Hua, ChenggangYao, XingCole, Shu2024-10-182024-10-18202410.7275/54997https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14394/54997Following traumatic events like spinal cord injuries, individuals often face drastic lifestyle changes and physical constraints, increasing their risk of depression. This can lead to withdrawal from various activities, particularly travelling. This study investigates travel's role as a therapeutic tool for trauma survivors, focusing on its long-term reciprocal relationship with depression alleviation. Addressing gaps in existing literature, it utilizes the DSM-5's classifications of trauma and stressor-related disorder and major depressive disorders. Findings align with social causation and social withdrawal theories, showing that travel counters social isolation effects and challenges depressive tendencies to withdraw from social engagement. Thus, travel emerges as both an immediate and long-term therapeutic avenue in mental health rehabilitation, offering a new perspective for recovery in trauma survivors.enJourneys to Heal: The Reciprocal Link Between Traveling and Depression Alleviation in Trauma SurvivorsPresentation