Can Aversives and Restraints Produce PTSD in
People with Autism?
Published in The
Communicator, the newsletter of The Autism
National Committee (Summer 1998)
As we learn to listen to people with
autism, to their families and to their
friends, evidence is growing that, in
certain extreme circumstances, behaviors
typically explained away as newly-emerged
symptoms of the person's autism may in fact
indicate something else: Post-Traumatic
Stress Disorder, or PTSD.
The general
public may have heard of this disorder
occurring among Vietnam veterans, Bosnian
civilians, or even the young witnesses to
the recent spate of schoolyard shootings. In
the book Trauma and Recovery (NY: Basic
Books, 1992), Judith Lewis Herman, M.D.,
describes the origins and consequences of
PTSD:
"The human
response to danger is a complex, integrated
system of reactions, encompassing both body
and mind. Threat initially arouses the
sympathetic nervous system, causing the
person in danger to feel an adrenalin rush
and go into a state of alert. Threat also
concentrates a person's attention on the
immediate situation. In addition, threat may
alter ordinary perceptions: people in danger
are often able to disregard hunger, fatigue,
or pain. Finally, threat evokes intense
feelings of fear and anger. These changes in
arousal, attention, perception, and emotion
are normal, adaptive reactions. They
mobilize the threatened person for strenuous
action, either in battle or in flight.
Traumatic
reactions occur when action is of no avail.
When neither resistance nor escape is
possible, the human system of self-defense
becomes overwhelmed and disorganized. Each
component of the ordinary response to
danger, having lost its utility, tends to
persist in an altered and exaggerated state
long after the actual danger is over.
Traumatic
events produce profound and lasting changes
in physiological arousal, emotion,
cognition, and memory. More-over, traumatic
events may sever these normally integrated
functions from one another. The trauma-tized
person may experience intense emotion but
without clear memory of the event, or may
remember everything in detail but without
emotion. She may find herself in a constant
state of irritability without knowing why.
Traumatic symptoms have a tendency to become
disconnected from their source and to take
on a life of their own." (p. 43)
Among the
symptoms of PTSD described by Dr. Herman are
alterations in affect regulation, which may
be manifested as self-injury or explosive
anger; alterations in consciousness,
including the unwanted reliving of
experiences, either in a sudden, intrusive
manner or as a preoccupation or thought that
won't go away; and alterations in a person's
sense of self or of relations with others,
resulting in manifestations of helplessness,
paralysis of initiative, isolation, or
withdrawal. (p. 121)
As Dr. Herb
Lovett observed, "People who have been hurt
in the name of therapy may not understand
their plight any differently than survivors
of cult abuse or sexual abuse. A common
feature of post-traumatic stress syndrome is
the flashback in which a person acts as if a
memory is present reality.... every time
they recall their previous maltreatment,
unless their panic and rage are recognized
as a function of stress, they are likely to
be further stigmatized as `impossible to
serve.'" (p. 208, Learning to Listen, 1996).
Those who are
without speech, whose ability to produce the
needed words "on demand" is unreliable, or
whose words are discounted, not only may be
more vulnerable to what we perceive as
"typical" criminal acts, but also to
experiences of intense frustration,
helplessness, and entrapment in "no-win"
situations. An unreliable sensorimotor
system -- a body that does not always do
what you want it to do -- in combination
with "treatments," services, and living
facilities which not only fail to help the
person accomplish what they need to do, but
make their quality of life contingent on
their successful accomplishment of what
someone else wishes them to do, may, however
unintentionally, establish a situation of
intense threat from which neither victory
nor escape are perceived possible. Those
families and people with autism who have
reported to the Autism National Committee on
trauma-type symptoms often connect them to
experiences of this type of "entrapment."
Despite
fairly abundant anecdotal evidence,
knowledge of the nature, prevalence, and
treatment of psychological trauma in the
lives of people with severe disabilities is
lacking. Herman's book suggests a possible
reason. In outlining the historical roots of
PTSD research, she observes that "Periods of
active investigation have alternated with
periods of oblivion." (p. 7). Three forms of
trauma have come to light over the past
century, and "Each time, the investigation
of that trauma has flourished in affiliation
with a political movement." (p. 9).
