Abstract

Background: Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a psychiatric illness that is very prevalent in both civilian and military environments. The clinical course, regardless of management, is chronic for a number of patients, especially veterans. Persistent PTSD symptoms interact with representations of the person and their body, and may negatively impact rehabilitation. Sport is known to help psychiatric patients such as those suffering from PTSD, as it improves the connection with the body, and supports physiological and emotional regulation. However, the impact of sport on self-representations has not yet been studied. The first aim of this study is to explore person and body representations in a population of military veterans suffering from chronic PTSD, as a function of clinical severity. Second, it aims to explore how a 9-day sport program, which includes an element of socio-professional rehabilitation, changes representations of the person and their body.Methods: This exploratory qualitative study examined the self-representation of veterans with chronic PTSD before a sport rehabilitation program. Veterans were given the prompts “body” and “person” and asked to free associate. PTSD severity and the mind–body connection were assessed using the Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist for DSM-5, and the Freiburg Mindfulness Inventory, respectively. Parasympathetic activity was recorded at rest. A subgroup of the population volunteered to participate in a post-program session to record the same semantic, psychological, and physiological variables.Results: Although before the program, veterans gave more negatively than positively valenced words, no relation was observed between the overall number of negative words and PTSD severity. Post-program, changes were observed in terms of valence. Specifically, some negatively-valenced categories of words disappeared, and some positive categories appeared. At the same time, there was a fall in PTSD severity, an increase in the mind–body connection, and a decrease in parasympathetic activation.Conclusions: This study highlighted that veterans with chronic PTSD have a negative representation of the self. A dedicated, 9-day program that included regular sport improved self-representations related to both the person and their body, and reduced PTSD symptoms. The findings underline the importance of ensuring that programs for patients suffering from chronic PTSD should include sporting activity, and highlight the benefits. Sport appears to be a path to the reappropriation of a positive image of the self, by improving the representation of the body. This relationship could be consistent with improved interoception, but our results need further investigation.

Highlights

  • Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is an adaptive condition that can occur following one or more traumatic events that involve direct or indirect confrontation with death, threatened death, actual or threatened serious injury, or actual or threatened sexual violence [1]

  • The population included in this exploratory study consisted of 47 veterans who had been on sick leave due to PTSD for over 6 months, between May 2018 and April 2021

  • Four individuals were excluded from the analysis as they did not complete the questionnaires, leaving a total of 43 patients who had been suffering from PTSD for more than 6 months

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Summary

Introduction

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is an adaptive condition that can occur following one or more traumatic events that involve direct or indirect confrontation with death, threatened death, actual or threatened serious injury, or actual or threatened sexual violence [1]. While studies show that more than half of patients make positive progress [9], a relatively recent review highlights that clinical outcomes can be highly variable [10]: in particular, only 18–50% achieve stable remission These figures are similar for military veterans [11,12,13,14], the prevalence is estimated to be around 20% in this population, depending on the nature of the mission [15, 16]. The first aim of this study is to explore person and body representations in a population of military veterans suffering from chronic PTSD, as a function of clinical severity. It aims to explore how a 9-day sport program, which includes an element of socio-professional rehabilitation, changes representations of the person and their body

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