Nitsa Nacasch
Sheba Medical Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by Nitsa Nacasch.
Behavior Therapy | 2015
Nitsa Nacasch; Jonathan D. Huppert; Yi-Jen Su; Yogev Kivity; Yula Dinshtein; Rebecca Yeh; Edna B. Foa
The study aims to determine whether 60-minute sessions of prolonged exposure (PE) that include 20 minutes of imaginal exposure (IE) are noninferior to the standard 90-minute sessions that include 40 minutes of IE in treating posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and to explore the relationship of treatment outcome to within- and between-session habituation and change in negative cognitions. Thirty-nine adult veterans with chronic PTSD were randomly assigned to 90-minute (n=19) or 60-minute (n=20) sessions of PE. PTSD symptoms were assessed by an unaware independent evaluator before and after treatment and at 6-month follow-up. Self-reports of depression and negative cognitions were assessed before and after treatment. Participants in both conditions showed significant reductions in PTSD symptoms. Sixty-minute sessions were found to be noninferior to 90-minute sessions in reducing PTSD symptoms, as the upper bound of the 95% confidence interval for the difference between conditions in the PTSD Symptom Scale-Interview (posttreatment: 6.00; follow-up: 6.77) was below the predefined noninferiority margin (7.00). Participants receiving shorter sessions showed less within- and between-session habituation than those receiving longer sessions, but no group differences in reductions in negative cognitions were found. The current findings indicate that the outcomes of 60-minute sessions of PE do not differ from those of 90-minute sessions. In addition, change in trauma-related cognitions and between-session habituation are both potential mechanisms of PE.
Cns Spectrums | 2007
Nitsa Nacasch; Edna B. Foa; Leah Fostick; Miki Polliack; Yula Dinstein; Dana Tzur; Pnina Levy; Joseph Zohar
Prolonged exposure (PE) therapy has been found efficient in reducing posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms mostly among rape victims, but has not been explored in combat-related PTSD. Five patients with severe chronic PTSD, unresponsive to previous treatment (medication and supportive therapy) are described. Patients were evaluated with the PTSD Symptom Scale-Interview, and Beck Depression Inventory, before and after 10-15 sessions of PE therapy. All five patients showed marked improvement with PE, with a mean decrease of 48% in PTSD Symptom Scale-Interview score and 69% in Beck Depression Inventory score. Moreover, four patients maintained treatment gains or kept improving 6-18 months after the treatment. The results suggest that PE was effective in reducing combat-related chronic PTSD symptoms.
World Journal of Biological Psychiatry | 2012
Leah Fostick; Nitsa Nacasch; Joseph Zohar
Abstract Objectives. Posttraumatic obsessions have been reported in a few studies and case series. However, as the patients described were chronic, and the onset of their posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) symptoms was dated some time previously, this hampers interpretation of the temporal, biological and psychological relationship of OCD following traumatic events. In the current paper we describe the emergence of posttraumatic obsessions a short time following the exposure to a traumatic event. Methods. The emergence of posttraumatic obsessions, a few months after exposure to trauma, is described for five veterans. All the veterans participated in combat during the summer of 2006 (in the Second Lebanon War). Results. For all cases, OCD symptoms were initially related to the trauma but later became generalized and independent. Conclusions. The course of the symptoms suggests a potential environmental role in the development of OCD following an exposure to a traumatic event. These observations suggest a biological linkage between exposure to trauma and OCD.
Social Work in Health Care | 2015
Miriam Schiff; Nitsa Nacasch; Shabtay Levit; Noam Katz; Edna B. Foa
The aims of this pilot study were: (a) to test the feasibility of prolonged exposure (PE) therapy conducted by a social worker staff on female patients in methadone program clinics who were survivors of child sexual abuse or rape and (b) to examine preliminary outcomes of PE on posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, and illicit drug use at pre- and posttreatment, and up to 12-month follow-ups. Twelve female methadone patients who were survivors of child sexual abuse or rape diagnosed with PTSD were enrolled in 13–19 weekly individual PE sessions. Assessments were conducted at pre-, mid-, and posttreatment, as well as at 3, 6, and 12-month follow-ups. The treatment outcomes measures included PTSD symptoms, depressive symptoms, and illicit drug use. Ten of the 12 study patients completed treatment. PTSD and depressive symptoms showed significant reduction. No relapse to illicit drug use was detected. These preliminary results suggest that PE may be delivered by methadone social workers with successful outcomes. Further research should test the efficacy of PE among methadone patients in a randomized control trial with standard care as the control condition.
Archive | 2015
Nitsa Nacasch; Lilach Rachamim; Edna B. Foa
This chapter presents the reader with an array of treatment options for those who suffer from PTSD. Each option is supported by a large volume of research, thus making the appropriate treatment choice difficult. Therefore, the editors (Safir, Wallach, and Rizzo) decided to present the reader with an actual case of a man who suffers from PTSD, and requested the proponents of the different approaches to discuss how they would employ their approach with this client. We leave it to the reader to decide which approach they believe to be the most appropriate. This dilemma is addressed again in the last chapter of the book (Wallach, Matching Treatment to Patients Suffering from PTSD). The case we have presented was actually treated by Nacasch, Rachamim, and Foa, and is followed by commentary by Nacasch, Rachamim, and Foa (Prolonged Exposure), with alternative treatment plans presented by Chard (Cognitive Processing Therapy), Klein Rafaeli and Markowitz (Interpersonal Therapy), and Rothbaum (D-Cycloserine, Virtual Reality).
European Neuropsychopharmacology | 2011
Nitsa Nacasch; Leah Fostick; Joseph Zohar
Cognitive and Behavioral Practice | 2015
Lilach Rachamim; Izabella Mirochnik; Liat Helpman; Nitsa Nacasch; Elna Yadin
Israel Journal of Psychiatry and Related Sciences | 2009
Lilach Rachamim; Nitsa Nacasch; Naama Shafran; Dana Tzur; Eva Gilboa-Schechtman
Archive | 2015
Nitsa Nacasch; Lilach Rachamim; Edna B. Foa
Archive | 2013
Marylene Cloitre; Loretta S. Malta; Jill T. Levitt; Nitsa Nacasch; Edna B. Foa; Jonathan D. Huppert; Joseph Zohar; Leah Fostick; Dana Tzur; David M. Clark; Kate Gillespie; Michael Duffy; David Bolton