There is no reason that mentally ill adults with histories of childhood abuse cannot be cared for through existing disciplines, such as pharmacotherapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy, case management, and, in some cases, exploratory therapy. It is likely that most of the patients treated in public trauma initiatives will be chronically dysfunctional women with borderline personality disorder—like those I saw when I attended the 1998 annual meeting of the state's Office of Trauma Services in Portland, Maine. These patients in Portland were undergoing new-age fanciful "therapies" such as "body work"— aimed at identifying past trauma that is being expressed through bodily sensations—along with journaling and dream interpretation. Rather than receiving ill-defined, untested, and potentially regressive interventions—tax-payer funded interventions—these patients were obvious candidates for dialectical behavioral therapy—a well-researched and constructive treatment for borderline personality disorder.