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VIRTUAL REALITY USED TO TREAT TRAUMATIZED VETERANS --
Researchers and physicians are treating PTSD by
exposing
veterans to video game-like recreations of the
kind
of horrors they experienced in the war.

For more about virtual reality therapy, use the
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http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=virtual+reality&op=ph
Story here...
http://blogs.wsj.com/health/2008/02/
11/virtual-reality-used-to-treat-traumatized-vets/?mod=googlenews_wsj
Story below:
-------------------------
Virtual Reality Used to Treat Traumatized Vets
Posted By Jacob Goldstein
If a person has post-traumatic stress disorder after a car accident, a
therapist might have him sit in a car for a while, then start the engine
without going anywhere and, finally, start driving again. But what do you
do for a soldier traumatized by a tour of duty in Iraq?
Academic researchers and military docs are developing virtual reality
simulators with the hope of treating PTSD by exposing veterans to video
game-like recreations of the kind of horrors they experienced in the war.
Article continues below:
(use left/right arrows in screen to view more videos)
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“You can wear a head-mounted display and drive in
a Humvee through the desert, or go on foot patrol through an Iraqi city,”
Skip Rizzo, a psychologist at the University of Southern California’s
Institute for Creative Technologies, told the Health Blog.
The notion that exposing someone to the sort of thing that traumatized
them in the first place is counterintuitive — wouldn’t you just be
traumatizing them all over again? But it turns out that so-called
“exposure therapy” has proved effective for PTSD, Deane Aikins a
Yale-based psychologist who’s an expert in PTSD, told us. The big problem
is a high dropout rate, because the therapy can be so difficult for
patients to endure.
“I think a lot of these people have no idea of what they’re getting into,”
Aikins said. “They don’t have an emotional vocabulary.”
The Iraq simulation was designed so that the therapist controls the level
of exposure the vet is exposed to. “They can sit by the side of the road
with no sound. They can drive like they’re going through Arizona,” Rizzo
said. “Once they habituate to that, the clinician can add a gunshot in the
distance, or an IED goes off, or the guy in the seat next to you gets shot
and dies.”
The Iraq project came to the Health Blog’s attention because of a
presentation Rizzo gave at the recent Medicine Meets Virtual Reality
conference in Long Beach, Calif. The project is in its early phases and
has seen a high dropout rate, even in preliminary therapy sessions before
donning the virtual reality headset.
Still, Rizzo says the early experience is promising for those who finish
the program, though some vets aren’t quite clear on the concept. “Some
people get in there, they say, ‘I want to fire back,’ ” Rizzo said, noting
that soldiers can look around in the simulation, but can’t fire a weapon.
“That”s not what the goal of this is. It’s not a cathartic experience of
getting revenge and taking out people. It’s about dealing with the trauma
you were exposed to.”
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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