PTSD
Post-traumatic stress disorder develops after experiencing or witnessing a traumatic event, causing flashbacks, nightmares, hypervigilance, and emotional numbing that can profoundly disrupt daily life. PTSD is not a sign of weakness — it is a recognised medical condition. Specialist psychological therapies are highly effective and most people make a significant and lasting recovery.
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This page provides general health information only. If you are in crisis or having thoughts of self-harm, call 112 or a crisis helpline immediately.
What is PTSD?
PTSD is a psychiatric disorder that can develop in people who have experienced or witnessed a traumatic event such as serious injury, sexual violence, natural disaster, war, or the sudden death of a loved one. The brain becomes stuck in a state of threat — replaying the traumatic event and remaining hypervigilant to danger even when it has passed.
PTSD affects people of all ages and backgrounds. It is more common after repeated or prolonged trauma, childhood abuse, or when social support is limited. Expats living abroad at the time of a traumatic event can face additional barriers to recovery — including distance from support networks and difficulty accessing English-language therapy.
Symptoms
Re-experiencing
- Flashbacks — vivid, involuntary reliving of the traumatic event as though it is happening again
- Nightmares about the trauma
- Intense distress when reminded of the event — by sounds, smells, places, or anniversaries
Avoidance
- Avoiding thoughts, memories, places, or people associated with the trauma
- Emotional numbing — feeling detached from others or unable to feel positive emotions
Hyperarousal
- Being constantly on guard (hypervigilance) — startling easily and feeling unsafe
- Irritability, anger, or aggressive outbursts
- Difficulty concentrating and sleep disturbance
Causes & risk factors
- Direct experience of trauma — assault, accident, disaster, or medical emergency
- Witnessing trauma — particularly in emergency service workers, military personnel, and healthcare staff
- Repeated or prolonged trauma — childhood abuse, domestic violence, or conflict
- Lack of social support after a traumatic event
- Pre-existing mental health conditions — anxiety or depression increase vulnerability
When to seek help
Seek help if trauma-related symptoms have persisted for more than a month and are affecting your daily functioning, relationships, or work. Earlier treatment leads to better outcomes — PTSD does not tend to resolve on its own without the right support. You deserve to feel safe again.
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Confidential support. No referral needed. Within 24 hours.
Treatment options
- Trauma-focused CBT (TF-CBT) — the gold-standard psychological treatment; processes traumatic memories and reduces their emotional impact
- EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing) — highly effective for PTSD; uses guided eye movements to help the brain process traumatic memories
- SSRIs (sertraline, paroxetine) — recommended medication for PTSD; reduce symptom severity and improve sleep
- Prazosin — for trauma-related nightmares
- Group therapy and peer support — particularly valuable for veterans and first responders
How eMedClinic can help
Our psychiatrists and psychologists provide PTSD assessments, prescribe medication where appropriate, and connect you with trauma-focused therapy in English. We approach PTSD with the compassion and clinical rigour it demands, and understand the particular challenges of managing mental health abroad.
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Confidential English-speaking specialists online. No referral needed.