A new international project is now offering free psychological training and support to NGOs and charitable organisations working with individuals suffering long-term effects of war trauma, including PTSD and limb loss.
The IEMT-MVF Project, hosted by The Association for IEMT Practitioners, is an apolitical, multinational brief therapy initiative. Overseen by a clinical team comprising psychologists, a psychiatrist, and registered nurses, the project delivers targeted education in Integral Eye Movement Therapy (IEMT) — a structured, rapid-change model designed to support those affected by the lingering psychological and physical impact of war.
“This project is not about replacing existing services,” said Director Andrew T. Austin. “Instead, our goal is to ease pressure on frontline services by offering a method that may fast-track appropriate individuals off waiting lists and into recovery.”
Key features of the IEMT-MVF Project:
Delivered and overseen by an experienced international clinical team
Provides free training to NGOs and frontline workers
Specialises in trauma associated with PTSD and limb loss
Focuses on post-conflict and recovery-phase care, not emergency interventions
Offers flexible training options, including online learning modules
Training is designed to enhance and complement existing services, not replace them. It is particularly well-suited to organisations supporting survivors in areas affected by war but now entering a stage of longer-term rehabilitation.
The project is actively welcoming partnerships with NGOs and charities working in post-conflict zones or refugee support contexts.
For media inquiries or to discuss collaboration:
Communications Officer:
Sabine Chartouny
Sabine@integraleyemovementtherapy.com WhatsApp: +961 3 626 875
Project Director:
Andrew T. Austin
associationforiemt@gmail.com
WhatsApp: +44 7838 387 580
Learn more at:
https://integraleyemovementtherapy.com/iemt-mvf/