A Military.com article published on May 29th reports on the U.S. Army's increasing openness to non-traditional therapies to treat PTSD. The article by Bryant Jordan is called, "East Meets West in Army Mental Therapy," and it quotes Col. Elspeth Ritchie on the Army's increasing openness to options beyond traditional counseling and medication, to include items like yoga, acupuncture, meditation, and of course, virtual reality. The headline is positive, but in truth, the Army may be taking only baby steps towards including nontraditional therapies, often known as Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM).
(Some "definition of terms" is in order. "Alternative medicine" means treatment choices other than conventional medicine, to be used instead of conventional medicine; "complementary medicine" means treatment choices to be used in addition to conventional medicine -- so the term "CAM," or "Complementary AND Alternative Medicine" is meant to be inclusive of both approaches. This ends up being an important distinction, because responsible M.D.s are often more in favor of patients adding complementary therapies in to their treatment protocol, rather than replacing a conventional treatment protocol with fully alternative therapies. "Complementary" is misspelled in the Military.com article as "complimentary," which further confuses the terminology.)
The article states that "Therapies that are "kind of tried and true" remain at the forefront of treating Soldiers with behavioral problems, [Col.] Ritchie said. These include behavioral therapy and exposure therapy -- where patients are "exposed" by degrees to scenarios that may be at the core of the problem -- and medication." And it further quotes Col. Ritchie as saying that although CAM therapies "are interesting, we don't have the hard data to show which therapies are useful for what population. So we're really in the research phase of this for yoga, acupuncture and some other therapies."
The Military.com article is linked here. A previous article by Noah Shactman in Wired magazine on March 25 discussed similar material, and mentions a Department of Defense grant opportunity with a closing date of May 15, providing $4 million in funds to study therapies with possible benefits for PTSD and/or TBI, including but not limited to "music, animal-facilitated therapy, art, dance/movement, massage therapy, EMDR program evaluation, virtual reality, acupuncture, spiritual ministry, transcendental meditation, yoga and other novel approaches." (The grant opportunity announcement is linked here.) According to the Wired article, reading from the grant application, the Army is willing to contemplate as well the potential effectiveness of "biologically-based treatments, botanicals, and nutritional supplements for enhancing cognitive function and mood in patients with trauma spectrum disorders, including TBI and/or PTSD, depression, anxiety, and/or substance dependence/abuse," and adds, "Even proposals for wild-sounding "therapies using bioenergies such as Qi gong, Reiki, distant healing and acupuncture" would be accepted." The Wired article is linked here.
I'm unclear whether the Army is leading the way of all the military branches in considering the potential of CAM for PTSD; but whether it is or isn't, kudos to it for being reasonably open-minded. One of the problems that seems to keep coming up with PTSD is that no one obvious choice comes up in treating it, that works every time. There are a variety of pharmaceutical drugs that are prescribed, but no one remedy in particular appears to be the wonder drug, or cure-all. (You hear the frustration about this when you listen to the stories of combat veterans who are taking a handful of pills to combat PTSD, sometimes as many as 20 or 30 separate medications - a scary cocktail, indeed.) Other approaches for PTSD, such as talk therapy, cognitive therapy, EMDR, etc., all have their place in the pantheon of treatments, and each has their adherents/proponents, but again, there doesn't seem to be a one-size-fits-all, cure-all for PTSD. In the absence of the medicinal "silver bullet" that cures all PTSD, it's great that the Army is at least embracing the concept of possible adjunct therapies, while asking them to prove themselves clinically, as much as possible.
In the following weeks, we will report on complementary and alternative therapies that appear to have some benefit in treating PTSD; in addition to the more mainstream approaches that are already in use. (Virtual reality is another type of treatment entirely: dependent on technology, it doesn't fit the typical rubric of CAM, nor should it.)


