PTSD Sufferers To Get Digital Help For Overlooked Symptom. Iraq, Afghanistan, Mali, Central African Republic, Yemen, Palestine, Israel … Libya, and now Ukraine – the countries go on and on. We know that people live struggling to get food to eat. They are all destined to experience PTSD as are many of the combatants in these wars. Please share with people from Ukraine. Source NoCamels (Israel)

PTSD Sufferers To Get Digital Help For Overlooked Symptom
   4 minutes
Technology

(Courtesy Andrew Neel/Pexels)

Israeli military veterans and other sufferers of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) will soon be able to receive online assistance in addressing a symptom that is often overlooked: chronic procrastination or an ongoing inability to follow through on a goal in their lives. The new “Ani Al Ze” (Hebrew for “I’m on it”) website will help PTSD sufferers combat procrastination and remain consistent in pursuing their goals.

Volunteers from Israel’s high-tech sector working on the “Ani Al Ze” website (Courtesy)

The website is for now being exclusively offered by NATAL, an Israeli non-profit organization that treats citizens suffering from war- and terror-related trauma, which is to provide the new service as part of its six-month vocational training program. The website is already being piloted, and it will expand to reach more people in need in the coming months. More on this subject:In First, Israeli Study Of IDF Veterans Shows Oxygen Therapy Reduces PTSD SymptomsIDF Veteran’s Best Friend: Dogs Ease Pain Of PTSDSimple Saliva Test Could Help Diagnose PTSD In SoldiersShaked Arieli, head of Career Development at NATAL, says that she is unaware of an app or website that has been designed thus far to help people with PTSD combat their chronic procrastination. She says that the closest digital help for PTSD she has found has been a US-developed app for American veterans that helps them understand and manage their symptoms.While the website is currently only available in Hebrew, Arieli hopes that it will be expanded into a global service. The Israel Defense Forces does offer a range of PTSD treatments for its soldiers, but does not offer digital assistance. 

Israeli soldiers. Photo by Timon Studler on Unsplash
The Israel Defense Forces offers in-person PTSD therapy for its soldiers (Unsplash)

Participants of the NATAL program meet regularly with trained career coaches to strengthen their soft skills (personal attributes that let someone interact effectively), such as time management and emotional regulation, and build a personal career path that includes setting achievable short-term and long-term goals. Digital Development The new platform lets the participants add goals and set difficulty levels for each one, track the progress they’ve made on a particular goal, and maintain communication with their career coach between meetings. The coaches can use the website to view the progress the participants say they have made on their goals, including verifying how often they logged on, and also provide them feedback through the WhatsApp instant messaging service.The participants also receive daily automated WhatsApp reminders to log their progress, as well as reinforcements with custom messages and notifications. “Our coaches work with the participants on the things that challenge them most in terms of their career progression – like time management, decision-making, and emotional regulation,” Arieli tells NoCamels. 

“What we wanted to do was integrate an app into the coaching process that would help them with this,” she says. 

NATAL and Code for Israel team members meeting on the new website. Far left: Shaked Arieli, and far right: Yuval Tamir (Courtesy)

The website was created through Code for Israel, an initiative in which hundreds of Israelis working in the high-tech sector volunteer to develop technological projects that benefit the country’s society. A team of 15 people spent nine months carefully constructing the website, including two volunteer veterans from NATAL who previously benefited from its therapy and career coaching services. Based on the volunteer veterans’ first-hand experience with PTSD, the team also included a feature that allows the participant to ping their career coach on WhatsApp if they are in need of urgent assistance.And if they’re experiencing a particularly stressful day or week, participants can use the website’s “stop all” feature, which pauses all of their tasks and ceases to send them notifications until they choose to resume the process. It also notifies their career coach that they have used the feature. 

