The Association Between Service Connection and Treatment Outcome in Veterans Undergoing Residential PTSD Treatment

AbstractThe Department of Veterans Affairs has invested significant time and resources into the treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Despite concerted efforts, a significant portion of patients do not respond optimally to trauma-focused treatment. One of the factors that has been hypothesized to be associated with treatment response is participation in the Veterans Benefits Administration service-connected disability process. This factor may be particularly relevant in the residential treatment setting, where most participants are engaged in the compensation seeking process. We conducted a retrospective chart review of 105 veterans who completed Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT) in a residential rehabilitation program. ANCOVAs that adjusted for baseline PTSD severity compared symptom change between those who were and were non-compensation seeking at the time of treatment. Compensation seeking status was associated with significantly less symptom improvement over the course of CPT after adjusting for baseline PTSD severity (F(1, 102)  = 4.29, p <  .001, η2 = .03). Sensitivity analyses did not detect a similar effect during a prior coping skills phase of treatment. During CPT, clinically significant change was met by 66.7% of non-compensation seeking veterans (M = –15,SD = 14.56) and by 40.1% of the compensation seeking group (M = –7.1,SD = 12.24). Compensation-seeking may be associated with reduced response to trauma-focused ...
Source: Psychiatric Quarterly - Category: Psychiatry Source Type: research