Trauma Essentials: The Go-To Guide

Trauma essentials: the go-to

guide

Babette Rothschild

WW Norton & Co 2011, £14.99

ISBN 978-0393706208

Reviewed by Omar Sattaur

This book would have been

a godsend in the agency I

worked for when the number

of referrals of victims of

torture began to increase,

and I found myself struggling

to help clients cope with

the debilitating symptoms

of PTSD. Ignorant of the

field, what I needed first

was the equivalent of a road

map rather than a detailed

pathfinder. Trauma Essentials

admirably lives up to its title.

It offers essential information

that any would-be trauma

therapist needs to know in

order to identify training

needs and reinforce

knowledge they already have.

What I like most about

this book are Rothschild’s

sensitivity towards

traumatised people and her

catholic approach to treating

trauma. The two are closely

linked and evidence her

good sense in working with

this diverse client group.

Her introduction – 10

Foundations for Safe Trauma

Therapy – sets the tone by

establishing the primacy

of the client’s safety, the

centrality of the therapeutic

alliance and, implicit in the

remaining eight chapters,

the importance of being

client-led rather than therapyled.

Rothschild reminds us

that ‘safe trauma therapy aims

to improve a client’s quality

of life. Stability and ability to

function normally in a secure

environment are essential to

accomplishing all other goals’.

She writes, ‘The therapist

must be prepared, at times

– or even for a whole course

of therapy – to put aside

any and all techniques and

just talk with the client.’

She explains what we

know about how the brain

processes trauma and

describes the psychological

and physiological effects

of trauma. Chapter eight

outlines current treatment

methods, summarising

the rationale and practice

of cognitive, somatic and

specialised therapies.

(For a snapshot of these

therapies in practice I would

recommend one of her earlier

books: The Body Remembers

Casebook: Unifying Methods in

the Treatment of Trauma and

PTSD.) But Trauma Essentials

also aims to speak directly

to clients and here, I believe,

it is less successful. Most of

the book is clearly addressed

to therapists although I can

imagine that, for a few clients,

selected pages explaining

how we process trauma

might be of great value.

Omar Sattaur is a BACP

accredited counsellor and

editor of EMDR Now, the

newsletter of the EMDR

Association UK and Ireland

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