Title: Healing the Mind,Body & Spirit- Natural Approach
1Empathy Fatigue Dealing Effectively with the
Stress and Grief Reactions of Extraordinary
Stressful and Traumatic Events
- By Natural Approach
- Phone03 9370 8777
- Address
- Unit 4, 751 Nicholson Street
- Carlton North (By Appointment only).
- or
- 1600 Bayunga Road
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- Email admin_at_naturalapproach.com.au
2Empathy Fatigue Healing the Mind, Body, and
Spirit
-
- Personal Testimonials of Persons
- Experience of Empathy Fatigue
3Purpose and Intent
- Identify Recognize Critical Pathways to Empathy
Fatigue (EF) and other professional fatigue
syndromes. - Describe Cumulative effects and Impact on the
professional counselor which leads to the
deterioration of the counselors empathic
engagement with their clients. - Provide Self-care Strategies for
pre-professionals, counselor educators and
supervisors that cultivate healthy coping and
resiliency.
4A Consciousness Shift in the Counseling and
Allied Helping Professions
- September 11, 2001 (2,996 deaths)
- War in Afghanistan Iraq (4,493 U.S. Soldiers
- 88,456 Iraqi Civilian deaths )
- Tsunami December 26th 2004 (275,000 deaths in 11
countries - Hurricane Katrina 2005 (70 deaths )
- Child Deaths by intentional-unintentional gun
violence (3,024yr) - School deaths due to violence (92-98 171 99-08
250) - Cumulative AIDS-related deaths in U.S (through
2002 501,669d) Ethiopia (1.8 mil predicted by
08)
5Healthy Occupational Outlook for Counselors
- Fire
- Flood
- Hurricanes/Tornados
- Ice storms
- Plane crashes
- Volcanoes
- Earthquakes
- Epidemics
- Workplace violence
- Traumatic injury in the workplace
- School shootings
- Bioterrorism
- Transportation Accidents
- Civil Unrest
- 2nd Depression
6A Constant State of Disaster Preparedness Crisis
Response Teams
- ARC/State Disaster MH
- EMS/IC-EM
- Law/Fire
- Public Health
- DSS
- School Counselors
- CISM Teams
- MH/LME
- EAPs
- Baptist Men
- Salvation Army
- United Way
- FEMA
- National Guard/Military
- Insurance Adjustors
- Media
- Airline Industry
- Banks/Financial Institutions
7Empathy Fatigue (EF)
- A dynamic state of psychological, emotional,
social, physical, occupational, and spiritual
exhaustion that occurs on a continuum, resulting
from the helpers own wounds that are continually
revisited by their clients life-stories of
stress, chronic illness, mental/physical
disability, trauma, grief, and loss.
8EF-The Wounded Healer Experience
- Traditional Native American teachings each time
you heal someone you give away a piece of
yourself until at some point you require
healing. - The wounded healer phenomenon has been noted
throughout the history of counseling, psychology,
and through spiritual leaders (Jung Nouwen,
Rogers, Dali Lama) - Journey to become a counselor, healer, or Shaman
comes with the understanding that there is a cost
to M-B-S.
9Professional Fatigue Syndromes A Concern for the
Helping Professions
- APA - Advisory Committee on Colleague Assistance
Impaired Professionals. - AMA- Physician Impairment physical, mental, and
behavioral disorder that hinders the physicians
ability to safely treat patients safely. - American Nurses Association- Compassion
Fatigue. - ACA Task Force on Counselor Wellness and
Impairment - Educate counselors on prevention strategies
- ID resources counselors
- Intervention and treatment recommendations
- Advocate for professional counseling associations
to establish programs on counselor impairment
10Ethical Considerations in EF
- Counselors are alert to the signs of impairment
from their own physical, mental, or emotional
problems and refrain from offering or providing
professional services when such impairment is
likely to harm a client or others - Counselors shall seek assistance for problems
that reach the level of professional impairment,
and if necessary, they limit, suspend, or
terminate their professional responsibilities
until such time it is determined they may be safe
to resume their work
11Epidemiology of Empathy Fatigue How is EF
Experienced?
- Empathy and compassion is the foundation of
counselor pre-professional training (Rogers
Corey Corey Ivey Ivey) - Intense interactions requires intense listening
and results in intense parallel experiences. - Many counselors spend a tremendous amount of
energy trying to understand the meaning of their
clients exp. - Theres a cost for counselors searching through
their clients emotional scrapbook looking for
all the losses, grief, pain, and suffering.
