- Joined
- Feb 10, 2008
- Messages
- 8,131
- Reaction score
- 8,350
Hi all,
Wanted to draw your attention to this 2024 state of the science article on EMDR, which concludes that, despite all of the dismantling studies, there is indeed some scientific evidence for EMDR. The idea is that it taxes working memory, allowing the trauma memory to be reconsolidated in a less vivid or intense manner https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/jts.23012
You can also see Sadie Larsen from the NCPTSD interviewing the study authors here:
Incidentally, de Jongh is the first author of my favorite article criticizing CPTSD as both a construct and needing separate treatment guidelines. This surprises me because usually the EMDR camp and CPTSD camp tend to overlap.
Thoughts? Obviously I'm not gonna go run out and get trained in EMDR (or ever), but I am open to reconsidering my radically opposed stance on it, and this is the most compelling argument I've seen so far.
Wanted to draw your attention to this 2024 state of the science article on EMDR, which concludes that, despite all of the dismantling studies, there is indeed some scientific evidence for EMDR. The idea is that it taxes working memory, allowing the trauma memory to be reconsolidated in a less vivid or intense manner https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/jts.23012
You can also see Sadie Larsen from the NCPTSD interviewing the study authors here:
Incidentally, de Jongh is the first author of my favorite article criticizing CPTSD as both a construct and needing separate treatment guidelines. This surprises me because usually the EMDR camp and CPTSD camp tend to overlap.
Thoughts? Obviously I'm not gonna go run out and get trained in EMDR (or ever), but I am open to reconsidering my radically opposed stance on it, and this is the most compelling argument I've seen so far.