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Journal of Trauma & Treatment

ISSN: 2167-1222

Open Access

Volume 11, Issue 9 (2022)

Research Article Pages: 1 - 8

Women of Cultural Diversity and Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder: Group Intervention with STAIR Model

Sara Guila Fidel Kinori*, Gloria Palomar Martinez, Carolina Ramos Sayalero, Estela García Gea, Constanza Daigre Blanco, Guillem d’Efak Fullana-Ferre and José Antonio Ramos-Quiroga

DOI: 10.37421/2167- 1222.2022.11.527

Background: The improvement in the assessment of women with Complex PTSD diagnosis has made it easier to offer special treatments with scientific evidence. In Spain, non-native women present a high percentage of this disorder and require a specific approach.

Objective: Develop a Pilot Study adapting the STAIR modular program to Spanish for women of cultural diversity, and apply it in a group format in two different settings: a General Hospital and an Arts Museum.

Method: 26 culturally diverse women were randomized into two groups, offering the STAIR program in 10 consecutive weekly sessions, with a pre- and post- evaluation, and a follow-up during the first year. A non-parametric statistical analysis for repeated measures was used.

Results: All the participants showed significant improvement (p<0.001) in anxiety, depressive and post-traumatic stress symptoms, and in quality of life. Overall symptomatic improvement was identified in the participants, despite the fact that satisfaction with the treatment was lower in the Museum group setting with Art in Health approaches.

Conclusions: The cross-cultural adaptation of the STAIR Model has been useful in the symptomatic improvement of the participants, but it is necessary to get better with Arts in Health perspective.

Mini Review Pages: 1 - 2

Knowledge of Neuroscience and the Brain: A Mini Review

David N. Goldman*

DOI: 10.37421/2167- 1222.2022.11.530

The AD sector is well known for numerous clinical trials of disease-modifying medications that failed despite demonstrating great devotion in preclinical AD models deliberately evaluated how practical AD creature models were. They identified a few aspects of these models that may be to blame for this lack of interpretation. These include: the majority of models testing a single AD hypothesis using healthy and young creatures, which occurs in more advanced patients, frequently with other comorbidities, and the use of single mental result estimates in creature models as opposed to the complexity of cognizance in AD, which changes with comorbidities and AD stage and is a complicating factor In comparison to clinical preliminary reports, they also observed that many creature preliminary reports were less illuminating. The authors suggested using standardised focus on plan execution and disclosure, releasing all raw data from research, creating a translational profile for models, and precisely approving them in order to address some of these problems.

Mini Review Pages: 1 - 3

Surgery with Significant Outcomes for Patients with Brain Disease

Biniam Arfroz*

DOI: 10.37421/2167- 1222.2022.11.529

Neuroimaging techniques utilizing cerebrum attractive reverberation imaging to enhance understanding of the neural substrate of surgical coma. Previous research suggested that possible inclining cerebrum MRI markers of postoperative incoherence may be a decreased global or provincial mind volume, an expanded white matter hyper intensity volume, and various cerebrum infarcts. However, there is conflicting evidence suggesting there are no association with cerebrum volumes and no relationship with WMH volumes or hemodynamics. An important issue to consider is that the great majority of these previous examinations was underpowered and required prior mental imaging.

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 1048

Journal of Trauma & Treatment received 1048 citations as per Google Scholar report

Journal of Trauma & Treatment peer review process verified at publons

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