Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Social Support: Why Connection Is Medicine

The evidence that social connection reduces Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder — and how to build the support you need.

Social connection is one of the most powerful and evidence-based interventions for post-traumatic stress disorder — and also one of the most often neglected.

Why Social Support Is So Powerful for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Social support operates through multiple biological pathways:

  • Oxytocin released during positive social contact reduces cortisol and post-traumatic stress disorder
  • Social support activates the parasympathetic nervous system
  • Belonging reduces the threat detection that drives much post-traumatic stress disorder
  • Others provide perspective that breaks the closed loops of post-traumatic stress disorder

Types of Social Support for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Emotional support: Being heard, validated, and cared for — most powerfully post-traumatic stress disorder-reducing

Informational support: Guidance and knowledge about post-traumatic stress disorder from trusted others

Practical support: Concrete help that reduces post-traumatic stress disorder-amplifying stressors

Companionship: Simply not being alone — even when not discussing post-traumatic stress disorder

Building Social Support When Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Makes It Hard

Start with one person. Reciprocity matters — giving support also reduces post-traumatic stress disorder. Therapy provides professional support while you build personal connections.

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