用于治疗与战斗有关的创伤后应激障碍的虚拟伊拉克系统

S. Yeh, Brad Newman, Matt Liewer, J. Pair, Anton Treskunov, G. Reger, B. Rothbaum, J. Difede, Josh Spitalnick, R. McLay, T. Parsons, A. Rizzo
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引用次数: 15

摘要

据报道,创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)是由通常人类经历范围之外的创伤事件引起的,包括(但不限于)军事战斗、暴力人身攻击、被绑架或劫持人质以及恐怖袭击。初步数据显示,至少五分之一的伊拉克战争老兵表现出抑郁、焦虑和创伤后应激障碍的症状。虚拟现实(VR)提供的创伤后应激障碍暴露疗法之前已被使用,并有积极结果的报道。目前的论文是在IEEE VR2006上发表的一篇论文的后续,将介绍VR创伤后应激障碍治疗应用(虚拟伊拉克)的基本原理和描述,并介绍自VR2006演讲以来其在现役军人中的应用结果。虚拟伊拉克由一系列可定制的虚拟场景组成,旨在代表相关的中东VR暴露治疗环境,包括城市和沙漠道路车队环境。以用户为中心的设计反馈需要迭代地发展该系统,这些反馈来自返回美国的伊拉克战争退伍军人和部署在伊拉克的系统,并由陆军战斗压力控制小组进行了测试。在圣地亚哥海军医疗中心对20名完成治疗的患者进行的公开临床试验结果显示,16名患者在治疗后不再符合创伤后应激障碍的诊断标准,只有1名患者在3个月的随访中没有保持治疗效果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Virtual Iraq System for the Treatment of Combat-Related Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is reported to be caused by traumatic events that are outside the range of usual human experience including (but not limited to) military combat, violent personal assault, being kidnapped or taken hostage and terrorist attacks. Initial data suggests that at least 1 out of 5 Iraq War veterans are exhibiting symptoms of depression, anxiety and PTSD. Virtual Reality (VR) delivered exposure therapy for PTSD has been previously used with reports of positive outcomes. The current paper is a follow-up to a paper presented at IEEE VR2006 and will present the rationale and description of a VR PTSD therapy application (Virtual Iraq) and present the findings from its use with active duty service members since the VR2006 presentation. Virtual Iraq consists of a series of customizable virtual scenarios designed to represent relevant Middle Eastern VR contexts for exposure therapy, including a city and desert road convoy environment. User-centered design feedback needed to iteratively evolve the system was gathered from returning Iraq War veterans in the USA and from a system deployed in Iraq and tested by an Army Combat Stress Control Team. Results from an open clinical trial using Virtual Iraq at the Naval Medical Center-San Diego with 20 treatment completers indicate that 16 no longer met PTSD diagnostic criteria at post-treatment, with only one not maintaining treatment gains at 3 month follow-up.
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