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Thank you Mark.
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Ladies and gentlemen,
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you will probably wonder why I, as a development economist,
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am here today to talk about treating trauma.
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It's because I've come to see that trauma is
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not only a huge global problem of truly epidemic proportions
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but traumas also have a devastating impact
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on human development, economic development,
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and even on the possibility of peace.
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Given the importance of trauma worldwide,
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it's actually rather surprising to see the invisibility,
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it's almost like the problem is hidden.
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In fact, most traumas worldwide remain unrecognized,
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undiagnosed, and therefore untreated.
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That's particularly true for the developing countries.
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I'm here today to make a plea,
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to make available treatment services
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to the hundreds of millions of people worldwide who are in need,
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and to do so not in small doses,
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but rather as a quantum jump.
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I believe that that is now possible for the first time in history,
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with a new treatment called EMDR,
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for Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing.
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Ladies and gentlemen,
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I have this picture on my desk at home,
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to remind me of the human face of trauma.
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Look at this man's eyes, look at the anguish,
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the vulnerability, the hopelessness.
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I first came to realize the importance of trauma,
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when I was UNICEF representative in Bangladesh in the 1990s.
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And I was pondering
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the development challenges of the country,
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its grinding poverty, their regularly recurring natural disasters;
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they've just gone through a punishing war of liberation.
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I could not believe that anyone in that country
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had actually been able to escape being traumatized
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because the signs and the sources of trauma
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were everywhere to be seen.
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So I was wondering what can we do about a problem at such a large scale.
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The answer came to me rather unexpectedly.
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I was taking a brief sabbatical in San Francisco,
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I was in a book store,
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and inexplicably, my hand reached out
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to a book with the title EMDR.
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I'd never heard of EMDR, I didn't know why my hand was doing this.
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Nonetheless, I sat down on the floor, began to read,
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and about an hour later when I reemerged,
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I realized that I had just read
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about a treatment facility,
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a treatment modality, that was rapidly scalable,
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and that was very effective in treating people
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in a very short period of time.
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So that was exactly the kind of treatment
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that we could very well use in Bangladesh.
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So I called the author, Dr. Francine Shapiro
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- who also is the developer of EMDR -
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I asked for an appointment, and the next day, I was in her home
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negotiating a contract for EMDR trainers to come to Bangladesh
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and to begin to treat the many people there.
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The training would be given
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to the 54 Bangladeshi psychologists and psychiatrists in that country.
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So that way I learned first hand
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about the amazing, almost magical effectiveness of EMDR.
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Most of you probably have heard or know someone,
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who has been traumatized,
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perhaps even suffer from PTSD, post traumatic stress disorders.
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In fact, statistically speaking,
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there should be a good number of you here in this audience
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who actually have suffered PTSD yourself.
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The PTSD symptoms include three sets: the first is the hyper-arousal,
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that means you can't sleep, you can't concentrate very well.
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There is also easily being angered, or getting into a panic,
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or even feeling intense feelings of hatred.
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Then there is the reliving of the traumatic event,
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and that comes in nightmares,
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invasive, intrusive flashbacks.
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And thirdly, there is the avoidance and numbing,
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you avoid any situation that reminds you of the traumatic event.
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You avoid certain relationships.
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And there is also the growing
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distrust of anyone around you,
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your isolation, the hopelessness,
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and that can go all the way to outright depression.
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So, from these symptoms,
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you can see that PTSD is a very severe and disabling illness
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that has very serious consequences
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for both the ability to learn,
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the creativity of people,
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the productivity, and the general well being.
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There is also new evidence to show
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that if people have suffered even a minor trauma
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there are heightened chances there
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that you would get ill with substance abuse,
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with cardiac conditions, and even with cancer.
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There's a saying that says "Violence begets violence."
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What we don't often realize is
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that the trauma is the 'trait d'union' between violence and violence.
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Because, if somebody gets traumatized
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as a result of violence,
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then that person is at a heightened risk
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of himself or herself become a perpetrator of violence.
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That's actually quite a scary understanding.
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If PTSD is left untreated,
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then it will last a life time.
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Ladies and gentlemen,
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we don't have a very good statistics worldwide,
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about trauma and PTSD.
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But if we look at the number of people
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who are exposed to traumatic circumstances and events,
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we may be able to get an order of magnitude.
