Bieu, Rachel, Rinaldi,
Anthony, Gehrman, Philip, Kulas, Joseph
FRI 180
(Clin Res, Health, Sleep, Adult)
I - Industrialized
PTSD-Related Sleep Disturbance and Poor Sleep Quality
Predict Emotion Regulation Difficulties after Controlling
for PTSD Symptom Severity
Hunsanger, Jillian, Pickett, Scott
FRI 181
(Clin Res, Illness, Tech, Grief, Adult)
A - Industrialized
Can Psychosocial Support Work Virtually? Evaluation of an
Online Tool for Chronic Pain Patients
Kostova, Zlatina
FRI 182
(Clin Res, Practice, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Patients’ Experiences Making PTSD Treatment Decisions
Grubbs, Kathleen, Harik, Juliette, Hamblen, Jessica
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 183
(Clin Res, Pub Health, Adult)
I - Latin Amer & Carib
FRI 189
(Clin Res, Anx, Clin Res, Illness, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - N/A
Suicide Behavior and PTSD in Students from Seven College
Institutions in Northeastern Brazil
Lira, Sidnei, Netto, Liana, Teles, Carlos, Quarantini, Lucas
FRI 184
(Clin Res, QoL, Adult)
I - N/A
FRI 190
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - N/A
Effects of Internalized Stigma of Mental Illness among
Female Survivors of Interpersonal Violence
Weber, Holly, Elwood, Lisa, Goodin, Samantha
FRI 185
(Clin Res, Rape, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Meaningful Engagement with Military Work as a Protective
Factor following Deployment-Related Stressors
Finkelstein-Fox, Lucy, George, Login, Park, Crystal, Hoff, Rani
FRI 191
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Clin Res, Tech, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Peritraumatic Fear, Injury, and Rape Acknowledgment
Mediate the Relation between Rape Type and PTSD: A Focus
on Substance-Involved Rape
McConnell, Amy, Kaufman, Julia, Messman-Moore, Terri,
Gratz, Kim, DiLillo, David
FRI 186
(Clin Res, Sub/Abuse, Adult)
- Industrialized
Trauma Exposure and Non-Medical Use of Prescription
Drugs among College Students
Overstreet, Cassie, Rapport, Lance, Gillespie, Nathan, Kendler,
Kenneth, Dick, Danielle, Amstadter, Ananda
FRI 187
(Clin Res, Sub/Abuse, Terror, Grief, Adult)
I - N/A
Spirituality as a Moderator between Mass Violence and
Coping
Felix, Erika, Meskunas, Haley
FRI 188
(Clin Res, Anx, Tech, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) Mobile App: A
Comparative Validation Study of a Test of a Minimal Viable
Product (MVP)
Montera, Nicole, Stuart, Andrew, Infante, Leandra, Gau,
Alyssa, Agosto, Jazlyne, Javier, Gabriela
www.istss.org
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Veterans is Associated
with Increased Vestibular Impairment Symptoms
Haber, Yaa, Chandler, Helena, Serrador, Jorge
What Characterizes Danish Formerly Combat-Deployed
Military Personnel Seeking Treatment at the Danish
Department of Military Psychology? Assessment, Treatment
Model, and Treatment Response
Hjortkjaer, Dorte, Eskelund, Kasper, Norgaard, Ole, Nielsen,
Anni
FRI 192
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Cog/Int, Bio/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - N/A
Examining the Profile of Combat-Related Posttraumatic
Stress Disorder in Veterans: Self-reported Executive
Function Problems and Alterations in Eye Movement
Nguyen, Dorothy, Meltzer, Christine, Srnka, Kyle, Ciccone,
Danielle, Bair, John
FRI 193
(Clin Res, Assess Dx, Depr, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
The Regretted Actions/Inactions of Military Veterans and
Their Psychological Consequences
Williams, Christian, Berenbaum, Howard
FRI 194
(Clin Res, Acc/Inj, Sub/Abuse, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Moral Injury as a Mediator between Combat and Facets of
Hazardous Drinking among U.S. Military Personnel and
Veterans
Robbins, Allison, Yilmaz, Bilge, Hollis, Brittany, Bravo, Adrian,
Kelley, Michelle
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 195
(Clin Res, Bio/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
FRI 201
(Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - N/A
Suppression of Salivary Cortisol with a Glucocorticoid
during a Novel Intervention for Male Veterans with
Combat-related PTSD
Holliday, Ryan, Holder, Nicholas, Suris, Alina, Adinoff, Bryon
FRI 196
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Practice, Grief, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - N/A
FRI 202
(Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Trauma-Related Self-Forgiveness: A Novel Group
Intervention for Moral Injury in Combat Veterans
Malott, Jesse, Smigelsky, Melissa
FRI 197
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Fam/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - N/A
Service Utilization Before and After Treatment in Female
Veterans with PTSD
Lunney, Carole, Schnurr, Paula
FRI 203
(Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Theory of Mind and Memory Deficits in Post-911 Veterans
