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Group therapy for military sexual trauma cut PTSD symptoms

A randomized trial found an MST-focused group therapy reduced PTSD symptoms in veterans and improved trauma-related thinking more than a control.

Illustration accompanying coverage of a 2026 trauma study.

A 2026 study published in JAMA network open reports new findings relevant to trauma.

What the study reported

Military sexual trauma (MST) is associated with substantial psychiatric sequelae, but treatment options lack evidence-based protocols tailored to this specific trauma. To evaluate the efficacy of a MST-focused treatment using an 8-week virtual delivery format compared with an active control treatment to reduce symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This randomized clinical trial compared Warrior Renew (MST-focused group) with Health and Wellness (active control group) at baseline, week 8 (after treatment), and week 16 (follow-up). The study was conducted at 2 Veterans Affairs health care systems in the Pacific Northwest region of the US. Participant enrollment occurred from July 19, 2023, to March 24, 2025. Veterans aged 18 to 75 years with a history of MST-related PTSD symptoms were recruited via informational letters, self-referral, and clinician referral. Participants were randomized 1:1 to the MST-focused group or active control group. Analysis of participants with baseline data was based on the intention-to-treat principle. The MST-focused treatment targets themes of MST using cognitive and experiential strategies, including imagery reprocessing. The active control targets health and well-being, including behavioral engagement with weekly goals. Both treatments consisted of 8 weekly, 90-minute sessions delivered via telehealth in groups separated by sex. The primary outcome was change in PTSD symptom severity from baseline to week 8, which was measured by the PTSD Checklist for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (PCL-5) and the Posttraumatic Cognitions Inventory (PTCI). A linear mixed model was used to compare outcomes of the treatments at weeks 8 and 16. Of the 191 veterans who consented, 140 (mean [SD] age, 50.6 [14.7] years; 71 males [50%]) completed baseline assessments and were included in the intent-to-treat analyses. Participants in the MST-focused group showed significant score improvements from baseline to week 8 on the PCL-5 (-7.97; 95% CI, -11.01 to -4.92; P < .001) and the PTCI (-19.99; 95% CI, -26.86 to -13.12; P < .001), which were maintained at week 16. Active control group participants also showed significant score improvements on the PCL-5 and PTCI; however, the MST-focused group demonstrated greater score improvements on the PTCI (-9.61; 95% CI, -18.98 to -0.25; P = .04) and the PTCI self-blame subscale (-3.10; 95% CI, -5.30 to -0.90; P = .006) compared with the active control group. Additionally, only participants in the MST-focused group exceeded a 10-point score threshold indicating meaningful change on the PCL-5 at week 16. Women in the MST-focused group demonstrated greater results on the PCL-5 over the control group (-5.90; 95% CI, -11.58 to -0.22; P = .04) at week 8. Both treatments had low dropout rates (around 11%). This randomized clinical trial showed that both treatments demonstrated efficacy in reducing PTSD symptoms, but the MST-focused treatment compared with the active control demonstrated greater improvements in posttraumatic cognitions. The results support the use of the MST-focused group treatment for PTSD symptoms associated with MST. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05776719.

The source

These findings are drawn from “Group Therapy for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms Among Veterans With Military Sexual Trauma: A Randomized Clinical Trial” (Wood AE, Zaccari BA, Hee Wai TY, et al., 2026), published in JAMA network open. Read the full study on PubMed.

References

  1. 1.Wood AE, Zaccari BA, Hee Wai TY, et al. ( 2026). Group Therapy for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms Among Veterans With Military Sexual Trauma: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA network open. Link . doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2026.18896