I am a registered psychologist and for over 40 years have treated many patients, including for trauma. Obviously any therapeutic “recovery” of memories is a contested and difficult area, and the current debate about a deceased accuser of a minister is problematic in the extreme.
However you seem to have been black and white in your coverage. In my view your recent article contains unhelpful misrepresentations of psychological therapies.
Unfortunately your article appears to rely on dated reporting on eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR) and on Dr Bessel van der Kolk — by Forbes magazine 18 years ago in 2003, and The New York Times in 2014. (Van der Kolk threatened to sue the latter about misrepresenting his views as supporting “repressed memory therapy” and they apparently issued a partial apology.)
I saw van der Kolk present at several respected conferences, and he was certainly not advocating “recovered memory therapy” — not that there is any therapy named as such.
Many clinicians maintain that some therapeutic experiences result in the recollection of previously unremembered traumatic events. Others maintain these are constructed memories (the debate is known as “the memory wars”).
Furthermore, your sentence: “In recent years the therapy has been rebadged as dissociative identity disorder” makes no sense.
Dissociative identity disorder is a diagnosis — not a therapy — listed by the DSM-5, the manual put out by the American Psychiatric Association.
I have not utilised EMDR much at all clinically, although I was trained in it years ago. But I feel compelled to say that your description of EMDR as the therapist “waggling their fingers” is a misrepresentation of the detailed protocol required in EMDR treatment.
It is not a “pseudo-science therapy”, and it is not used to elicit repressed memories.
It is endorsed by the World Health Organization as a first-choice therapy for post-traumatic stress treatment. The new International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies guidelines rated EMDR as “strongly recommended” in the treatment of PTSD.
The Black Dog Institute recommends EMDR as a treatment for trauma. The Australian Psychological Society, the peak body for psychologists in Australia, also has an EMDR interest group, which tracks the latest research and controlled studies into EMDR. It recently held a workshop presenting clinical work with bushfire survivors.
It appears you did not do much research on this, nor did you consult the peak Australian psychologists’ body for your article, relying instead on two old (American) general magazine articles.
I agree with your implication that memory is not straightforward and that we cannot know whether Christian Porter is “guilty”. But your misrepresentation of psychological therapies that are at times very useful for treating trauma is misleading and very, very unhelpful.
You appear to wish to de-legitimise the deceased accuser of Porter, by stigmatising the therapy she apparently received. I wish you’d done broader research.
Diana Scambler is a registered psychologist, a full member of the Australian Psychological Society, and a fellow of the College of Counselling Psychologists. She has worked for over 40 years with trauma-affected clients in both private practice and in public sector bodies such as the Family Court and Child Protection Services.
Indeed! Clearly Mr Hardaker did not do his homework and more troubling it appears the editorial staff at Crikey did not do theirs. Surely the title of the article should have raised at least some discomfort. Perhaps that’s why comments were turned off.
Diana Scambler is a registered psychologist, a full member of the Australian Psychological Society, and a fellow of the College of Counselling Psychologists. She has worked for over 40 years with trauma-affected clients in both private practice and in public sector bodies such as the Family Court and Child Protection Services.
David Hardaker has an extensive career as a journalist and broadcaster, primarily at the ABC where he worked on flagship programs such as Four Corners, 7.30, Foreign Correspondent, AM and PM. He spent eight years reporting in the Middle East and can speak Arabic.
What a pity such an experienced journalist did not consult someone experienced in the diabolically charged subject matter he was writing about.
Did Hardaker do all the work himself, or was the story fed to him by someone with a vested interest in discrediting the woman?
Ouch…
Thank goodness this article with its much better researched perspective has been published.
As a child sexual abuse survivor I was extremely uncomfortable when reading that article and in fact I burst into tears because for some reason it made me feel inadequate, as though I didn’t really know my own memories of trauma. Luckily, although I was tempted, I didn’t cancel my fist psychologist appointment in 3 months that I have been waiting for and feeling I desperately need because my life circumstances have made my depression worse in the last 8 months and then the last few weeks have been absolutely brutal.
So I am happy to read Diana’s article and glad to hear that Crikey can acknowledge that people were hurt by last week’s article.
These subjects just really suck, so this article has alleviated my feelings of anguish and discomfort – until I see a pale, stale, male apologist for Christian Porter such as PVO on Insiders yesterday and then I am traumatised all over again – as well as extremely, horribly angry!
I hear you. I just want to say I’m sorry about what was done to you and can understand the effect the saturation coverage must be having, especially such a deeply upsetting gaslighty article like that. I am a survivor too (though I have very little memory of the childhood incident) and work with survivors in my profession so I felt the same when I read it.
I hope you’re okay.
I’m sorry for your loss and grief, glad that the reporting has been corrected and even more glad that you’re getting support. Big hugs…
Thank you Diana Scambler! I have been fuming since reading David Hardaker’s article on Friday. I couldn’t believe Crikey would let it go to print. Wake up Crikey!
I note that you’ve backtracked in the Crikey Worm today but, in my opinion, you are not sorry enough for printing such uninformed rubbish!
Shame, shame shame on Hardaker for writing such rubbish and for such outrageously poor journalism.
Yes I agree with this response to the rather sloppy article last Friday and it sent me rereading the work on trauma work