with mTBI
Perlick, Deborah, Drapalski, Amy, Grier, Savannah, Schultz,
Danielle, Schladen, Manon, Libin, Alexander
FRI 198
Clin Res, Fam/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Perceived Combat Threat Relates to Higher PTSD Stigma
from Family in OEF/OIF Military Veterans
Kugler, Jordan, Blais, Rebecca
FRI 199
(Clin Res, Affect/Int, Train/Ed/Dis, Mil/Vets, Theory, Adult)
M - N/A
The Role of Cognitively Flexible Coping, Social Support,
and Optimism in Posttraumatic Growth: A PostDeployment Examination among Iraq and Afghanistan
Combat Veterans
Heinz, Adrienne, Cohen, Nicole, Ortigo, Kile, Herbst, Ellen,
Bosch, Jeane, McCaslin, Shannon
FRI 200
(Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Prospective Cohort Study of Danish OEF Personnel
Deployed to Afghanistan in 2013: From Prior to Deployment
through 2.5 Years after Home Coming
Nielsen, Anni, Andersen, Søren, Karstoft, Karen-Inge
www.istss.org
Unique Associations between Spirituality and
Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms
Raines, Amanda, Currier, Joseph, McManus, Eliza, Walton,
Jessica, Franklin, C
The Impact of Residential Length of Stay on PTSD
Symptomatology and Outpatient Mental Health Service
Utilization among Veterans with PTSD
Banducci, Anne, Bonn-Miller, Marcel, Cloitre, Marylene,
Rosen, Craig
FRI 204
(Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
Changes in Distress Tolerance Predict PTSD Symptom
Severity Post-Treatment across Two Samples of Veterans in
Residential PTSD Treatment
Banducci, Anne, Connolly, Kevin, Vujanovic, Anka, Alvarez,
Jennifer, Bonn-Miller, Marcel
FRI 205
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Who Can’t Get No Satisfaction? Satisfaction with VA and
non-VA Mental Health Care among OIF/OEF Veterans with
PTSD
Moshier, Samantha, Klein, Alexandra, Harwell, Aaron,
Trachtenberg, Felicia, Keane, Terence, Marx, Brian
FRI 206
(Clin Res, Practice, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Less Symptomatic but More Impaired: Correlates of Early
Treatment Termination among Returning Veterans with
PTSD
Moshier, Samantha, Erb, Sarah, Parker-Guilbert, Kelly,
Trachtenberg, Felicia, Keane, Terence, Marx, Brian
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 207
(Clin Res, Practice, Comm/Int, QoL, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
FRI 213
(Clin Res, CPA, Clin Res, Fam/Int, Intergen, Lifespan)
M - N/A
Veterans Individual Placement and Support Towards
Advancing Recovery (VIP-STAR): Methods and Baseline
Clinical Characteristics of the Veterans Affairs Cooperative
Study Program #589
Davis, Lori, Suris, Alina, Resnick, Sandra, Mueller, Lisa,
Ottomanelli, Lisa, Parker, Pamela
FRI 208
(Clin Res, Bio Med, Clin Res, Bio/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
An Open Label Pilot Study of Adjunctive Asenapine for the
Treatment of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Davis, Lori, Norrholm, Seth, Pilkinton, Patricia, Badari, Badari,
Moody, Felicia
FRI 209
(Clin Res, Practice, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - N/A
Associations between Treatment Satisfaction and One-year
Clinical Outcomes in OEF/OIF Veterans with PTSD
Klein, Alexandra, Moshier, Samantha, Harwell, Aaron, Rosen,
Raymond, Keane, Terence, Marx, Brian
Child Maltreatment Status and Child Attachment
Classification as Predictors of Parenting Behaviors
Cummins, Nicole, Skowron, Elizabeth
FRI 215
(Clin Res, Cog/Int, Older)
I - N/A
Acceptance and Mindfulness Outcomes of Posttraumatic
Stress Disorder Treatment in a Sample of Older Adult
Veterans
Glassman, Lisa, Wells, Stephanie, Bower, Emily, Savage,
Ulysses, Wickramasinghe, Induni, Thorp, Steven
FRI 217
(Clin Res, Death, Grief, Aging, Older)
M - Industrialized
Adaptation of a Mind-body Intervention to Prevent
Complicated Grief in Widowed Older Adults: A Focus Group
Study in Patients and Community Providers
Bui, Eric, Grasfield, Rachel, Chad-Friedman, Emma, Rolfe,
Allison, Denninger, John
Technology
FRI 210
(Clin Res, Rape, Mil/Vets, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Exploring Military Sexual Trauma among Male Veterans
Menefee, Deleene, Voelkel, Emily, Schwartz Moravec,
Margaret, Walford, Vincent
FRI 211
(Clin Res, Practice, Self-Care, Mil/Vets, VHA Chaplains)
M - Industrialized
1. VHA Chaplains’ Definitions and Approach to Treating
Moral Injury: A Qualitative Analysis
McCormick, Wesley, Carroll, Timothy, Sims, Brook, Currier,
Joseph, Drescher, Kent
FRI 212
(Clin Res, CSA, Fam/Int, Intergen, Lifespan)
I - Industrialized
FRI 220
(Tech, DV, Prevent, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Changes in Peritraumatic Dissociation and PTSD Symptoms
in a Web-based Recovery System
Shoji, Kotaro, Benight, Charles, Boult, Terrance
FRI 221
(Tech, DV, Prevent, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Fractal Properties of Heart Rate Variability in a WebIntervention for Trauma Survivors
