Title: Early Psychological Intervention
1Early Psychological Intervention
- National VOADs
- Emotional and Spiritual
- Care Committee
2Background and History
3EPI Committee
- American Red Cross
- International Critical Incident Stress Foundation
- National Organization for Victim Assistance
- The Salvation Army
4National VOAD Members Services
- American Red Cross, Susan Hamilton
- International Critical Incident Stress
Foundation, Donald Howell - National Organization for Victims Assistance,
Cheryl Guidry Tyiska - The Salvation Army, Kevin Ellers
- Tom Davis, Moderator, Church World Service
5American Red Cross
6American Red Cross Disaster Mental Health
- To respond to disaster mental health needs
across the continuum of disaster preparedness,
response and recovery. -
- Physical, emotional, cognitive, behavioral,
- and spiritual reactions
7Red Cross DMH Interventions
- Screening, assessment and triage
- Crisis Intervention
- Psychological support
- Advocacy
- Education
- Problem solving
- Referral
- Casualty support
- Monitoring and mitigating organizational stress
8Red Cross DMH Training and Resources
- Foundations of Disaster Mental Health
- Psychological First Aid
- Disaster Mental Health Overview
- DMH Activity Handbook
- Disaster Response Handbook
- Brochures
9DMH Tier I Eligibility Requirements
- Licensed Behavioral Health Professionals
- Alcohol and Substance Abuse Counselors
- Mental Health Counselors
- Physicians
- Nurses
- Pastoral Counselors
- Rehabilitation Counselors
- Occupational Therapists
10DMH Tier II Eligibility Requirements
- Students and Other Trainees
- Team Deployment
- Peer Support for Mental Health Consumers
11The Salvation Army
12The Salvation Army Concepts for Disaster Mental
Health
Presenter Kevin Ellers, M.Div. Territorial
Disaster Services Coordinator Central Territory
Caution Hurting People Ahead
Sensitive Caregivers Only
13ESC Team Mission
- Emotional and spiritual care (ESC) teams exist to
utilize the skills of clergy, chaplains, mental
health professionals, and trained crisis
responders to provide effective emotional and
spiritual care to meet the disaster-related needs
of disaster responders and disaster affected
families and individuals within disaster
operations. ESC teams utilize crisis
intervention principles of psychological first
aid to effectively integrate these principles
within ESC teams for appropriate care throughout
the disaster continuum from the immediate to
long-term recovery process.
14ESC Organization
Where Do I Fit?
I
15Incident Command SystemOrganization Chart
Policy Group
Incident Commander
Public Information
Liaison
Command Staff
Emotional Spiritual Care
Safety
General Staff
Logistics
Finance Admin
Planning
Operations
16Key ESCO Responsibilities
- Assessment
- Development of an ESC plan
- Team formation
- Training
- Coordination
- Liaison
- Supervision team care
17Key Principles
- Outreach
- Crisis intervention
- Strength/solution focused
- Stealth mental health services
- Integration within practical services
18ESC Team Interventions
- Assessment, screening, triage
- Disaster worker and survivor care
- Psychological 1st Aid
- Companioning
- Building indigenous support systems
- Education
- Liaison
- Spiritual services
- Referral
19ESC Training Experience
20Emotional Spiritual Care A Spectrum of
Experience Training
Emotional Spiritual Care Leadership
Team Trained experienced within individual
discipline crisis response ministry disaster
ESCO
Specialized disaster training, experience
crisis response certification
- Target Populations
- Children
- Seniors
- Mentally ill
- Emergency responders
- Families crisis dynamics
- Specialized training
- Grief
- Trauma
- Stress reduction/compassion fatigue
- Mass casualty
- Group work
ESC Team
Trained crisis peer support Lay counselors
ministers, deacons, elders, peer support
Professional Disciplines Clergy, certified
chaplains, mental health, medical, massage
therapists
Priesthood of all believers 1 Peter 29 All EDS
workers provide some elements of ESC Ministry of
presence, practical compassionate care, listening
All Workers
21Crisis Response Training Courses
- The following crisis intervention courses are
recommended for ESC team members - Individual Crisis Intervention Peer Support
- Group Crisis Intervention
- Or NOVA Basic Crisis Response Training
- Emotional Spiritual Care in Disasters
- Grief Following Trauma
- Advanced Group Crisis Intervention
- Pastoral Crisis Intervention
- Suicide Prevention, Intervention Postvention
- Strategic Planning
22ICISF
- The International Critical Incident Stress
Foundation, Inc. (ICISF) is a non-profit, open
membership foundation dedicated to the prevention
and mitigation of disabling stress through
Comprehensive Crisis Intervention Systems - Education, training, consultation and support
services
23ICISF
- Comprehensive Crisis Intervention Systems
- Pre-Event Planning/Preparation
- Assessment
- Strategic Planning
- Individual Crisis Intervention
24ICISF - Comprehensive Crisis Intervention Systems
- Large Group Intervention
