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Preliminary Findings from a Qualitative Study of Trauma Survivors in Treatment: Changes in Personal Narratives
Authors:Diya Kallivayalil  Jocelyn Levitan  Nicola Brown  Mary R. Harvey
Affiliation:1. Cambridge Health Alliance/Harvard Medical School , Somerville , Massachusetts , USA dkallivayalil@challiance.org;3. Department of Clinical, Counseling and School Psychology , University of California, Santa Barbara , Santa Barbara , California , USA;4. Center for Addiction and Mental Health , University of Toronto , Toronto , Ontario , Canada;5. Cambridge Health Alliance/Harvard Medical School , Somerville , Massachusetts , USA
Abstract:This article seeks to document the characteristics and themes of later trauma recovery using a grounded theory analysis of interviews with trauma survivors enrolled in outpatient treatment. Little research exists that speaks to patients’ own accounts of the process of trauma recovery. Such accounts might elucidate how psychotherapy helps survivors make and remake meaning of their lives, their experience of traumatic events, and the resources they might call on in psychotherapy to secure recovery. This study examined narrative material gathered in a series of interviews with trauma survivors (n?=?14) who had been in treatment for an average of 8 months and could be described as in a later phase of the recovery process. Two significant themes emerged from the analysis: (a) greater coherence to the trauma narrative, and (b) the emergence of a more reflective and observational stance with respect to one's history. Implications for trauma-informed therapy are discussed.
Keywords:grounded theory  later recovery  narrative analysis  trauma-informed therapy
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