Shoji, Kotaro, Benight, Charles, Devane, Amanda, Stearns,
Shaun, Boult, Terrance
Parental Abuse History and Child Psychopathology among
Sexually Abused Youth: Examining the Contributions of
Parent Psychological Symptoms and Parenting Stress
Franz, Molly, Pogue, Jessie, Meidlinger, Katie, Hansen, David
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
Training/Education/ Dissemination
Assessment/ Diagnosis
FRI 222
(Train/Ed/Dis, Cog/Int, DV, Adult)
I - Industrialized
FRI 229
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Cul Div, Global, Child/Adol)
- Global
Intimate Partner Violence and Victim Blaming: Factors
Influencing a Common but Detrimental Response
Weingarten, Christine, Martinez-Torteya, Cecilia
FRI 226
(Train/Ed/Dis, Anx, Commun, Complex, Depr, Prof)
M - Industrialized
Opportunities for the Public Health Impact of a
Dissemination and Implementation Effort in Washington
State: A Novel Common Elements Treatment Approach
Peterson, Roselyn, Hughes, MacKenzie, Monroe-DeVita,
Maria, Kopelovich, Sarah, Berliner, Lucy, Darnell, Doyanne
Cross-cultural Evaluation of the Child and Adolescent
Trauma Screen
Rosner, Rita, Sachser, Cedric, Risch, Elizabeth, Berliner, Lucy,
Holt, Tonje, Jensen, Tine, Goldbeck, Lutz
FRI 230
(Assess Dx, Anx, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
The Role of Anxiety Control Beliefs among Youth with
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Neill, Erin, Weems, Carl, Scheeringa, Michael
FRI 231
(Assess Dx, Illness, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
FRI 227
(Train/Ed/Dis, Practice, Train/Ed/Dis, Mil/Vets, Prof)
I - Industrialized
Sleep On This: Changing Prescribing, Access and Attitudes
through Rural Provider Education
Montano, Macgregor, Sherrieb, Kathleen, Bernardy, Nancy
FRI 228
(Train/Ed/Dis, Affect/Int, Comm/Int, DV, Train/Ed/Dis, Case Workers
at a Domestic Violence Shelter)
I - Industrialized
Trauma Informed Care at The Family Place: A Baseline
of Staff Knowledge, Attitudes, and Beliefs Towards an
Esteemed Organizational Model
Moore, Antoinette, Pagels, Patti, Gimpel, Nora
Trauma in Early Childhood Predicts Pain-related Functional
Disability in Youth with Amplified Musculoskeletal Pain
Hildenbrand, Aimee, Weiss, Danielle, Sherker, Jennifer,
Sherry, David, Daly, Brian, Marsac, Meghan
FRI 233
(Assess Dx, Depr, Sub/Abuse, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Alcohol Use and Suicidal Ideation among People with PTSD
and Depression
Lv, Xin, Byllesby, Brianna, Claycomb, Meredith, Durham, Tory,
Elhai, Jon
FRI 234
(Assess Dx, Chronic, Cog/Int, Ethnic, Gender, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Relationship between Trauma Number and Dissociation
Symptoms Controlling for Demographics
Lv, Xin, Byllesby, Brianna, Durham, Tory, Claycomb, Meredith,
Charak, Ruby, Elhai, Jon
FRI 235
(Assess Dx, Cog/Int, Depr, Adult)
A - Industrialized
Looming Cognitive Style’s Moderating Role between
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptom Clusters and
Depression
Claycomb, Meredith, Brough, Shawna, Elhai, Jon
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 236
(Assess Dx, Cog/Int, Sub/Abuse, Adult)
A - Industrialized
FRI 242
(Assess Dx, Rape, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Rumination and Anxiety Sensitivity’s Role in the
Relationship between Co-Occurring Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder and Problematic Alcohol Use
Claycomb, Meredith, Lv, Xin, Durham, Tory, Byllesby, Brianna,
Elhai, Jon
FRI 243
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Gender, Adult)
I - Industrialized
FRI 237
(Assess Dx, Cog/Int, Adult)
M - Global
Self-attitudes among Trauma Victims who Developed
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder vs. Hoarding Disorder
Chou, Chia-Ying, Valdez, Christine, Shumway, Martha,
Mathews, Carol
FRI 238
(Assess Dx, Practice, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Trauma and Psychophysiologic Reactivity: Menstrual
Phase, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, and Performance on
a Loud Tones Task
Amalathas, Aneline, Curreri, Andrew, Resick, Patricia,
Rasmusson, Ann, Orr, Scott, Pineles, Suzanne
FRI 245
(Assess Dx, Affect/Int, Health, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Development of the Posttraumatic Information Processing
Survey: A Multidimensional Assessment of Trauma-Related
Cognitions
Valdez, Christine, London, Melissa, Lilly, Michelle
FRI 239
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Practice, Complex, Res Meth, Adult)
M - Industrialized
An Evaluation of the ICD-11 Trauma Interview Schedule
Compared to the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale and
WHODAS 2.0
Bondjers, Kristina, Arnberg, Filip, Willebrand, Mimmie
Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms and Psychological
Impairment: The Mediating Role of Detachment.