PTSD sufferers may experience procrastination when certain parts of a traumatic memory are triggered (Courtesy Alex Green/Pexels)

“The day-to-day life of a person struggling with PTSD is very stressful, and we don’t want to overwhelm them,” says Yuval Tamir, a software engineer at cloud-computing company Zadara, who acted as project manager during the development of the website.“The goal of the app is to help [the participants] complete these tasks, no matter how long it takes,” Tamir tells NoCamels. Triggers And TraumaFor many people struggling with PTSD, procrastination may occur when certain parts of a traumatic memory that have not been fully processed are unconsciously triggered, according to registered practitioner psychologist Gemma Pearson. Arieli, who has worked with many people suffering from PTSD, says that many of her clients share the same attributes of low self-esteem, fear of failure, shame, anger, and helplessness. These traits – specifically fear of failure and low self-esteem – have also been linked to causing procrastination

The “Ani Al Ze” dashboard, as seen by a career coach. Ongoing tasks are in purple and completed tasks in green (Courtesy)

Arieli believes that the website can extend beyond use by participants within NATAL. She sees it as having the potential to work with other non-governmental organizations in the rest of the world whose focus is coaching young adults with PTSD. “This is not just another task management app – there are thousands of those in the world,” Arieli says. “It feels like someone is helping guide people struggling with PTSD through the most daunting aspects of their goals. Even if the coach is not there all the time, the fact that they know their coach can see what they do on the website makes completing a task more meaningful,” she says. 

PTSD Sufferers To Get Digital Help For Overlooked Symptom
   4 minutes
Technology

(Courtesy Andrew Neel/Pexels)

Israeli military veterans and other sufferers of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) will soon be able to receive online assistance in addressing a symptom that is often overlooked: chronic procrastination or an ongoing inability to follow through on a goal in their lives. The new “Ani Al Ze” (Hebrew for “I’m on it”) website will help PTSD sufferers combat procrastination and remain consistent in pursuing their goals.

Volunteers from Israel’s high-tech sector working on the “Ani Al Ze” website (Courtesy)

The website is for now being exclusively offered by NATAL, an Israeli non-profit organization that treats citizens suffering from war- and terror-related trauma, which is to provide the new service as part of its six-month vocational training program. The website is already being piloted, and it will expand to reach more people in need in the coming months. More on this subject:In First, Israeli Study Of IDF Veterans Shows Oxygen Therapy Reduces PTSD SymptomsIDF Veteran’s Best Friend: Dogs Ease Pain Of PTSDSimple Saliva Test Could Help Diagnose PTSD In SoldiersShaked Arieli, head of Career Development at NATAL, says that she is unaware of an app or website that has been designed thus far to help people with PTSD combat their chronic procrastination. She says that the closest digital help for PTSD she has found has been a US-developed app for American veterans that helps them understand and manage their symptoms.While the website is currently only available in Hebrew, Arieli hopes that it will be expanded into a global service. The Israel Defense Forces does offer a range of PTSD treatments for its soldiers, but does not offer digital assistance. 

Israeli soldiers. Photo by Timon Studler on Unsplash
The Israel Defense Forces offers in-person PTSD therapy for its soldiers (Unsplash)

Participants of the NATAL program meet regularly with trained career coaches to strengthen their soft skills (personal attributes that let someone interact effectively), such as time management and emotional regulation, and build a personal career path that includes setting achievable short-term and long-term goals. Digital Development The new platform lets the participants add goals and set difficulty levels for each one, track the progress they’ve made on a particular goal, and maintain communication with their career coach between meetings. The coaches can use the website to view the progress the participants say they have made on their goals, including verifying how often they logged on, and also provide them feedback through the WhatsApp instant messaging service.The participants also receive daily automated WhatsApp reminders to log their progress, as well as reinforcements with custom messages and notifications. “Our coaches work with the participants on the things that challenge them most in terms of their career progression – like time management, decision-making, and emotional regulation,” Arieli tells NoCamels. 

“What we wanted to do was integrate an app into the coaching process that would help them with this,” she says. 

NATAL and Code for Israel team members meeting on the new website. Far left: Shaked Arieli, and far right: Yuval Tamir (Courtesy)

The website was created through Code for Israel, an initiative in which hundreds of Israelis working in the high-tech sector volunteer to develop technological projects that benefit the country’s society. A team of 15 people spent nine months carefully constructing the website, including two volunteer veterans from NATAL who previously benefited from its therapy and career coaching services. Based on the volunteer veterans’ first-hand experience with PTSD, the team also included a feature that allows the participant to ping their career coach on WhatsApp if they are in need of urgent assistance.And if they’re experiencing a particularly stressful day or week, participants can use the website’s “stop all” feature, which pauses all of their tasks and ceases to send them notifications until they choose to resume the process. It also notifies their career coach that they have used the feature. 

