James S. Gordon, MD; Julie K. Staples, PhD; Afrim Blyta, MD, PhD; Murat Bytyqi, BA; and Amy T. Wilson, PhD
Objective: To determine whether participation in a mind-body
skills group program based on psychological self-care, mind-body techniques,
and self-expression decreases symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Method: Eighty-two adolescents meeting criteria for PTSD
according to the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire (which corresponds with 16 of the
17 diagnostic criteria for PTSD in DSM-IV) were randomly assigned to a
12-session mind-body group program or a wait-list control group. The program
was conducted by high school teachers in consultation with psychiatrists and
psychologists and included meditation, guided imagery, and breathing
techniques; self-expression through words, drawings, and movement; autogenic
training and biofeedback; and genograms. Changes in PTSD symptoms were measured
using the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire. The study was conducted from September
2004 to May 2005 by The Center for Mind-Body Medicine at a high school in the
Suhareka region of Kosovo.
Results: Students in the immediate intervention group had
significantly lower PTSD symptom scores following the intervention than those
in the wait-list control group (F = 29.8, df = 1,76; p < .001). Preintervention
and postintervention scores (mean [SD]) for the intervention group were 2.5
(0.3) and 2.0 (0.3), respectively, and for the control group, 2.5 (0.3) and 2.4
(0.4), respectively. The decreased PTSD symptom scores were maintained in the
initial intervention group at 3-month follow-up. After the wait-list control
group received the intervention, there was a significant decrease (p < .001) in
PTSD symptom scores compared to the preintervention scores.
Conclusions: Mind-body skills groups can reduce PTSD symptoms
in war-traumatized high school students and can be effectively led by trained
and supervised schoolteachers.
Trial Registration: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00136357
J Clin Psychiatry 2008;69(9):1469-1476
© Copyright 2008 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.