Gray, Brandon, Schwenk, Haley, Lowmaster, Sara
FRI 246
(Assess Dx, Ethics, Health, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Wartime Atrocity Exposure Type, PTSD Diagnosis and
Symptom Severity Prediction among OEF/OIF Veterans
Harwell, Aaron, Moshier, Samantha, Klein, Alexandra, Rosen,
Raymond, Keane, Terence, Marx, Brian
FRI 247
(Assess Dx, Aggress, CPA, CSA, Adult)
M - Industrialized
FRI 240
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Practice, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Psychometric Properties of the Swedish PTSD Checklist for
the DSM 5
Bondjers, Kristina, Arnberg, Filip, Willebrand, Mimmie
FRI 241
(Assess Dx, Acc/Inj, Acute, Adult)
A - Industrialized
A Path Analysis of Known PTSD Risk Factors and a
Predictive Screen of PTSD Risk among Single-Incident
Trauma Survivors Admitted to a Level 1 Trauma Center
Hunt, Josh, Schumann, Nicholas, Nydegger, Liesl, deRoonCassini, Terri
www.istss.org
The Importance of Screening for Suicidal Ideation among
Male and Female MST Survivors
Gerber, Holly, Monteith, Lindsey, Bahraini, Nazanin,
Matarazzo, Bridget, Soberay, Kelly
Latent Classes of Juvenile Poly-victimization and Their
Association with Suicide Behavior among Adults with
Lifetime Traumatic Experiences: The Moderating Role of
Anger Reactivity
Charak, Ruby, Byllesby, Brianna, Durham, Tory, Claycomb,
Meredith, Armour, Cherie, Elhai, Jon
FRI 248
Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Global, Health, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - S Asia
Latent Profiles of Posttraumatic Stress, Depression, and
Anxiety Symptoms in Indian Army Personnel Deployed in
the Conflict Zones of Jammu Region
Charak, Ruby, Claycomb, Meredith, Durham, Tory, Byllesby,
Brianna, Contractor, Ateka, Gupta, Samia
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 249
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Practice, Cog/Int, Adult)
- Industrialized
FRI 255
(Assess Dx, Theory, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Development of the Brief Posttraumatic Cognitions
Inventory (PTCI-9)
Wells, Stephanie, Torres, Elisa, Abrahem, Rachel, Mackintosh,
Margaret-Anne, Morland, Leslie, Aarons, Gregory
FRI 250
(Assess Dx, Cul Div, Ethnic, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
Moving Beyond Self-Report: Construct Validation of DSM-5
PTSD Symptom Clusters Using the CAPS-5
Petri, Jessica, Kramer, Lindsay, Silverstein, Madison, Lee,
Daniel, Weathers, Frank
Clinical Practice
Factor Structure of the Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Checklist (PCL) with Veterans Residing in Hawaii
Kloezeman, Karen, Tunze, Chloe, Chong, Rebecca, Meija,
Alexa, Morland, Leslie
FRI 251
(Assess Dx, Fam/Int, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
Military Couple Communication during Deployment:
The Development and Psychometric Evaluation of the
Deployment Communication Inventory
Balderrama-Durbin, Christina, Erbes, Christopher, Polusny,
Melissa, Vogt, Dawne
FRI 257
(Practice, Assess Dx, Practice, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Trauma Exposure and Undetected Post-Traumatic Stress
Disorder (PTSD) among Adults with a Mental Disorder
Bisson, Jonathan, Lewis, Catrin
FRI 258
(Practice, Assess Dx, Clin Res, Pub Health, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Understanding Heterogeneity in PTSD Symptoms and
Treatment Response in Female Veterans
Goodkind, Madeleine, Castillo, Diane
FRI 259
(Practice, CPA, CSA, Complex, Gender, Adult)
I - Industrialized
FRI 252
(Assess Dx, Theory, Adult)
- Industrialized
An Examination of Competing Latent Models of the
Dissociative Experiences Scale-II and the Relationship to
PTSD
Byllesby, Brianna, Durham, Tory, Claycomb, Meredith, Lv, Xin,
Elhai, Jon
Impact of Dissociation, Retraumatization, and
Interpersonal Problems on the Therapeutic Alliance among
Women with Traumatic Stress Related to Childhood Abuse
Lawson, David
FRI 253
(Assess Dx, Mil/Vets, Adult)
A - N/A
What Lies Beneath: Understanding the Latent Classes of
PTSD with a Veteran Sample
Cuccurullo, Lisa-Ann, Raines, Amanda, Walton, Jessica,
Maieritsch, Kelly, Franklin, C, Elhai, Jon
FRI 254
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Sleep, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Effects of PTSD Diagnosis on Results of Polysomnography
in a VA Sleep Clinic
DeViva, Jason, McCarthy, Elissa
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 261
(Practice, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
FRI 267
(Practice, Clin Res, QoL, Sub/Abuse, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
“It’s worth it”: Veterans’ Experiences in Prolonged Exposure
and Cognitive Processing Therapy
Hundt, Natalie, Barrera, Terri, Arney, Jennifer, Stanley, Melinda
FRI 262
(Practice, Fam/Int, Mil/Vets, Theory, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Moderating Role of Trauma Type in Soldiers and their
Spouses
Oseland, Lauren, Beck, Austin, Nelson Goff, Briana
FRI 263
(Practice, Cul Div, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
Culturally Congruent Strategies for the Successful Delivery
of Massed PE with Active Duty Military Personnel
Hall-Clark, Brittany, Wright, Edward, Fina, Brooke
FRI 264
(Clin Res, Chronic, Practice, Mil/Vets, Adult)
- Industrialized
A Prolonged Exposure Intensive Outpatient Program for
PTSD in Active Duty Service Members
Peterson, Alan, Blount, Tabatha
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) for TraumaExposed Substance Users: A Local Application to Expand
Programming among Veterans
Smith, Angela, Hogan, Julianna, Hoang, Chloe, Teng, Ellen
FRI 268
(Practice, Train/Ed/Dis, Mil/Vets, Prof)
M - Industrialized
Supporting Adherence to Clinical Practice Guidelines
through Provider Training and a Decision Support Tool
Osei-Bonsu, Princess, Bass, Deanna, Friedman, Matthew,
Nugent, Sean, Hagel-Campbell, Emily, Spoont, Michele
FRI 269
(Assess Dx, Assess Dx, Health, Gender, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
Validation of the Factor Structure of the AdolescentDissociative Experiences Scale in a Sample of TraumaExposed Detained Youth
Charak, Ruby, Kerig, Patricia, Chaplo, Shannon, Bennett,
Diana, Armour, Cherie, Modrowski, Crosby, McGee, Andrew
Biological/Medical