PTSD sufferers may experience procrastination when certain parts of a traumatic memory are triggered (Courtesy Alex Green/Pexels)

“The day-to-day life of a person struggling with PTSD is very stressful, and we don’t want to overwhelm them,” says Yuval Tamir, a software engineer at cloud-computing company Zadara, who acted as project manager during the development of the website.“The goal of the app is to help [the participants] complete these tasks, no matter how long it takes,” Tamir tells NoCamels. Triggers And TraumaFor many people struggling with PTSD, procrastination may occur when certain parts of a traumatic memory that have not been fully processed are unconsciously triggered, according to registered practitioner psychologist Gemma Pearson. Arieli, who has worked with many people suffering from PTSD, says that many of her clients share the same attributes of low self-esteem, fear of failure, shame, anger, and helplessness. These traits – specifically fear of failure and low self-esteem – have also been linked to causing procrastination

The “Ani Al Ze” dashboard, as seen by a career coach. Ongoing tasks are in purple and completed tasks in green (Courtesy)

Arieli believes that the website can extend beyond use by participants within NATAL. She sees it as having the potential to work with other non-governmental organizations in the rest of the world whose focus is coaching young adults with PTSD. “This is not just another task management app – there are thousands of those in the world,” Arieli says. “It feels like someone is helping guide people struggling with PTSD through the most daunting aspects of their goals. Even if the coach is not there all the time, the fact that they know their coach can see what they do on the website makes completing a task more meaningful,” she says. 

PTSD Sufferers To Get Digital Help For Overlooked Symptom

By Ariel Grossman, NoCamels June 21, 2023  4 minutes

Technology

(Courtesy Andrew Neel/Pexels)

Israeli military veterans and other sufferers of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) will soon be able to receive online assistance in addressing a symptom that is often overlooked: chronic procrastination or an ongoing inability to follow through on a goal in their lives. 

The new “Ani Al Ze” (Hebrew for “I’m on it”) website will help PTSD sufferers combat procrastination and remain consistent in pursuing their goals.

Volunteers from Israel’s high-tech sector working on the “Ani Al Ze” website (Courtesy)

The website is for now being exclusively offered by NATAL, an Israeli non-profit organization that treats citizens suffering from war- and terror-related trauma, which is to provide the new service as part of its six-month vocational training program. 

The website is already being piloted, and it will expand to reach more people in need in the coming months. 

More on this subject:
In First, Israeli Study Of IDF Veterans Shows Oxygen Therapy Reduces PTSD Symptoms
IDF Veteran’s Best Friend: Dogs Ease Pain Of PTSD
Simple Saliva Test Could Help Diagnose PTSD In Soldiers

Shaked Arieli, head of Career Development at NATAL, says that she is unaware of an app or website that has been designed thus far to help people with PTSD combat their chronic procrastination. 

She says that the closest digital help for PTSD she has found has been a US-developed app for American veterans that helps them understand and manage their symptoms.

While the website is currently only available in Hebrew, Arieli hopes that it will be expanded into a global service. 

The Israel Defense Forces does offer a range of PTSD treatments for its soldiers, but does not offer digital assistance. 

Israeli soldiers. Photo by Timon Studler on Unsplash
The Israel Defense Forces offers in-person PTSD therapy for its soldiers (Unsplash)

Participants of the NATAL program meet regularly with trained career coaches to strengthen their soft skills (personal attributes that let someone interact effectively), such as time management and emotional regulation, and build a personal career path that includes setting achievable short-term and long-term goals. 

Digital Development 

The new platform lets the participants add goals and set difficulty levels for each one, track the progress they’ve made on a particular goal, and maintain communication with their career coach between meetings. 

The coaches can use the website to view the progress the participants say they have made on their goals, including verifying how often they logged on, and also provide them feedback through the WhatsApp instant messaging service.

The participants also receive daily automated WhatsApp reminders to log their progress, as well as reinforcements with custom messages and notifications. 