The first to
come to public awareness was "hysteria,"
which the late nineteenth century was
briefly inclined to consider as a possible
manifestation of the isolated, politically
powerless lives led by most Western women
(an interpretation later dismissed in favor
of Freudian reductionism). The second
form of trauma to be studied was "shell
shock" or combat neurosis, which became an
issue in England and the United States after
the First World War and reached a peak after
the Vietnam War. Here the political context
was the growth of an antiwar movement and a
re-thinking of the effects of armed combat
in the modern world. The last and most
recent type of trauma to achieve widespread
public awareness was sexual and domestic
violence, spotlighted by the feminist
movement as well as modern political
advocacy to secure the human rights and
protection of children. Many people with
disabilities and their advocates would like
to add to Herman's list a fourth category,
but its recognition may well be dependent on
their success in bringing political
awareness of issues such as aversive
"treatments" and institutional living
conditions.
The personal
and public recognition of trauma which
occurs at the hands of another human being
is difficult to achieve, Herman notes: "When
traumatic events are natural disasters or
`acts of God,' those who bear witness
sympathize readily with the victim. But when
the traumatic events are of human design,
those who bear witness are caught in the
conflict between victim and perpetrator. It
is morally impossible to remain neutral in
this conflict. The bystander is forced to
take sides.
It is very
tempting to take the side of the
perpetrator. All the perpetrator asks is
that the bystander do nothing. He appeals to
the universal desire to see, hear, and speak
no evil. The victim, on the contrary, asks
the bystander to share the burden of pain.
The victim demands action, engagement, and
remembering. ...
In order to
escape accountability for his crimes, the
perpetrator does everything in his power to
promote forgetting. Secrecy and silence are
the perpetrator's first line of
defense. If secrecy fails, the perpetrator
attacks the credibility of his victim. If he
cannot silence her absolutely, he tries to
make certain that no one listens. To this
end, he marshals an impressive array of
arguments, from the most blatant denial to
the most sophisticated and elegant
rational-ization....The perpetrator's
argu-ments prove irresistible when the
bystander faces them in isolation. Without a
supportive social environment, the bystander
usually succumbs to the temptation to look
the other way...." (pp. 7-8)
How much more
operative might this principle be when the
victim can be characterized as a person with
a severe disability and problem behaviors
who must experience aversive "treatments" as
a "medical necessity," and when the
perpetrator seems both pleasant and
reasonable? As Herman observes, those who
expect a purveyor of abuse to radiate
warning signals will find themselves
confused: "Since he does not perceive that
anything is wrong with him, he does not seek
help -- unless he is in trouble with the
law. His most consistent feature, in both
the testimony of victims and the
observations of psychologists, is his
apparent normality....Authoritarian,
secretive, sometimes grandiose, and even
paranoid, the perpetrator is nevertheless
exquisitely sensitive to the realities of
power and to social norms. Only rarely does
he get into difficulties with the law;
rather, he seeks out situations where his
tyrannical behavior will be tolerated,
condoned, or admired. His demeanor provides
an excellent camouflage, for few people
believe that extraordinary crimes can be
committed by men of such conventional
appearance." (p. 75).
Nor do
perpetrators of abuse have to resort to
violence in order to cause trauma: "Although
violence is a universal method of terror,
the perpetrator may use violence
infrequently, as a last resort....Fear is
also increased by inconsistent and
unpredictable outbursts of vio-lence and by
capricious enforce-ment of petty rules." (p.
77)
Dr. Herman
finds other key elements in the development
of PTSD to be "isolation, secrecy, and
betrayal (which) destroy the relationships
that would afford protection." (p. 100). In
the absence of relationships with caring,
affirming people, the foundation of personal
develop-ment is undermined.
The only way
back from severe psychological trauma is
through re-establishing connectedness with
others: "Traumatic events destroy the
sustaining bonds between individual and
community. Those who have survived learn
that their sense of self, of worth, of
humanity, depends upon a feeling of
connection to others. The solidarity of a
group provides the strongest protection
against terror and despair, and the
strongest antidote to traumatic experience.
Trauma isolates; the group recreates a sense
of belonging. Trauma shames and stigmatizes;
the group bears witness and affirms." (p.
214).
It
may be significant that the reestablishment
of trust and connectedness to others is also
the factor credited with improving the lives
of people with autism who believe, or whose
families believe, that certain of their
symptoms originated in psychological trauma.
Clearly we have much to learn as this issue
begins to receive the attention it deserves.
http://www.autcom.org/articles%5CPTSD.html