Title: Challenging Times Require a Commitment to SelfCare by Practitioners
1Challenging Times Require a Commitment to
Self-Care by Practitioners
- Raymond F. Hanbury, PhD, ABPP
- H. Katherine ONeill, PhD
- Richard A. Heaps, PhD, ABPP
- Suzan M. Stafford, EdD
- Ester Cole, PhD
- Sunday, August 9, 2009
2Empathy Versus Strain Need for Self-Care
Raymond F. Hanbury, PhD, ABPP
3Disaster Response Network Focus on Responder
Self-Care
- Stress
- Empowerment
- Life
- Functioning
- Compassion
- Assessment
- Resiliency
- Empathy
4Types of Stress
- General Stress Eustress/ Distress
- Acute (incident specific immediate)
- Delayed (incident specific can be latent for
about 6 months) - Cumulative / Chronic (not incident specific)
- Critical Incident Stress
- Posttraumatic Stress
5Major Types of Stressful Events / Stressors
- Natural Disasters
- Mass Interpersonal violence
- Technological Disasters
- Disasters of Human Intention
- Large scale transportation accidents
- House or other domestic fires
- Motor vehicle accidents
- Economic factors
- Sudden traumatic loss
- Rape sexual assault
- Stranger assault
- Partner battery
- Torture
- War
- Child abuse
- Emergency worker exposure
- Medical Illness
- Military Deployment
6Working With Trauma
- Helpers sometimes mistakenly believe their
training, role, and experience make them somehow
immune to the effects of traumatic exposure. - Traumatic stress response is in part an autonomic
biological response.
7Trauma Phenomenon Reviewed in Different Ways
Click to add text
- Classical Burnout Freudenberger, 1984
- Compassion Fatigue Figley, 1995
- Vicarious Traumatization McCann
-
Pearlman, 1990
8Difference Between Burnout Secondary Traumatic
Stress
- Burnout is conceptualized as the gradual
depletion of resources with the residual effect
of inefficacy while. - Compassion Fatigue or Vicarious Traumatic Stress
is seen as the rapid insertion of fear associated
with the psychological material or others
encountered in the work setting. -
(Stamm, 2002)
9Current Conceptualization of Work Related
Indirect Trauma
It is widely accepted that interaction with
victims of traumatic exposure places helpers at a
high risk of secondary exposure.
10Direct and Indirect Trauma
- Sometimes work-related trauma places one in the
path of both direct and indirect trauma. - Responding to humanitarian disasters, such as
wars or terrorist attacks helpers find
themselves dealing with these events in difficult
living conditions. - (Stamm,
2002)
11Line of Duty Aspects
- Overcrowding
- Sanitation
- Poor housing
- Long hours
- Food insufficiency
- Poverty
- Absence of medical assistance
12The danger increases when helpers assumption of
immunity allows them to put themselves at
increased risk by continuing to work when they
have exhausted their personal resources.
13Sometimes helpers conceal their distress behind
masks of denial and avoidance because they think
they are failing as helpers.
14Vulnerability to Secondary Exposure
- Some work has been done on the factors that
contribute to helpers vulnerability to secondary
exposure, but much of it is anecdotal,
theoretical, or retrospective survey but not
separate secondary exposure from primary
exposure. - Even less is available as what supports
resiliency in helpers.
15Empathy Empathic Strain in Trauma Work
- The capacity for sustained empathy is pivotal for
the recovery process of the victim. - Achieving empathy requires a nonjudgmental manner
to the victim and the ability to project oneself
into the phenomenological world being experienced
by the other person. Empathy is both more
necessary and more difficult to maintain.
- (Ochberg, 1993)
16Vicarious Trauma
- In the last decade it became clear that people
can be secondarily affected by the suffering of
others - Empathy - vehicle whereby helpers make themselves
open to absorption of stressful and traumatic
events - Vicarious Traumatization - The process of changes
in the helper/rescuer resulting from empathic
engagement with patients or survivors
17- Empathy is a complex concept in that the
responders must be aware of his or her own
partial identification with the victim in other
words, take into account countertransference.
18Helpers Also Suffer
- Stresses associated w/ clinical work work
setting(s) - Limited decision making power control over
aspects of work - Poor interpersonal/ institutional support
- Heavy case-loads
- Managed care demands
- Professional isolation
- Work-Family conflict (lack of work-family
balance) - Work with difficult clients (e.g., chronic
illness, suicidal) - Financial/business pressures in independent
practice
19Helpers Also Suffer
- Impairment
- Deleterious impact of distress/ demands on
professional competence - Decline in quality of professional functioning to
the point where the psychologist is unable to
deliver competent patient care - patient may be
harmed or services may be ineffective (Coster
Schwebel, 1997 Laliotis Grayson, 1985) - Problems with professional competence proposed
to replace the term impairment (e.g., Elman,
2007) - Rates of impairment among psychologists
- Current 5 to15 / Lifetime 60
- About 1/3 of psychologists report knowing an
impaired colleague or identify themselves as
currently or formerly impaired (e.g., Floyd et
al., 1998)
20Helpers Also Suffer What increases
psychologists risk?
