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Trauma Treatment Module 4 Guide

This document provides a roadmap for Module 4 of a training program on treating trauma. It includes topics such as shame, self-harm, moral injury, and positive emotion. For each topic, it lists key questions to consider from the course material and prompts the user to add relevant clients to a "My Clients" list. The goal is to help the user apply what they're learning to their own client cases.

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Ante
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
599 views3 pages

Trauma Treatment Module 4 Guide

This document provides a roadmap for Module 4 of a training program on treating trauma. It includes topics such as shame, self-harm, moral injury, and positive emotion. For each topic, it lists key questions to consider from the course material and prompts the user to add relevant clients to a "My Clients" list. The goal is to help the user apply what they're learning to their own client cases.

Uploaded by

Ante
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The Advanced Master Program on the Treatment of Trauma

ROADMAP FOR MODULE FOUR


1
Shame The internalization of shame
can give trauma survivors a
sense of control. Think of your
What are the 2 areas of the brain clients whose shame may
Lanius mentions are involved in function this way and add
the visceral feeling of shame? them to your “My Clients” list.

My Clients:

According to Steele, what are the


4 strategies clients might use to
cope with shame?

According to Bryant-Davis, what


kind of relationship patterns can be
an indicator of shame?

According to Porges, why is learning


about polyvagal theory particularly
helpful to trauma survivors?

Ogden modeled several somatic


indicators of shame. What are they?

How does Sweezy help create ‘distance’


between a client’s self and their inner
critic that holds the shame?

Have you noticed any of


these indicators of shame in
your clients? Add them to
your “My Clients” list.

nicabm p.1
ROADMAP FOR MODULE FOUR
2
Self-harm

I know what questions to ask to My Clients:


differentiate between parasuicidal
and suicidal behavior

According to Lanius, what trauma


symptom can be an overlooked
self-harming behavior?

Rather than a safety plan, what is a


What’s the effective “one-two more appropriate alternative to
punch” that self-harming gives helping clients manage dysregulation
the body according to Fisher? according to Dana?

3
According to Fisher, what is the Moral injury
strategy to use with self-harming
clients to make self-harm less What are the 2 risk factors that
appealing? make an individual vulnerable to
moral injury?

Have you updated


your client list with
the strategy you’ll
try using? Think of clients who may be
at risk of moral injury based
on these risk factors. Add
them to your “My Clients” list.

nicabm p.2
ROADMAP FOR MODULE FOUR

What is the somatic approach that Have you updated


Ogden introduced to work with your client list with
moral injury? the approach you’ll
try using?

My Clients:

According to Nash, instead of helping


clients reconcile the past we need to
help them:

4
Positive Emotion

I understand how a client’s nervous


system can be protecting them by not
tolerating positive emotion

How do you help a client titrate their


experience of positive emotions to stay
within their window of tolerance?

List some questions to ask to assess


whether a client has difficulty
experiencing positive emotion:

Dana talked about the


importance of ‘savoring’ brief
moments of positive emotion.
Write down one client you
want to try this with on your
“My Clients” list.

nicabm p.3

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