We cannot fully explain the epidemiology of Subconscious Restructuring® without first giving a brief overview of all behavioral epidemiology.
The epidemiology of all human behavior and in particular PTSD is based on an external cause and effect. Most behavioral epidemiologic studies involve four basic parameters.
This is a great foundation for translational epidemiology but at the conclusion of any study one needs to ask oneself what was accomplished. If the patient dies can you claim any success?
There are assessment issues for all epidemiological studies on human emotion and behavior. Content validity is always in question because of the checklists used to assess a traumatic event. There is continual argument and no clear line has been drawn whether something can be classified as an undesirable event or a traumatic one. Sometimes it can be perfectly obvious but most of the time it is subjective.
Epidemiological studies usually have a descriptive rather than an explanatory purpose. One of the proposed solutions is to match a stress/trauma process that happens over time.
1) Objective Stressors or Events
2) Subjective Stressors or Events
3) Acute Distress and
4) Chronic Disorder
Analyzing subjective observational results of any human behavior is at best primitive with virtually no useful information to assist the patient or client. This is evidenced by the continual rise in antidepressant medication and suicide.
The first question in any other field if something is broken or diseased is… How can we fix it or cure it? This question along with several other crucial questions is missing from all behavioral epidemiological studies. The first question asked in the process of SR® is “What determines an emotional state and behavior?” Without asking and clearly answering this question one is simply guessing how to effectively address any aberrant emotional state or behavior.
SR® asks, clearly answers and has the infrastructure to address the question of… “What determines an emotional state and behavior?”
SR® Definition - Subconscious Restructuring® is the process of learning how the subconscious works for the purpose of taking control of ones emotional state and behavior via Restructuring of Subconscious Processes.
The difference between SR® epidemiology and every other behavioral epidemiology is we do not look at external events and attempt to analyze the effect of an event that is causing trauma based on race, gender, ethnicity, age or geographic location of the person affected. None of these issues is relevant if the objective is to get the client or patient back to normal functioning.
The primary focus of SR® is to fully understand how each individual processes all information from the deepest level of the subconscious. All human beings must go through an internal process that is very consistent in order to bring about an emotional state and behavior and reproduce a trauma from an external event. SR® simply uses this consistent process to teach the individual how to restructure the internal subconscious information that is causing the trauma. Simply put a fix to PTSD or any other disorder must be based on how each person processes and stores information on a subconscious level.
With the above in mind let us first take a look at the four parameters of the behavioral epidemiology of SR® starting with objectives. In this sample we will use PTSD but the baseline parameters for virtually all behavior disorders are constant.
The results of this process have been consistently fast and powerful in regard to not just getting someone back to normal but exceeding where they were before the traumatic event. Following are some of the improvements over a 5 day period.
You can find more studies at www.SubconsciousRestructuring.com/life-coach/studies-and-results
By looking at how the subconscious mind processes information as opposed to looking at external events and then guessing how it has affected each person, SR® is able to address virtually all human behavior and impact it positively. This is possible by simply using a modality that conforms to how the mind works. In other words if you have learned it you can unlearn it using the same process that allows the subconscious to continually repeat a traumatic experience.