12Theoretical EF Critical Pathways
- Counselors who use empathy-focus therapeutic
interactions may be more at risk for EF. - EF is an unconscious process where the
professional and those around them may not
recognize counselor fatigue. - EF can occur early-on developmentally in
supervisees due to pre-existing personality
traits, general coping resources, age,
counselor-developmental factors, opportunities in
clinical experiences to build resiliency,
organizational, and environmental supports. - EF is cumulative and ranges on a continuum of
low, moderate, and high levels of
physical-emotional-mental spiritual, and
occupational exhaustion. Can be both acute and
cumulative.
13Theoretical Empathy Fatigue
- EF (is much like stress) can be experienced by
the pre-professional professional as both an
acute, chronic, delayed onset reaction ranges on
a continuum. - EF experienced by person dealing with a variety
of issues- clients daily hassles, stress, grief,
loss, addictions, or trauma. - Cumulative effects of EF leads to higher levels
of the deterioration in the pre-professional
counselors coping abilities and resiliency.
14Consequences of Empathy Fatigue?
- - Depletion of the counselors interpersonal
effectiveness - - Reduced warmth, compassion, intuitiveness
- - Physiological type of chronic fatigue
- - Social and Peer-professional withdrawal
- - Lack of mental focus
- - Decreased meaning in ones career
- - Existential confusion
- - Loss of connection with spiritual or religious
practices - - Parallel experience with client living life
out of balance
15Philosophy of EF
- It is not necessarily the nature of the clients
stress, trauma, loss, grief, daily hassles,
unhealthy coping, or disability adjustment issues
that creates a sense of EF rather, it is the
counselors perception towards that particular
client the counselors attributes that determines
the professionals response to it As a
consequence, leads to a diminished capacity to
listen, respond empathically, and provide
competent professional servicesoverall effects
on M-B-S.
16What Are EF Risk Factors?
- Personality Traits
- History of MH Problems
- Maladaptive Coping Behaviors
- Age and Experience-Related Factors
- Organizational Factors
- Job Duties within the Organization
- Socio-Cultural Factors
- Persons Response to Past Events
- Level of Support
17Global Assessment of EF Rating ScaleA
Theoretical Measure
- Theoretical scale ranging from
- Level 5(H-EF) Level 1(L-EF).
- Constellation of States, Traits, Behavioral
Dimensions Cognitive Behavioral Spiritual
Process Skills Emotional Physical Occupation. - Suggested use Self-ratings Ratings by clients
Independent peer-observer Independent
researcher.
18EF Assessment for Counselor Supervisors Share
Your Experiences
- I chose the field/occupation of counseling
because - I work best with clients who are
- I feel good and am encouraged by my clients
success when they - I am most negatively affected by my clients who
- My needs are met when they
- I generally do not work well under conditions
that involve - If I could make any change(s) in my situation I
would
19Ethical Review Checklist for Counselor Supervisors
- Does the Supervisee
- Have the necessary and sufficient skills and
competencies to provide services to
clients/consumers at least provisionally? - Possess training that has reached an acceptable
level of competency in the specialty area that
they practice? - Have the ability to control or cope with the
personal, emotional, psychological stress of
their job? - Possess enough self-awareness to limit or suspend
their practice when they are at risk for EF?
20Resilient Professionals
- Convey a sense of genuine commitment and
confidence to help with their clients stress
levels and critical issues- despite dealing with
ones own level of life difficulties. - Communicate competence and have a good sense of
mastery with handling challenging and difficult
clients- without depletion of ones own mind,
body, and spirit. - Feel optimistic, positive, and energetic about
the good work they do and have good coping
resources- even in tough times. - Have a purpose-driven life, find meaning in their
profession and practice good self-care
techniques. - Maintain excellent interpersonal insight and
still have the capacity for warmth, caring, and
empathy.
21The Resiliency Advantage
- 1. Making conscious choices in life.
- 2. Power of Positive Thinking.
- 3. Take responsibility.
- 4. Internal locus of control.
- 5. Self motivate yourself.
- 6. Dont fear trying-out new things.
- 7. Take control of your life.
- 8. Practice positive approaches to life.
22Adaptive Coping Healing Strategies
Organizational
- Skilled Competent clinical supervision
- Mentoring approaches
- Peer-supervision
- Shift focus of treatment team meetings
- Re-structure organizational philosophy to a
healthy person-centered M-B-S
23- Show-up
- Pay Attention
- Be Open to the Outcomes
24Wellness Approaches
- Breathing
- Meditation
- Visualization