R-TEP & G-TEP: Offering Relief and Stability When Recent Trauma Hits
Master EMDR Protocols for Early Intervention in an Unpredictable World
December 10, 2025: 9:00 am - 4:30 pm ET
Online
Renan Silva
Catherine Luensmann
admin@emdrtherapy.com
Early Interventions Restore Safety, Strengthen Resilience and Reduce the Likelihood of PTSD
With so many people in the world experiencing natural and human-made disasters; community devastation and interpersonal violence, there is a critical need for early EMDR intervention following traumatic incidents. In 2008, EMDR R-TEP (Recent Traumatic Events Protocol) was developed by Elan Shapiro and Brurit Laub to meet that need. This protocol is now used in disaster areas around the world, for ongoing traumatic stress and for recent traumatic events large and small.
R-TEP is Not Only for Headline-Level Disasters
It is a powerful addition to every EMDR therapists’ repertoire. R-TEP is specifically designed to meet the unique needs arising from recent traumatic events—which differ from those for processing past traumas. R-TEP expands your ability to respond to clients blindsided by a recent trauma or caught in an overwhelming event as it unfolds in real time.
R-TEP, used before the consolidation of a traumatic memory takes place, can reduce connections to past traumas and prevent traumatic memories from accumulating. R-TEP is also shown to enhance adaptive associations, resilience and other measures of 'post-traumatic growth.'
Using R-TEP, you can provide safety and containment to a client who may not be ready for memory processing. It lets you titrate the client's experience without the risk of further destabilization. You can help clients respond adaptively to their difficult situation, especially those that can be ongoing. And with R-TEP you have a clinical roadmap for helping them move through recent traumatic events based on their capacities and circumstances.
R-TEP's Innovations Are Effective for Recent Traumatic Events of All Kinds
The key difference between standard EMDR processing and R-TEP is focus. The three main R-TEP refinements are:
- The “traumatic episode” is tightly defined in terms of images, sensations, feelings and thoughts directly related to the event itself.
- Processing is limited exclusively to elements related to the traumatic event. This focused processing provides client stability and safety and prevents emotional overload.
- Using an EMD strategy for processing the cognitive, visual, auditory, and other sensory intrusions can permanently dissolve disturbing images, sensations or thoughts within minutes—before consolidation of the traumatic memory takes place.
Learn to Extend the Power of R-TEP to Groups
G-TEP (Group Traumatic Episode Protocol) expands the reach of early EMDR intervention when resources following a traumatic event are limited. Adapted from R-TEP for use with groups, G-TEP makes it possible to treat large numbers of people simultaneously for acute traumatic experiences and ongoing traumatic stress.
Conceptualized as guided self-help, G-TEP is designed so individuals in a group can work simultaneously on a shared or discrete trauma. Then they process the trauma as they experienced it and in their own terms.
G-TEP uses an art therapy format so clients represent their experience of the trauma episode visually with no verbal articulation of traumatic material. Thanks to simultaneous processing and visual-only representations of the trauma, G-TEP offers protection and benefits to everyone involved.
- It avoids the peril of vicarious traumatization and shame-based exposure for clients.
- It sidesteps language issues with immigrants and refugees as well as with children, teens and anyone who struggle with expressive language.
- G-TEP accommodates diversity among group participants and is flexible so you can use it in all kinds of settings.
- G-TEP's approach de-stigmatizes mental health services with cultural groups who hold negative perceptions of psychotherapy.
What If EMDR Processing Is Not Possible for So Many, So Quickly?
G-REP (Group Resource Enhancement Protocol) is designed to provide relief and stability when resources for processing are limited. You'll learn how to use this extended resource-only intervention with groups of all kinds. Adapted from G-TEP, G-REP was first developed to meet the needs of refugees from Ukraine. You'll learn to use G-REP as an early intervention following a recent traumatic event to guide group members in connecting to their own inner resources, bolstering their resilience and providing stability and relief until the resources for trauma processing become available.
Meet Your Trainers
Renee Eddy
Renee Eddy, LPC, is an EMDRIA Certified Therapist and Approved Consultant based in Norwich, CT. She is also the founder of Eddy Wellness, a multi-disciplinary wellness center and group practice. As an EMDR therapist, Renee specializes in treating clients who have been exposed to a recent traumatic event using R-TEP and G-TEP as well as offer EMDR Intensives as part of her clinical practice.
Renee has worked in varying roles throughout her career as a counselor to include: an emergency response pediatric therapist, outpatient clinician in a non-profit agency, forensic therapist, clinical supervisor, program coordinator, and college professor. Renee specializes in recent traumatic events (both group and individual) and trauma throughout the lifespan including complex developmental trauma.
Here's What Your Colleagues Say about this Training