The Conference focused on the initial findings of the FSU Research Team (headed by Joyce Carbonell and Charles Figley) and sought input from scholars and practitioners about what they believe to be the common features among these neoteric treatment approaches for PTSD and other anxiety disorders.
(left to right) Callahan, Roger Callahan, Roger Solomon, and Francine
Shapiro

Most
were experienced practitioners who had discovered through their own clinical
innovation how to help clients desensitize from troubling memories and
move on in greater health in life.
The following year (1996) the conference continued to speculate on and deconstruct and dismantle the various neoteric treatment approaches under investigation. Moreover, the focus was on the Green Cross Projects partnership with colleages in Oklahoma City following the bombing.
Interest in burnout and especially the Compassion
Fatigue
experienced by nurses, social workers, and family therapists stimulated
the active ingredient project. Why? Because those who were using treatment
methods that appear to cause relief in the client did not experience (or
rarely experienced) compassion stress or fatigue in the course of working
with the traumatized.