- Motivations for becoming a psychologist
- Some enter profession with known physical or
psychological vulnerabilities - Family of origin issues Childhood trauma or
abuse reported in 33 - 66 of female mental
health professionals - The Challenging and intense nature of our work
and our therapeutic relationships may increase
the risk for stress, distress, and impairment - Role identification
- Professional/ clinical responsibility for clients
- Empathic engagement as helping professionals
21- Potential Consequences of Ignoring Occupational
Stress
- To psychologists, including
- Depression
- Social/professional isolation
- Job dissatisfaction
- Suicide
- Chemical abuse or dependence
- Relationship conflicts (divorce)
- Other addictions
- Unprofessional behaviors
- Ethical violations
- Stress-related illnesses
22Potential Consequences of Ignoring Occupational
Stress
- To Clients, including
- Malpractice
- Suicide
- Boundary violations
- Loss of faith in therapy
- Symptom exacerbation
- Guilt
- Iatrogenic symptoms
- Despair
23Potential Consequences of Ignoring Occupational
Stress
- To the Profession of Psychology, including
- Loss of credibility
- Lawsuits
- Attrition
- Negative media attention
- Cynicism
- Disillusionment
24Stressors in Our Practices
- Somatic Distress
- Isolation/Loneliness
- Transitional/Role stress
- Family crisis
- Serious mental illness
- Psychiatric emergencies
- Catastrophic crisis
- Economic stress
25Differences by Setting/Practice
-
- OFFICE
- Long term
- Calm atmosphere
- Quiet
- Individual/family
- Aloneness
- Business
- Long hours
- Scheduled times
- Structured interactions
- Solo or small group
- FIELD
- Short duration
- Intense exposure
- Noisy, chaos
- Mass numbers
- Groups / organizations
- Pro bono / volunteer
- Long days or weeks
- Unscheduled
- Sense of urgency
- Collaboration with teams
26Similarities by Setting/Practice
- OFFICE
- Assessments
- Connect with patients
- Competence
- Training
- Ethics
- Danger
- Need for Wellness
- Cultural awareness
- Work with tragedy
- Be in control
- Evidence based approach
- FIELD
- Assessments
- Connect with survivors
- Competence
- Training
- Ethics
- Danger
- Need for Wellness
- Cultural awareness
- Work with tragedy/ trauma
- Be in control
- Evidence based approach
27Wellness and Self-Care Moral Ethical
Imperatives
APA Ethics Code Principle A - Psychologists
strive to be aware of the possible effect of
our own physical and mental health on our
ability to help those with whom we work. (APA,
2002, p. 3) - Awareness is an important first
step towards wellness Pursuit of Wellness -
Wellness is the enduring quality in ones
professional functioning over time and in the
face of professional and personal stressors
(Coster Schwebel, 1997) Self-Care - Self-care
practices are necessary to maintain optimal
wellness in the face of occupational and personal
stress - If you dont practice self-care, you
risk harming clients - Moral Imperative
(Carroll et al., 1999) - Ethical Imperative
(Baker, 2007 Barnett et al., 2007)
28Maintaining Empathy Self-Care
- Adequate education and training
- Experience in the field and office in treating
survivors - Proper supervision
- Collegial peer support
- Personality traits
29MENTAL HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
We May Also Be Victims!!!