FRI 271
(Bio Med, Bio Med, Sub/Abuse, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
FRI 265
(Practice, Chronic, Cog/Int, QoL, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Cumulative Trauma, Cognitive Flexibility, and
Posttraumatic Stress Outcomes in a Veteran Population
Dyson, Rachel, Osborne, Lauren, Kison, Saarah, Keith, Jessica
Effect of Smoking and Alcohol Use on 24-Hour Urinary
Catecholamines, Dopamine, and Cortisol in Veterans with
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Herbst, Ellen, Pennington, David, McCaslin, Shannon, Cohen,
Beth
FRI 272
(Bio Med, Assess Dx, Sleep, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Sleep Factors Underpinning Posttraumatic Nightmares of
PTSD: An ambulatory PSG Study
Phelps, Andrea, Kanaan, Richard, Worsnop, Christopher,
Redston, Suzy, Ralph, Naomi, Forbes, David
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 273
(Bio Med, Assess Dx, Bio/Int, Res Meth, Tech, Adult)
M - Industrialized
FRI 279
(Bio Med, Bio Med, Bio/Int, Neuro, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Clustering Patients with PTSD via Time-Frequency
Decomposition of Evoked Response Potentials
May, Geoff, Wahbeh, Helané, Nelson, Steven
FRI 274
(Bio Med, Assess Dx, Bio Med, Clin Res, Bio/Int, Adult)
M - N/A
Heightened Skin Conductance Response to Trauma
Challenge in Individuals with PTSD
Roffman, Rebecca, Michopoulos, Vasiliki, Fiorillo, Devika,
Ressler, Kerry, Jovanovic, Tanja
FRI 275
(Bio Med, CPA, Chronic, DV, Health, Adult)
I - Industrialized
FRI 280
(Bio Med, Complex, Mil/Vets, Neuro, Adult)
A - Industrialized
Regional Cortical Gyrification is Reduced in Chronic Severe
PTSD
Woodward, Steven, Schaer, Maire, Kaloupek, Danny
FRI 281
(Bio Med, Rape, Neuro, Lifespan)
M - Industrialized
Exploration of the Relationship between Maternal Exposure
to Trauma and Infant Birth Factors
O’Brien, Kate, Figge, Caleb, D’Amico, Julie, Martinez-Torteya,
Cecilia
FRI 277
(Bio Med, Bio Med, CPA, Depr, Neuro, Adult)
M - Global
Early Life Stress and Glutamate Neurotransmission in Major
Depressive Disorder
Averill, Lynnette, Abdallah, Chadi, Fenton, Lisa, Fasula,
Madonna, Mason, Graeme, Sanacora, Gerard
FRI 278
(Bio Med, CPA, CSA, Neglect, Neuro, Adult)
A - N/A
Susceptible and Resilient Maltreated Individuals Have
Comparable Abnormalities in Global Network Architecture
but Differ in Amygdala Centrality
Ohashi, Kyoko, Anderson, Carl, Bolger, Elizabeth,
McGreenery, Cynthia, Khan, Alaptagin, Teicher, Martin
www.istss.org
Higher Translocator Protein (TSPO) Availability, a Marker of
Neuroinflammation, in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Pietrzak, Robert, Esterlis, Irina, Huang, Henry, Carson, Richard,
Cosgrove, Kelly
Developmental Stage Moderates the Effect of Early
Life Interpersonal Violence on Resting-state Network
Connectivity: An Exploratory Study
Zielinski, Melissa, Privratsky, Anthony, Steele, Scott,
Smitherman, Sonet, Kilts, Clinton, Cisler, Josh
FRI 282
Bio Med, Dev/Int, Ethnic, Bio/Int, Sub/Abuse, Lifespan)
- N/A
A Longitudinal Analysis of Early Life Trauma and
Neurocognitive Functioning Associated with Risky Alcohol
Use
Meyers, Jacquelyn, McCutcheon, Vivia, Pandey, Ashwini,
Chorlian, David, Agrawal, Arpana, Bucholz, Kathleen, Porjesz,
Bernice
FRI 283
(CulDiv, Sub/Abuse, Genetic, Lifespan)
- Industrialized
Childhood Trauma, Early Alcohol Use Initiation, and
Alcohol Use Disorder in African-American and White
Women: A Genetically-informative Approach
Sartor, Carolyn, Grant, Julia, Werner, Kimberly, McCutcheon,
Vivia, Few, Lauren, Madden, Pamela, Bucholz, Kathleen, Heath,
Andrew, Agrawal, Arpana
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 284
(Pub Health, CPA, CSA, Ethnic, Sub/Abuse, Lifespan)
- Industrialized
FRI 290
(Res Meth, Affect/Int, Cog/Int, Theory, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Neighborhood Disadvantage, Childhood Trauma Exposure,
and Alcohol Involvement in African American and White
Women
Werner, Kimberly, Bender, Annah, McCutcheon, Vivia, Grant,
Julia, Sartor, Carolyn, Bucholz, Kathleen, Heath, Andrew
An Analog Test of the Peritraumatic Encoding Disruption
Hypothesis: Introducing Event Segmentation as a Marker
for Moment-to-Moment Processing
Sherrill, Andrew, Lilly, Michelle, Magliano, Joseph
FRI 291
(Res Meth, Genetic, N/A)
I - N/A
Research Methodology
FRI 285
(Res Meth, Cog/Int, Child/Adol)
I - N/A
When Does Time Heal? Perceived Stressfulness as a
Moderator of Time and Posttraumatic Growth
McDiarmid, Leah, Britton, Maggie, Taku, Kanako
FRI 286
(Res Meth, Cog/Int, QoL, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
Individual Images of Personal Growth and Posttraumatic
Growth in American Youth
Taku, Kanako, Dominick, Whitney
Study Designs and Statistical Tests for Genome-wide
Gene-environment Interaction Analysis: Focusing on PostTraumatic Stress Disorder
Chen, Chia-Yen, Neale, Benjamin, Smoller, Jordan
FRI 292
(Res Meth, Cul Div, Adult)
M - N/A
Assessment of Skin Conductance in African American and
Non-African American Participants in Fear Conditioning
Research: Implications for PTSD Research
Kredlow, M. Alexandra, Pineles, Suzanne, Inslicht, Sabra,
Milad, Mohammed, Otto, Michael, Orr, Scott
FRI 294
(Res Meth, Chronic, Clin Res, Res Meth, Intergen, Lifespan)
M - Industrialized
FRI 287
(Res Meth, Assess Dx, Adult)
M - E & S Africa
Ranking Traumatic Event Types According to Their
Importance in Predicting PTSD Risk
Conrad, Daniela, Wilker, Sarah, Pfeiffer, Anett, Elbert, Thomas,
Kolassa, Iris, Kolassa, Stephan
Reliability of an Observational Mother-child Behavioral
Paradigm among Highly Traumatized African-American
Families
Kim, Ye Ji, Vance, Alexander, Cao, Minhnguyen, Powers Lott,
Abigail, Cross, Dorthie, Bradley, Bekh
FRI 288
(Res Meth, Assess Dx, Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Anxiety Sensitivity and Distress Tolerance Profiles and
Relations to PTSD: A Cluster Analytic Approach
Brown, Emily, Overstreet, Cassie, Duran, Amy, Berenz, Erin,
McDonald, Scott, Amstadter, Ananda
FRI 289
(Res Meth, Depr, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Is the Relationship between Lifetime Stressful Events and
Past-year Depression Mediated by Unit Social Support
during Deployment among National Guard Members?
