cians and patients, their intensity of intervention, and clinical setting and training issues may ultimately be as or more relevant than comparative efficacy in choosing a course of treatment for PTSD. In the current era, there is a focus on short-term treatments (in part an antidote to the overly long psychotherapies of much of the 20th century). However, it is not clear how long treatment needs to be maintained to produce enduring positive outcomes, especially for patients with PTSD and comorbidities and difficult social circumstances. The field of PTSD therapy is still young, and the pursuit of clinically meaningful treatments for all types of patients, like the process of recovery for patients with PTSD, is an ongoing challenge.
Conflict of Interest Disclosures:The author has completed and submitted the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest and reported receiving royalties from Guilford Press and New Harbinger Press and that she is director of Treatment Innovations, which provides consultation, training, and materials related to psychotherapy.
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