“Our coaches work with the participants on the things that challenge them most in terms of their career progression – like time management, decision-making, and emotional regulation,” Arieli tells NoCamels. 

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“What we wanted to do was integrate an app into the coaching process that would help them with this,” she says. 

NATAL and Code for Israel team members meeting on the new website. Far left: Shaked Arieli, and far right: Yuval Tamir (Courtesy)

The website was created through Code for Israel, an initiative in which hundreds of Israelis working in the high-tech sector volunteer to develop technological projects that benefit the country’s society. 

A team of 15 people spent nine months carefully constructing the website, including two volunteer veterans from NATAL who previously benefited from its therapy and career coaching services. 

Based on the volunteer veterans’ first-hand experience with PTSD, the team also included a feature that allows the participant to ping their career coach on WhatsApp if they are in need of urgent assistance.

And if they’re experiencing a particularly stressful day or week, participants can use the website’s “stop all” feature, which pauses all of their tasks and ceases to send them notifications until they choose to resume the process. It also notifies their career coach that they have used the feature. 

PTSD sufferers may experience procrastination when certain parts of a traumatic memory are triggered (Courtesy Alex Green/Pexels)

“The day-to-day life of a person struggling with PTSD is very stressful, and we don’t want to overwhelm them,” says Yuval Tamir, a software engineer at cloud-computing company Zadara, who acted as project manager during the development of the website.

“The goal of the app is to help [the participants] complete these tasks, no matter how long it takes,” Tamir tells NoCamels. 

Triggers And Trauma

For many people struggling with PTSD, procrastination may occur when certain parts of a traumatic memory that have not been fully processed are unconsciously triggered, according to registered practitioner psychologist Gemma Pearson. 

Arieli, who has worked with many people suffering from PTSD, says that many of her clients share the same attributes of low self-esteem, fear of failure, shame, anger, and helplessness. These traits – specifically fear of failure and low self-esteem – have also been linked to causing procrastination

The “Ani Al Ze” dashboard, as seen by a career coach. Ongoing tasks are in purple and completed tasks in green (Courtesy)

Arieli believes that the website can extend beyond use by participants within NATAL. She sees it as having the potential to work with other non-governmental organizations in the rest of the world whose focus is coaching young adults with PTSD. 

“This is not just another task management app – there are thousands of those in the world,” Arieli says. 

“It feels like someone is helping guide people struggling with PTSD through the most daunting aspects of their goals. Even if the coach is not there all the time, the fact that they know their coach can see what they do on the website makes completing a task more meaningful,” she says. 

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About michelleclarke2015

Life event that changes all: Horse riding accident in Zimbabwe in 1993, a fractured skull et al including bipolar anxiety, chronic fatigue …. co-morbidities (Nietzche 'He who has the reason why can deal with any how' details my health history from 1993 to date). 17th 2017 August operation for breast cancer (no indications just an appointment came from BreastCheck through the Post). Trinity College Dublin Business Economics and Social Studies (but no degree) 1997-2003; UCD 1997/1998 night classes) essays, projects, writings. Trinity Horizon Programme 1997/98 (Centre for Women Studies Trinity College Dublin/St. Patrick's Foundation (Professor McKeon) EU Horizon funded: research study of 15 women (I was one of this group and it became the cornerstone of my journey to now 2017) over 9 mth period diagnosed with depression and their reintegration into society, with special emphasis on work, arts, further education; Notes from time at Trinity Horizon Project 1997/98; Articles written for Irishhealth.com 2003/2004; St Patricks Foundation monthly lecture notes for a specific period in time; Selection of Poetry including poems written by people I know; Quotations 1998-2017; other writings mainly with theme of social justice under the heading Citizen Journalism Ireland. Letters written to friends about life in Zimbabwe; Family history including Michael Comyn KC, my grandfather, my grandmother's family, the O'Donnellan ffrench Blake-Forsters; Moral wrong: An acrimonious divorce but the real injustice was the Catholic Church granting an annulment – you can read it and make your own judgment, I have mine. Topics I have written about include annual Brain Awareness week, Mashonaland Irish Associataion in Zimbabwe, Suicide (a life sentence to those left behind); Nostalgia: Tara Hill, Co. Meath.
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