Sampson, Laura, Cohen, Gregory, Fink, David, Liberzon, Israel,
Tamburrino, Marijo, Calabrese, Joseph
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
Global Issues
Culture/Diversity
FRI 297
(Global, Comm/Int, Cul Div, Fam/Int, Civil/War, Child/Adol)
- W & C Africa
A Qualitative Analysis of Factors Impacting Resilience
among Youth in Post-Conflict Liberia
Levey, Elizabeth, Oppenheim, Claire, Harris, Benjamin,
Lekpeh, G, Kekulah, Isaac, Henderson, David, Borba, Christina
FRI 298
(Clin Res, CPA, Fam/Int, Lifespan)
- E & S Africa
Water Insecurity, Child Maltreatment, and Child Mental
Health in Rural Uganda: A Mixed Methods Study
Cooper-Vince, Christine, Burns, Bridget, Ashaba, Scholastic,
Kakuhikire, Bernard, Mushavi, Rumbidzai, Owembabazi, Moran,
Vorechovska, Dagmar, Bangsberg, David, Tsai, Alexander
FRI 302
(CulDiv, Comm/Vio, Child/Adol)
M - N/A
Racial Differences in the Effect of Perception of
Neighborhood Condition on Post-Trauma Symptoms: The
Preceding Role of Hyperarousal
Salami, Temiola, Metzger, Isha, Stewart, Regan, Andrews,
Arthur, Tolbert, Christina, de Arellano, Michael
FRI 303
(CulDiv, DV, Orient, Gender, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Effects of Gender and Sexual Orientation in the Context of
Intimate Partner Violence
Elrod, Noel, Weaver, Terri
FRI 304
(CulDiv, Commun, Rape, Social, Train/Ed/Dis, Adult)
I - Industrialized
FRI 300
(Global, Health, Rights, Lifespan)
I - Global
Aftercare Successful Outcomes Form, Measurement of
Restoration for Survivors of Violent Crimes
Lee, Michele, Sierra, Ana, Hayden Sharpe, Christa, Knapp, Ann,
Slavovsky, Lisa
Sexual Violence is a Public Health Problem: Considerations
for International Students
Scholl, James, Micol, Rachel, Youngren, Westley, Steward,
Jennifer, Hancock, Kelsey, Davis, Joanne
FRI 305
CulDiv, Health, Illness, Journalism, Gender, Lifespan)
I - Latin Amer & Carib
FRI 301
(Global, Complex, Health, Health-care Professionals)
M - E Asia & Pac
The Psychological and Occupational Impacts of the 2015
MERS-CoV Outbreak in South Korean Teaching Hospitals
Lee, KangUk, Lee, So Hee
Zika in the Americas: Media Potrayal of Female Trauma
Cohen, Elise, Fowler, Zeleyka, Demaria, Thomas
FRI 306
(CulDiv, Comm/Vio, Dev/Int, Lifespan)
M - Industrialized
Types of Trauma Exposure and Symptoms among Racially
and Ethnically Diverse US Born and Non-US Born Young
Adults: Implications for Public Health Efforts
Amoh, Nana, Dewey, Lauren, Allwood, Maureen
www.istss.org
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
Community-Based Programs
Social Issues – Public Policy
FRI 307
(Commun, CPA, Clin Res, Neglect, Train/Ed/Dis, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
Improving Child Welfare Outcomes and Mental Health with
Trauma-informed Care: A Longitudinal Research Project
Meyer, Erika Elizabeth
FRI 308
(Commun, CSA, Clin Res, Practice, Comm/Vio, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
Initial Barriers to Implementing Services for Youth with
Problematic Sexual Behavior: A Senior Leaders and
Therapists’ Perspective
Daer, Jennifer, Taylor, Erin, Espeleta, Hannah, Beasley, Lana,
Silovsky, Jane
FRI 309
(Commun, Clin Res, Cul Div, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
Community Therapists’ Perspective of TF-CBT in Singapore
Kwek, Jean, Chen, Jemi, Lim, Xin Yi, Sim, Jasmine, Soh, Lynn,
Fitzgerald, Monica
Lawyers and Laypeople: Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and
the Insanity Defense
Camins, Joshua, Tomei, Jenna
FRI 314
(Social, CSA, Cog/Int, Comm/Int, Gender, Adult)
I - N/A
Blame and Responsibility Associated with Non-offending
Parents of Child Sexual Abuse Victims
Zagrodney, Jessica, Cummings, Jorden
FRI 315
(Social, Rape, Mil/Vets, Gender, Adult)
I - Industrialized
“But Once Again – A Woman in a Man’s World:” An Analysis
of Emergent Themes from Interviews with Women Veterans
Who Had Deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan
Brown, Elaine, Guthrie, Kate, Stange, Mia, Creech, Suzannah
Prevention/Early Intervention
FRI 310
(Commun, Practice, Commun, Complex, DV, Adult)
I - Industrialized
A Psychiatric Profile of Survivors of Intimate Partner
Violence and Sex Trafficking: Findings from a Pilot CoLocated Model of Psychiatric Care in the South Bronx
Weiss, Marina, Okuda, Mayumi, Berry, Obianuju, Regincos,
Rosa, Fitelson, Elizabeth, Monk, Catherine
FRI 311
(Commun, Complex, Cul Div, Train/Ed/Dis, Prof)
A - Industrialized
Prevention of Trauma-Related Disorders Stigma Through
the Analysis of the Labelling Processes’ and Cultural
Assumptions’ Effects on Diagnosis, Treatment, Healing, and
Patients’ Compliance
Manocchi, Michele
www.istss.org
FRI 313
(Social, Assess Dx, Social, Adult)
I - N/A
FRI 317
(Prevent, Anx, CPA, CSA, Neglect, Child/Adol)
