Program Goals
Seeking Safety is a manualized cognitive–behavioral intervention for individuals with co-occurring posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and substance use disorders. Seeking Safety has been used for a number of different populations, including incarcerated women. The intervention targets many of the unique needs of incarcerated women with PTSD and substance use disorders, which could interfere with their recovery and thus place them at risk for reoffending. The overall goal of Seeking Safety is to improve PTSD, depression, interpersonal skills, and coping strategies of incarcerated women.
Program Components/Target Population
Seeking Safety (SS) is a 12-week intervention, during which groups meet twice a week for 2 hours each time. As part of the treatment, SS provides psychoeducation, which seeks to educate participants about the consequences of trauma and the links between trauma and substance use. SS also integrates cognitive, behavioral, and interpersonal topics, and teaches specific coping skills. The treatment consists of 25 topics (such as asking for help and coping with triggers), which address the cognitive, behavioral, interpersonal, and case management needs of persons with both substance use disorders and PTSD. The intervention emphasizes the importance of stabilization, coping skills, and the reduction of self-destructive behavior (Zlotnick et al. 2003).
Program Theory
Seeking Safety therapy draws upon cognitive–behavioral therapy, and therefore the cognitive model. The cognitive model holds that individuals’ perceptions and thoughts about a situation will influence their emotional and behavioral reactions. Further, the cognitive model argues that individuals’ perceptions and thoughts are often distorted when they are distressed. It is through cognitive therapy that individuals can learn to correct this negative thinking; identify and modify distorted beliefs about themselves, the world, and others; and learn to accept their difficulties (Beck Institute for Cognitive Behavior Therapy 2015).
In addition to the cognitive model, Seeking Safety also draws upon psychoeducation, which includes an array of approaches such as ecological systems theory and group practice models. Ecological systems theory focuses on helping people understand their illness or experience in relation to others (i.e., partners or family). In line with this approach is group practice, which sets the stage for individual interaction, social learning, expansion of support, and the potential for group reinforcement of a positive change in behaviors (Lukens and McFarlane 2004). Using the cognitive model along with psychoeducation, Seeking Safety aims to address PTSD and substance use disorders in a population that needs an integrated treatment approach for these co-occurring disorders.