“…However, the procedure can be made more accessible to people with intellectual disabilities and acceptable to therapists by expanding the introductory PES phase in order to increase engagement and to ensure that participants have sufficient understanding of what they need to do and why, and by using some of the techniques developed for use with traumatised children (but adapted so as to be appropriate for adults (Barol & Seubert, 2010)). Some case study reports suggest that adapted EMDR protocols can be used to treat PTSD in people with intellectual disabilities (Gilderthorp, 2015;Jowett et al, 2016;Mevissen et al, 2011Mevissen et al, , 2017Porter, 2022), and a small-scale controlled trial concluded that EMDR was 'feasible, acceptable and potentially effective' for people with intellectual disabilities (Karatzias et al, 2019). However, a recent review concluded that while EMDR appears acceptable and feasible 'no firm conclusions can be drawn regarding effectiveness due to small sample sizes, lack of standardised assessment, and a paucity of methodological rigorous treatment designs' (Byrne, 2022).…”