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Iliff School Of Theology Encourages Chaplains To Try A New Path To Deal With PTSD

Iliff

DAN ELLIOTT   01/29/11 11:54 PM ET   AP

DENVER — A Colorado theology school is teaching Air Force chaplains to consider the religious beliefs of servicemen and women to better help them cope with post-traumatic stress.

The goal is to build trust so a chaplain can encourage service members to draw on their individual concepts of God and spirituality, said Carrie Doehring, an associate professor of pastoral care at the Iliff School of Theology in Denver.

Doehring helped develop the one-year program for the Air Force, which wanted another way for its chaplains to respond to the stress of deployments amid two protracted wars.

Doehring said she believes it's the only program of its kind in the country.

One student graduated last year and four are enrolled this year.

"This is incredibly helpful when dealing with trauma survivors," the graduate, Air Force Chaplain Dallas Little, said in an e-mail to The Associated Press. Little, a captain, is deployed in southwest Asia but said he couldn't disclose where for security reasons.

Little said he starts by trying to understand a service member's religious views. Trust and acceptance come more quickly, he said, and that person is more likely to relate the traumatic experience to Little so he can help.

Little said he's used the approach in a veterans hospital, an Air Force hospital, a base chapel and on deployment, and it has worked well in each setting.

He also said it also discourages him from "premature judgment, hasty moralizing or proselytizing."

Chaplain Matt Boarts, one of the students currently in the program, said he's learning to help others find the right words to express their traumatic experiences or to phrase the questions they may have.

"They come back having seen things they don't know how to share," said Boarts, an Air Force major. "They become isolated. They don't know how to ask it or they think the words in ther head might be offensive."

If people want to ask for his spiritual advice about their experience, he will give it, said Boarts, a Lutheran, but refraining from proselytizing isn't a dilemma for him, he said.

The issue of proselytizing is a delicate one, Doehring said.

"If they were leading worship where people have come to a Christian service of worship, of course they would lead out of their own tradition," she said of the chaplains. "Or if they're leading a prayer before troops go on a mission and the troops have volunteered to come to that prayer, they would use their own traditions."

But when people go to a chaplain for help with post-traumatic stress or other issues, they want someone who respects their views and won't try to impose other beliefs on them, she said.

Some military organizations, including the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo., have been accused of tolerating unwanted proselytizing by conservative Christians. That wasn't a factor in the Air Force's decision to support Iliff's program, said Abner Valenzuela, a chaplain and a major in the Air Force Office of the Chief of Chaplains.

"We're just responding to the emerging needs," he said, referring to the stresses of deployment.

Measuring the training's success is difficult, Valenzuela said, as it is with most things chaplains do.

"You can kind of find out that what you are doing is effective based on the feedback from the person you are helping," he said.

The Air Force pays for the training. Iliff officials declined to release how much the Air Force is paying but said tuition for a one-year, full-time masters progrm is about $16,000 a year.

Students are required to have a Master of Divinity degree to enter and are awarded a Master of Arts in pastoral and spiritual care when they graduate. Required courses include "Impact of War on Pastoral Care of Families," "Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: Pastoral Psychological and Theological Responses," and a comparative religion course.

___

Online:

Iliff School of Theology: http://www.iliff.edu/

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DENVER — A Colorado theology school is teaching Air Force chaplains to consider the religious beliefs of servicemen and women to better help them cope with post-traumatic stress. The goal is to b...
DENVER — A Colorado theology school is teaching Air Force chaplains to consider the religious beliefs of servicemen and women to better help them cope with post-traumatic stress. The goal is to b...
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01:07 AM on 02/28/2011
Perhaps the simplest way to prevent PTSD is for the United States of America to stop spending a trillion dollars a year going around the world bombing, torturing, and killing people.

No wonder G.I.'s suffer from PTSD. If I would have to do the things that they are trained to do, I would have psychological problems too.
11:34 AM on 02/02/2011
I think that all returning soldiers should be given access to any and all forms of PTSD treatments. The newest and most promising form of PTSD treatment is using the drug MDMA in conjunction with traditional therapies. PTSD can take years to treat with traditional therapies but treatment times can be cut in half when given with MDMA. Amazing stuff!
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MilesToGo
02:44 PM on 02/01/2011
I am a combat veteran of the Vietnam War, and this is a good development, for which Iliff is to be congratulated. Like many, I suffered from PTSD before there was ever a name for it. Years later, a wonderful professional psychologist, and also a nun, helped me immeasurably.

