Quick answer

What is post-traumatic stress disorder (ptsd)?

PTSD can develop after experiencing or witnessing traumatic events — serious accidents, assault, military combat, childbirth trauma, or disasters. Symptoms include re-experiencing (flashbacks, nightmares), avoidance, negative mood, and hypervigilance lasting over 4 weeks and affecting daily life. Trauma-focused CBT and EMDR are first-line NHS treatments. See a GP if symptoms persist after trauma — not weakness or delayed shock that always passes alone.

PTSD — when trauma stays in the body and mind

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) develops in some people after exposure to actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violencedirectly, witnessing, or learning it happened to close other.

Not weaknessnormal fear circuitry fails to file memory as past eventtriggers reactivate full fight-flight response.

Prevalence: ~50% experience trauma lifetime — ~20% of those develop PTSD — underdiagnosed.

Trauma examples

  • road traffic collision
  • assault, rape, domestic violence
  • childhood abuse
  • military combat
  • ** childbirth trauma**
  • natural disasters
  • ICU/near-death
  • sudden bereavement (contested in DSM — prolonged grief disorder separate)

Core symptom clusters

Re-experiencing

  • flashbacksfeels happening now
  • nightmares
  • intrusive thoughts/images
  • distress at reminders

Avoidance

  • people, places, conversations
  • emotional numbing

Cognition/mood

  • guilt, shame, blame
  • detachment, loss of interest
  • inability to remember parts of trauma
  • negative world view

Hyperarousal

  • sleep disturbance
  • irritable, angry outbursts
  • hypervigilance
  • exaggerated startle
  • concentration problems

Duration: >1 month for PTSD — <1 monthacute stress disorder.

Complex PTSD (cPTSD)

Repeated early interpersonal trauma:

  • affect dysregulation
  • negative self-concept
  • relationship difficulties
  • ICD-11 diagnosis — ** longer therapy**

Diagnosis

Clinical interviewPCL-5 questionnaire aids

Distinguish:

  • depression
  • GAD
  • substance misuse
  • TBIoverlap in veterans

Trauma-focused CBT

8–12 sessions typically:

  • psychoeducation
  • imaginal exposurerevisit memory safely
  • in vivo exposureavoided situations
  • cognitive restructuringguilt/distorted beliefs

EMDR

Structured protocolbilateral eye movements/taps while processing trauma memory — equivalent efficacy to TF-CBT for many

Medication

SSRIsertraline, paroxetine, fluoxetine — if therapy unavailable or comorbidity

Not benzodiazepines long termimpede processing, dependency

Prazosinnightmaresoff-label — mixed evidence

What does not help alone

  • generic counselling without trauma focus
  • ** alcohol** — worsens
  • avoidance forevermaintains

Single-session debriefing immediately after traumanot recommended — may harm

Special groups

Military/veteransCombat Stress, Op COURAGE

Emergency workersBlue Light Together

Birth traumamake birth better charities

Refugees/asyluminterpreter, culturally adapted therapy

Recovery

Many fully recovertherapy works

Stigma“just get over it”invalidatingprofessional help legitimate

Flashback nowgrounding (5-4-3-2-1 senses) — therapy teaches skills

PTSD is treatabletrauma-focused therapy, not years of talking without structure, restores life after the unthinkable.

Common questions

What are the symptoms of PTSD?
Re-experiencing — flashbacks, nightmares, intrusive memories, physical reactions to reminders. Avoidance — places, people, thoughts related to trauma. Negative alterations — guilt, numbness, detachment, inability to feel positive. Hyperarousal — sleep problems, irritability, hypervigilance, exaggerated startle. Must last over 1 month for PTSD diagnosis.
How long after trauma can PTSD start?
Symptoms often begin within 3 months but can appear months or years later — delayed onset. Acute stress disorder — similar symptoms first month — may resolve or progress to PTSD. Early support after trauma does not always prevent PTSD but helps coping.
What is the best treatment for PTSD?
Trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapy (TF-CBT) — gradually processing memory without retraumatisation. EMDR (eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing) — bilateral stimulation while recalling trauma — NICE approved. SSRIs (sertraline, paroxetine) if therapy waiting or comorbid depression — not first-line alone for most.
Is PTSD the same as anxiety?
PTSD is anxiety-related but specific — tied to traumatic memory re-experiencing and avoidance. Generalised anxiety lacks flashbacks to defined trauma. PTSD can coexist with depression, alcohol misuse — treat holistically.
Can PTSD be cured?
Many people recover fully with evidence-based therapy — memories remain but no longer dominate life. Some have residual symptoms manageable with skills learned in therapy. Complex PTSD from repeated trauma may need longer treatment — improvement still achievable.

Sources