I - Industrialized
Stress Inoculation: Preliminary Evidence that Exposure
to Low-levels of Early Adversity Protect against the
Psychiatric Consequences of Teenage Exposure to
Maltreatment
Hernandez Garcia, Laura, Teicher, Martin
FRI 318
(Prevent, CPA, Complex, DV, Intergen, Child/Adol)
I - N/A
One Scar, Many Origins: Poly-victimization, Caregiver
Impairment and Children’s Mental Health Outcomes among
Children and Families Involved with Child Protective
Services
Melita, Nicole, Clough, Meghan, Grasso, Damion, DiVietro,
Susan, Beebe, Rebecca
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 319
(Prevent, CPA, Health, Pub Health, Sub/Abuse, Child/Adol)
M - Industrialized
Early Childhood Adversity and Adult Health: Using
Longitudinal Research to Expand Translation of the ACE
Survey for Children 0-2
Melville, Alysse
Suicide Capability and Self-Stigma for Seeking Help in
Firefighters
Streeb, Nicole, Benight, Charles, Shoji, Kotaro
FRI 326
(Prevent, Death, Prevent, Pub Health, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - N/A
FRI 320
Prevent, Acc/Inj, Acute, Prevent, Pub Health, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Lifetime Rates and Current Interest in Receiving HIV and
Mental Health Services among High-Risk Acute Physical
Injury Survivors
Pacella, Maria, Dickson-Gomez, Julia, deRoon-Cassini, Terri
Social and Support Networks and Suicide among U.S. Army
Soldiers: Implications for Prevention
Dempsey, Catherine, Benedek, David, Nock, Matthew, Cox,
Kenneth, Wu, Hongyan, Wang, Leming
FRI 327
(Prevent, Clin Res, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
FRI 321
(Prevent, Clin Res, Cog/Int, Health, Pub Health, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Self-Reported Memory and Concentration Concerns in
Recent Trauma Survivors: Unique Associations with PTSD
Vanden Bussche, Alicia, McBain, Sacha, Metcalf, Caitlin, Bliss,
Whitney, Detweiler, Laura, Omofuma, Yimi
FRI 322
(Prevent, Assess Dx, Clin Res, Practice, Pub Health, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Predicting PTSD Measure Identifies Patients at Risk for
Chronic PTSD in both Interpersonal and Non-Interpersonal
Trauma
Rothbaum, Alex, Michopoulos, Vasiliki, Post, Loren, Fiorillo,
Devika, Ressler, Kerry, Rothbaum, Barbara
FRI 323
(Prevent, Dev/Int, Bio/Int, Rape, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Heart Rate Reactivity and Locus of Control Predict PTSD
Symptoms at One Month Post Trauma
Griffin, Michael, Preston, Brittany, Delgado, Rebecca, Harris,
Sydney
FRI 324
(Prevent, Rape, Social, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Developing a Risk Model to Target High-risk Preventive
Interventions for Sexual Assault Victimization among
Female U.S. Army Soldiers
Street, Amy, Rosselini, Anthony, Ursano, Robert, Stein, Murray,
Zaslavsky, Alan, Kessler, Ronald
www.istss.org
FRI 325
(Prevent, Train/Ed/Dis, Adult)
M - Industrialized
The Differential Role of Outcome Expectancy in Reducing
Intrusive Thoughts after Brief Postdeployment Training
Curreri, Andrew, Salters-Pedneault, Kristalyn, Shipherd, Jillian
FRI 328
(Prevent, Illness, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
A Register-based Study of the Use of Mental Health
Care System following Deployment to Balkan, Iraq and
Afghanistan
Vedtofte, Mia, Madsen, Trine
FRI 329
(Prevent, Chronic, Health, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Increased Risk of Lifetime Trauma Exposures in Combat
Veteran versus Civilian Hospitalized Physical Injury
Survivors
Ingraham, Leah, Darnell, Doyanne, Wang, Jin, Kompar,
Christopher, Guiney, Roxanne, Zatzick, Douglas
FRI 331
(Prevent, Clin Res, Commun, Health, Lifespan)
I - Industrialized
Effects of Preventive Psychoeducation on Self-efficacy
for Coping with Traumatic Memory Recall and Supporting
Traumatized People in Japanese Undergraduates: A
Controlled Trial
Osawa, Kaori
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 332
(Prevent, Gender, Lifespan)
I - Industrialized
FRI 340
(Pub Health, Aggress, Comm/Int, Comm/Vio, Cul Div, Adult)
- Industrialized
Meta-analysis of the Effectiveness of Sexual Assault
Bystander Interventions
Walsh, Kate
Ethics
FRI 341
(Pub Health, Aggress, Train/Ed/Dis, All Types of Health Care
Employees)
I - Industrialized
FRI 333
(Ethics, CPA, CSA, Cul Div, Ethics, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Trauma Research in a Japanese Sample: The Impact of
Disclosure amongst Interpersonal Trauma Participants
Straus, Elizabeth, Allard, Carolyn, Thomas, Katie
Public Health
VA Health Care System Employees’ Perceptions of
Vulnerability to Workplace Violence
Hebenstreit, Claire, Purcell, Natalie, Maguen, Shira, Drexler,
Michael
FRI 342
(Pub Health, Aggress, Rape, Adult)
M - N/A
