Ketamine Therapy Offers Hope for a Firefighter Struggling with PTSD | An Act of Service | Op-Docs

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  • čas přidán 5. 05. 2024
  • Emergency workers and researchers use the term “critical incident” to describe a traumatic event. It’s estimated that people, on average, will experience two to three critical incidents in their lifetimes. My first came at 8 years old, when my father made his first suicide attempt. Five years and five attempts later, he was dead. I’ve been compelled to explore mental health issues - and their potential solutions - ever since.
    Research has found that throughout a career, an emergency worker may experience over 180 critical incidents. While observing emergency workers in this documentary, I was amazed by their ability to work so calmly through crises and transition quickly in and out of their home lives. But I came to understand that there was a toll paid for this form of public service, as emergency workers experience rates of behavioral health issues that are notably higher than the general population’s. We depend on emergency workers to provide service during our most vulnerable moments, but these experiences place them critically at risk for issues like PTSD, substance abuse and suicide.
    After more than a decade spent working as a peer-support facilitator in suicide prevention and postvention, which involves assisting survivors in the grief process, I slowly became aware of the growing body of evidence supporting psychedelic-assisted therapies as a medical intervention for the types of behavioral health issues I encountered. Like many, I was skeptical. But I eventually learned that major institutions like the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (for which I volunteer) and the Department of Veterans Affairs have supported research into psychedelics such as ketamine. The V.A. even announced this year that it will fund new studies on MDMA and psilocybin-assisted psychotherapies.
    I wrote previously that the American West has some of the nation’s worst outcomes for behavioral health issues such as substance abuse and suicide. Growing up in Wyoming, I also saw how the West is home to some of the country’s most conservative cultural and political views on psychedelics. In making this film, I wanted to address that gap and challenge the assumptions of what a typical psychedelic user can and should look like.
    This philosophy led me to Rob C., whose last name I’ve withheld to protect his privacy, a firefighter in Idaho who is undergoing ketamine-assisted psychotherapy to treat his PTSD. This use is not approved or regulated by the Food and Drug Administration but is legal in a clinical setting. I hope that his story can become part of a new paradigm for approaching mental health care and shift the public conversation toward the experiences of individuals facing mental health challenges who stand to benefit from these therapies.
    - Film and text by Brandon Kapelow (www.brandonkapelow.com/)
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Komentáře • 29

  • @isabelc.m9593
    @isabelc.m9593 Před měsícem +23

    So beautifully filmed and extremely moving story. Thank you for sharing this! May there be more and more funded trials and studies! Healing one by one we heal the world

  • @charliesvisuals9855
    @charliesvisuals9855 Před měsícem +5

    I study psychology at university; I've been learning about the beneficial effects of MDMA in combination with psychotherapies for PTSD and CPTSD. It is really fascinating stuff!

  • @shortoftheweek
    @shortoftheweek Před měsícem +8

    Brilliant film, hard to imagine a scripted film being so perfectly constructed.

  • @Facedance-kh
    @Facedance-kh Před měsícem +7

    Thanks for this video

  • @user-lh5hm7kb3y
    @user-lh5hm7kb3y Před měsícem +5

    Wow, his BP was reading 172/99. Thats some high levels of stress right there.

    • @bfdrob
      @bfdrob Před měsícem +6

      Yeah, definitely my blood pressure was higher than normal. Part of that was the ketamine itself, which is given with an anti-hypertension medication that had not kicked in yet. Plus, being the subject in the documentary had a little bit more stress during the filming.

    • @m.ceniza4688
      @m.ceniza4688 Před měsícem +1

      @@bfdrobhope it all works out for you

    • @TheShadowMan.
      @TheShadowMan. Před 4 dny +1

      Are you the gentleman subject of this doc? ​@@bfdrob

    • @bfdrob
      @bfdrob Před 3 dny

      Yes

  • @artgreig7069
    @artgreig7069 Před měsícem +7

    Very well done, moving!

  • @jonmetz5843
    @jonmetz5843 Před 11 dny +1

    Amazing human being, and an amazing treatment with a truely gifted clinician.

  • @hammerr
    @hammerr Před měsícem +7

    Excellent work. Really moving.

  • @scipioafricanus4875
    @scipioafricanus4875 Před měsícem +7

    Enlightening thanks

  • @freebie808
    @freebie808 Před měsícem +5

    IN KET WE TRUST 🎉

  • @MornSemEntertainment
    @MornSemEntertainment Před měsícem +3

    What do you think? For me this is very Amazing

  • @bobbydennis8333
    @bobbydennis8333 Před měsícem +2

    It’s really is a shame the US wastes money on military spending. Not a single penny of it is needed to be a U.S. citizen.

  • @SH-qk8fg
    @SH-qk8fg Před 19 dny

    Thank you!

  • @freebie808
    @freebie808 Před měsícem +3

    K!

  • @user-go7zy3fc5f
    @user-go7zy3fc5f Před 4 dny

    Anyone know what clinic this is ?

    • @bfdrob
      @bfdrob Před 3 dny

      Boise ketamine clinic

  • @user-go7zy3fc5f
    @user-go7zy3fc5f Před 4 dny +1

    Wassup with his daughter ?

  • @mattyp6908
    @mattyp6908 Před měsícem +7

    This ket therapist or whatever is terrible