- Small Group Intervention
- Family Crisis Intervention
- Organizational/Community Consultation
- Pastoral Crisis Intervention
- Follow-Up/Referral
25ICISF Pastoral Curriculums
- Pastoral Crisis Intervention I
- Pastoral Crisis Intervention II
- Grief Following Trauma
- Emotional Spiritual Care in Disasters
26National Organization for Victim Assistance (NOVA)
- National Crisis Response Team
- Trained volunteers including mental health
specialists, victim advocates, public safety
professionals, clergy/chaplains and others - Teams fit demographics of impacted community
- Travel and lodging expenses sent within 24 hours
of a request at no cost to local community - Primary Team Tasks
- Help local decision-makers identify all the
groups at risk of experiencing trauma - Train local caregivers to reach out to those
groups after the CRT has departed - Facilitate individual and/or group crisis
intervention sessions to help victims start to
cope with their distress. - Contact
- (703) 535-NOVA (800) TRY-NOVA (879-6682)
- www.trynova.org/crt
27NOVA Training
- Basic (3 or 5 days) (theory, practical
application) - Basic required to join local or state teams
- Advanced (3 days) (advanced theory, primarily
experiential) - Training for Trainers (50 hours)
- Info on Training at http//www.trynova.org/crt/tra
ining/ - Info on Credentialing at http//www.trynova.org/nc
rcp/
28EPI Points of Consensus
- Early Psychological Intervention is valued
- EPI is a multi-component system to meet the needs
of those impacted - Specialized training in early psychological
intervention is necessary - EPI is one point on a continuum of psychological
care. This spectrum ranges from pre-incident
preparedness to post-incident psychotherapy, when
needed - Cooperation, communication, coordination and
collaboration are essential to the delivery of EPI
29EPI is valued
- EPI refers to a body of psychological
interventions designed to mitigate acute distress
while not interfering with natural recovery
processes - Where there is a need for physical disaster
response services, there is a potential need for
psychological disaster services - EPI is a valuable contribution along the
continuum of disaster response services - EPI is not psychotherapy, nor a substitute for
psychotherapy
30EPI is a multi-component system
- EPI is a multi-component system designed to meet
the needs of those impacted. - Specific early psychological interventions should
be included in any disaster response initiative.
- Interventions include, but are not limited to
- Pre-incident training
- Incident assessment and strategic planning
- Risk and crisis communication
- Acute psychological assessment and triage
- Crisis intervention with large groups
- Crisis intervention with small groups
- Crisis intervention with individuals,
face-to-face and hotlines - Crisis planning and intervention with communities
- Crisis planning and intervention with
organizations - Psychological first aid
- Facilitating access to appropriate levels of care
when needed - Assisting special and diverse populations
- Spiritual assessment and care
- Self care and family care including safety and
security - Post incident evaluation and training based on
lessons learned
31Specialized Training in EPI is necessary
- Fundamental understanding of National Incident
Management System (NIMS), Incident Command System
(ICS) (reporting relationships how EPI fits
within disaster response operations
collaborative relationships accountability for
deployment) - Pre-incident training
- Incident assessment and strategic planning
- Risk and crisis communication
- Acute psychological assessment and triage
- Crisis intervention with large groups
- Crisis intervention with small groups
- Crisis intervention with individuals,
face-to-face and hotlines - Crisis planning and intervention with communities
- Crisis planning and intervention with
organizations - Psychological first aid
- Facilitating access to appropriate levels of care
when needed - Assisting special and diverse populations
- Spiritual assessment and care
- Self care and family care including safety and
security - Post incident evaluation and training based on
lessons learned - Commitment to ongoing continued education and
training, team/organizational involvement
32Summary
- Early psychological intervention is one point on
a continuum of psychological care. - This spectrum ranges from pre-incident
preparedness to post-incident psychotherapy, when
needed.
33The Four Cs
- Cooperation, communication, coordination and
collaboration are essential to the delivery of
early psychological intervention. Consistent
with the NVOAD values, organizations that provide
EPI will demonstrate - Cooperation that is, encouraging the formation
and utilization of functional partnerships - Communication that is, the regular sharing of
information - Coordination that is, maximize the resources and
minimize the redundancy in an noncompetitive
atmosphere - Collaboration that is, working together to
achieve the best outcome for those impacted by
disasters
34Thank You