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For example, take a look at these numbers here.
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They're all taken from authoritative sources.
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1.5 billion people worldwide live
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in situations of political and criminal violence.
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That includes the Syrias and the Congos, and Somalias, and all the other countries.
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Then 42 million people worldwide
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are either refugees or internally displaced people,
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and displacement itself is a big risk factor for trauma.
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Some 200 million people have been exposed to natural disasters in 2011 alone.
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And so, this becoming an annual feature
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with the global climate change
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more and more people getting traumatized.
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Then some 1.3 billion people are living in absolute poverty.
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I don't think that we can imagine [more] traumatizing circumstances
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in which these people live their day to day life.
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And then get this,
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one in every three women worldwide
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actually suffer during their lifetime
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from sexual, physical or emotional abuse.
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These are staggering numbers you will agree.
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Most of these traumas are called Big "T" traumas
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because they are the results of extreme events.
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They are the results of loud emergency, if you could say,
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But there are also the small "t" traumas.
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And they are well known to all of us,
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they are caused by everyday traumatizing events,
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usually we call them normal events,
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but they are accidents, they are bullying,
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they are child abuse, divorce and many other circumstances like that.
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These are silent emergencies
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but they affect literally millions and millions of people at any given time.
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If you add big "T" trauma and small "t" trauma together,
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you end up with a staggering global burden of trauma.
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Now, let me hasten to say
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that not all traumatic experiences also lead to PTSD.
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Thankfully, humans are, by and large, remarkably resilient
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and usually, after traumatic experience
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get better all by themselves without any medical or psychological help.
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If we took
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the PTSD prevalence, life time prevalence of the United States,
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which is between 7 and 8%,
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and we apply that number to the world as a whole,
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we would end up with at least 500 million cases of PTSD.
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That's like the total population of the European Union.
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And the question could be asked: "Is this problem not too big to tackle?"
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I think a mere 30 years ago,
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I would have said, yeah, this can't be done.
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We didn't have the means, we didn't have the technology at that time.
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But today I think, with EMDR, we actually have a good chance.
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In a way, I believe that, you know,
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this is not rocket science to begin to deal with this problem,
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even at that very large scale.
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How does EMDR work?
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EMDR resolves the emotional distress,
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but the precise mechanism is probably
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a good topic for the next TED talk.
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Meanwhile, let me just say
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that the psycho-neuro physiological processes
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that lead to the healing are set in motion by bilateral stimulation
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and that is usually rapid eye movement, from left to right.
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It seems as simple and magical as that.
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As soon as that process has happened,
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the trauma memory is healed
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and all the symptoms of PTSD disappear.
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And they disappear for good. They won't come back.
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And all of this can be done in a matter of few sessions.
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This is why the World Health Organization
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recently gave official recognition to EMDR
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as one-evidence based and scientifically validated
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treatment modality for trauma.
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We now have the possibilities of rapidly scaling up
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with this new treatment called EMDR.
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EMDR can treat in a matter of hours and days,
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as opposed to the conventional therapy
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that took weeks, months, and sometimes years of therapy.
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It can also be administered to groups of people not just individuals.
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It is more easily accepted, because unlike the conventional treatment,
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you don't have to talk about your trauma,
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people who have been traumatized don't want to talk about their trauma.
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And then there's a possibility of using paraprofessionals
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to provide services of psychological first aid,
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thereby relieving the psychologists and psychiatrists
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from the more mundane kind of work.
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So based on my profession as a development economist,
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I'm convinced that it is now possible
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to begin to scale up these trauma services.
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Ladies and gentlemen,
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you will agree with me
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that this woman and all the millions of people
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who have been traumatized like her,
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at least deserve their peace of mind.
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They deserve actually much more,
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they deserve to get back their laughter and their self confidence,
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and be able to make a contribution to society again,
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and be part of their community.
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What would the world look like
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if we were able to systematically heal all the traumas?
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I believe that that world would be a lot less violent
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because we would finally begin to interrupt the insidious,
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interpersonal and inter-generational transmission of violence and abuse.
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So, that world, I believe, would be
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a lot more peaceful, and also a lot more prosperous.
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I believe that that world is within reach.
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I am convinced
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that EMDR has the power and the potential
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to help treat and heal
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the humanity's wounded memories.
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Do you think that that will happen?
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Thank you.
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(Applause)