The military employed a psychiatrist who was a Vietnam Vet, had PTSD, yet would not accept the diagnosis, so he would not give it to any soldiers who had it. Just a little bit of a dilemma with that one... which is why even I went external, as after 2 minutes with him, I refused to talk with him because he was just so outright angry I was even in his office. When I got to a civilian shrink, they are actually friends with him, and know he has PTSD and explained it to me... he was still in complete denial, even being a psychiatrist.
So yes... there are a crap load of nutjobs within the mental health field who don't want to help, but instead hinder.
In fact, instead of giving it to her, I may ask my next T if they have read it and use that as a barometer to see if they are up to date before I even go!!
Reading a book on complex trauma doesn't make any therapist up-to date on the issues, because every single person is completely different. No one mental health practitioner could possibly ever have all the answers. I have read just about every book worthy of reading on the subject of PTSD and related therapies used, and let me just say... each book is near identical in the methods, they just say it a different way, but the methods don't change regardless the type of trauma. The process differs slightly, but I could tell you that in 5 minutes, there is no substantial foundation of knowledge you need to learn on the subject.
People need to get away from that type of thinking, as its incorrect. What you're looking for is someone who is willing to work with you and learn on your behalf to help you. Its the fundamental understandings of therapy itself, not your specific case, that invokes positive or negative change within the client. It actually doesn't matter which mental health degree you take, the teachings on therapy are the same, because therapy types don't change. This is why nurses, social workers, counsellors, doctors, psychologists and psychiatrists can all be therapists, probably a few other qualifications in there as well, as the knowledge for each type of therapy doesn't change. Its the experience and the person, what they can do with that knowledge and the type of person they are.
One or the other can be painful for PTSD help... find the person with the combination of knowledge and legitimately want to help you, not just take your money, and bingo, you're in business.