The spiritual dimensions, while being intangible, are a real part of addressing the malady.
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p456
Walking Tall.
09:04 AM on 02/01/2011
Great now after sending our young men and women to the front lines on the battle field to face death or cause it. When they come off the battle field and have mental disorders as a result of experiencing the horror of war first hand. The U.S. military now thinks as apposed to making sure our service men and women get to see certified mental health professionals they get to see a preacher or pastor. A military Chaplin is not qualified to help a person suffering from PDTD or any other mental disorder.
06:33 PM on 02/01/2011
The point of this program is not to replace certified mental health professionals, but it is to provide ministers and chaplains with further tools in working with those who have PTSD. I think that this is a fantastic program and will improve the work the chaplains are already doing.
11:42 AM on 01/31/2011
Wow! I live in Oregon now but lived in Denver for over 30 years and so good to read this article about the grad school I used to work at for years!
 
Love this new program - proud of Iliff for creating such a worthwhile program. Also think they should include training chaplains to administer to any military person whether they're black, green, Catholic, atheist or gay.
 
I say that because we've been hearing about some chaplains who are so scared & angry about having DADT repealed and now 'they have to provide ministerial support to gays & lesbians." That kind of stinking- thinking needs to be done away with now for bigoted & discrimnatory practices.
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p456
Walking Tall.
08:55 AM on 02/01/2011
BS being black, gay, atheist or catholic has nothing to do with PTSD. The people who are suffering from it need real mental health care from certified mental health professionals. Not a bunch of military pastors and preachers, I find you comment both insulting and perhaps unintentionally bigoted.
10:29 AM on 01/31/2011
Is she approaching the spiritual groups at the Air Force Academy that are not j/c based? Would they accept a M. Div from Cherry Hill Seminary in South Carolina?
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HowdyDoody
Freud Woman
08:11 PM on 01/30/2011
Any therapist should be able to be comfortable with a person disclosing their own concepts of God. Why aren't they teaching chaplains ways to deal with PTSD, such as EMDR, Somatic Experiencing, and other strategies. Of course, when people have faced horror, the prospect of death, or many other situations which can cause perfectly normal nervous system dysfunction leading to PTSD, they may in fact want to talk about their spiritual beliefs. A chaplain may be called for, but that person should know the catastrophic consequences of not dealing with PTSD properly, including encouraging the person to talk about his or her experiences over and over, which re-traumatizes.
10:32 AM on 01/31/2011
Personally I am about anything that works. Many of my friends returning all have different ways of dealing with it everyday. They share tips and tricks that worked along with things that didn't. I am just glad they like my sense of humor....most of the time.
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HowdyDoody
Freud Woman
12:30 PM on 01/31/2011
Sounds like you're doing a lot of good for your friends. Laughing is the best!
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bcstractor
04:31 PM on 01/30/2011
Are they short of money or something? Presumably they've figured out how to con money out of the government for this.

Religion should have nothing to do with the military. Total hypocrisy - either their prayers are ineffective at "ending the war", "saving the troops" or curing PTSD - OR - why are they in the war in the first place if they are working by the "Thou shalt not kill commandment. I could understand it if they were conscientious objecters - but then its a volunteer army.

Crazy.
04:02 PM on 01/30/2011
This is nothing more than religious indoctrination/proselytizing being presented as medical treatment.
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ninetailedfox
banning people.....so childish
08:18 PM on 01/29/2011
Although I know how some atheists become atheists. Go ahead and try it, I know the outcome.

1. Some will become more violent, agressive and even more depressed.

2. Some will become hardcore Atheists.

3. Some will become so fundy that they cant even stand themselves.
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ninetailedfox
banning people.....so childish
08:15 PM on 01/29/2011
I could tell you now this will backfire in the worst way possible. I grew up christian, and most of the really devout believers told me I was worthess and would amount to nothing. Long story short, I predict a backlash.