FRI 335
Pub Health, Anx, Comm/Int, Depr, Pub Health, Adult)
- Industrialized
Resource Loss and Psychiatric Symptoms Following the
Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong
Hou, Wai-Kai
Extending the Confluence Model to Include Impulse
Control Difficulties and Domestic Violence
Cox, Ashley, Kirwan, Mitchell, Parkhill, Michele, Pickett, Scott
FRI 343
(Pub Health, Prevent, Rape, Adult)
I - N/A
FRI 337
(Pub Health, Health, Social, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Treating Trauma Survivors: Physicians’ Perspectives
Kokokyi, Seint, Klest, Bridget, Reid, Miranda
FRI 338
(Train/Ed/Dis, Practice, Cog/Int, Prof)
- Industrialized
Updating the Language of Rape Myths: An Examination of
Modern Rape Myth Acceptance in U.S. College Students
Edwards, Larissa-Jayne, Mitchell, Heike
FRI 344
(Pub Health, Health, Prevent, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Provider Perspectives on Barriers to Implementing
Cognitive Processing Therapy in the VA Healthcare System
Healy, Ellen, Feingold, Zoe, Chard, Kathleen
FRI 339
(Clin Res, Gender, Adult)
- Industrialized
Adverse Childhood Experiences and Oral Health: Findings
from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
Bosch, Jeane, Weaver, Terri, Arnold, Lauren, Ross, Michael
FRI 345
(Res Meth, Chronic, Pub Health, Adult)
- Industrialized
Gender Differences in Rates and Predictors of Individual
Psychotherapy Initiation and Engagement among Veterans
Newly Diagnosed with PTSD
Kehle-Forbes, Shannon, Spoont, Michele
www.istss.org
Comparison of Stigma and Barriers to Care in a Prospective
Study of Civilians and Police Officers Exposed to
Community Violence in Ferguson, MO
Galovski, Tara, Peterson, Zoe, Beagley, Marin, Strasshofer,
David
Firefighters, Trauma, and Social Support: Public Health
Implications from a Network Analysis
Sullivan, Connor, Lewis, Michael, Wusik, Michael, Jones,
Russell
Presenting Author is Bolded
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Poster Session Two Presentations
Friday, November 11, Grand Hall
5:30 p.m – 6:30 p.m.
FRI 346
(Pub Health, Chronic, Adult)
- Industrialized
FRI 352
(Pub Health, CPA, Health, Illness, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Firefighters and PTSD: Population Impact of Support,
Motivation, and Stress
Lewis, Michael, Sullivan, Connor, Jones, Russell, Wusik,
Michael
FRI 347
(Clin Res, Clin Res, Adult)
- Industrialized
Childhood Adversity and Diabetes: Age of Onset,
Complications and Diabetes Preventive Care
Schüssler-Fiorenza Rose, Sophia Miryam, Sasson-Gelman, E.
Joy
FRI 353
(Pub Health, Health, Social, N/A)
M - Industrialized
Teaching Firefighters AMIT: Effective Methods of Peer
Training
Gulliver, Suzy, Pennington, Michelle, Kimbrel, Nathan,
Zimering, Rose
FRI 348
(Pub Health, Health, Media, Pub Health, Res Meth, Adult)
I - N/A
Curvilinear Predictors of PTSD Symptom Change among
Emergency Responders
Mercer, Mary Catherine, Lilly, Michelle
“That ACEs Stuff, It’s Pretty Powerful:” Local Public Health
Department Officials’ Knowledge and Perceptions of
Traumatic Stress and Trauma-Informed Practice
Purtle, Jonathan, Peters, Rachel
FRI 354
(Pub Health, QoL, Social, Mil/Vets, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Assessing Civilian Perceptions of Veterans: An IAT Study
Schreger, Cade, Kimble, Matthew
FRI 355
(Pub Health, Assess Dx, Chronic, QoL, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
FRI 349
(Pub Health, Health, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Functional Impairment in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: a
Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
Vital, Nicolà, Malamud, Jolanda, Taeymans, Jan, MuellerPfeiffer, Christoph
FRI 350
(Pub Health, Comm/Int, Cul Div, Health, Pub Health, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Do PTSD Symptoms Contribute to HIV Care
Disengagement?
Gay, Natalie, McLean, Carmen, Gallagher, Thea, Foa, Edna
Mobile Health Applications for Addressing Post-Traumatic
Stress Disorder (PTSD): A Literature Review
Rodriguez Paras, Carolina, Sasangohar, Farzan, Benzer, Justin,
Kum, Hye-Chung, Creech, Suzannah
FRI 356
(Pub Health, Pub Health, Mil/Vets, Adult)
I - Industrialized
Exploring Patterns in Referrals to Combat Stress for UK
Veterans with PTSD between 1994 and 2014
Murphy, Dominic
FRI 351
(Pub Health, Prevent, Res Meth, Terror, Adult)
M - Industrialized
Weill Cornell 9/11 Mental Health Screening Program - a
Disaster Response Case Study
Wyka, Katarzyna, Cukor, Judith, Olden, Megan, Cancellare,
Mary Denise, Jayasinghe, Nimali, Difede, JoAnn
www.istss.org
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ISTSS 32nd Annual Meeting
Final Program
Convention Floor Plans
1st Floor
www.istss.org
3rd Floor
173