30Vicarious Traumatization Recommendations for
Prevention and Intervention
H. Katherine ONeill, PhD NDSU Dept. of
Psychology and Knowlton, ONeill,
Associates Fargo, ND
31Definition
- Vicarious traumatization has been defined as a
change in therapists inner experience resulting
from empathic engagement with a clients material - (Pearlman Saakvitne, 1995)
32Signs and Symptoms
- SYMPTOMS
- Re-experiencing (intrusive thoughts)
- Avoidance (avoidance of person and/or of hearing
about traumatic experiences) - Hypervigilance (arousal, anxiety, physical
symptoms) - Note similarity to PTSD symptoms, except these
are not due to direct trauma exposure
33Prevention Strategies
- AWARENESS
- An empathic listener will automatically form
images of trauma - Fight or flight reaction is natural response to
such images
34Prevention Strategies
- MANAGE PHYSIOLOGICAL AROUSAL
- Quick and easy relaxation methods
- Diaphragmatic breathing
- Grounding exercises
- Take a break
35Prevention Strategies
CONNECTIONS WITH OTHERS
- Share reactions with a trusted co-worker
- Find someone who will let you talk about your
experiences without judging or trying to fix it - Stay connected to family and friends
36Prevention Strategies
- SELF-CARE
- Engage in aerobic physical activity
- Take time for relaxation and recreation
- Pursue hobbies
37Prevention Strategies
- SELF VALIDATION
- Avoid over-reliance on client outcomes and
supervisor praise as indicators of success - Recognize own abilities and competencies, despite
pressures of work environment -
- The best I can do is all that I can do
- (Gentry, 2004)
38Prevention Strategies
- SPIRITUAL PRACTICES
- Put things into perspective
- Being part of a larger plan
- Connection with a benevolent presence
39Prevention Strategies
- ADEQUATE TRAINING
- Knowledge base
- Scope of competence
- RESOURCES
- Means of communication
- Backup person
- Materials needed for effective work
40Intervention Strategies
- PRIMARY TRAUMA SYMPTOMS
- Post-traumatic symptoms from direct exposure to
traumatic situation - History of unresolved trauma
- Address these first
41Intervention Strategies
- EMOTIONAL PROCESSING
- Process thoughts and feelings
- Release reactions to stressful situations and
vicarious traumatic exposure in a systematic way - Learn more about this strategy from our next
speaker
42Intervention Strategies
- RECONNECT WITH MISSION
- Act intentionally, in accordance with your
personal mission - Regain your sense of integrity
- Remember, your best is all you can do!
- (Gentry, 2004)
43Intervention Strategies
- SELF CARE
- Become a good self-manager
- Engage in activities that bring joy and
fulfillment outside of work - Learn to self-validate, rather than rely on
feedback from others
44Transforming Vicarious Traumatization
- POST-TRAUMATIC GROWTH
- Study of psychotherapists who work with trauma
- 100 reported transient secondary trauma symptoms
(intrusive thoughts, arousal, negative emotions) - 100 reported personal and professional growth
- Arnold, Calhoun, Tedeschi, Cann (2005)
45Transforming Vicarious Traumatization
- FOCUS ON BENEFITS
- Personal and professional growth
- Challenge, stimulation, intensity of work
- Satisfaction and accomplishment
- Collaboration and teamwork
- Appreciation from those being helped
46Journaling for Self-Care in Disaster Response
Richard A. Heaps, PhD, ABPP Counseling Ctr.
Counseling Psychology Dept, Brigham Young
University Kristina Withers Hansen,
EdS Counseling Psychology Dept Counseling
Ctr., Brigham Young University
47(No Transcript)
48The Problem
Traumatic Environments
49Unimaginable Trauma
50Exhausting Challenges
51Chaos
52Human Suffering
53Desperate Expectations
54Living Conditions
55Exposure Can Lead To
- Intrusive, obsessive thoughts
- Anxiety
- Work/social impairments
- Sleep disturbances
56IN DRN PSYCHOLOGISTSSECONDARY OR VICARIOUS
TRAUMATIZATION
57Self-Care
A Solution
58Example One solution - Journaling
59Personal Experiences
60Understanding and Interpersonal Connection
61Reinforcing Resilience
62- Avoiding Avoidance
- (Healing from Traumatic Experiences)
63Sleep Aid Managing Intrusive Thoughts and
Feelings
64Insight for Problem-Solving
65Emotional Outlet Controversial Issues
66Thinking In a Safe Place
67Research The Benefits of Journaling
- Health
- Emotional-Psychological
- Therapeutic Process
see paper and references
68Enhancing Benefits
Include Emotional and Cognitive expression (Feel
and Make Sense of Events)
69Psychologists Are People Too
(Same benefits from Journaling)
70How to Journal
- Use comfortable materials
- Define your audience
- Use concrete descriptions
- What happened?
- Write freely and honestly
- Say what you really think and feel
- What does your experience mean to you?
- Be truthful
71How Local Associations Can Promote Self-Care
Suzan M. Stafford, EdD
72Articles in Newsletters and E-Grams
- Defining, evaluating, and offering ways to
promote self care - Cultivating resilience and how it applies to self
care - Positive peer partnering and how it works
73Promoting Self-Care in Professional Psychology
- Culture change in psychology - Normalizing
discussion of occupational stress, distress,
temptations, via training programs and in
Psychological Associations - Training/Teaching/CE about self-care, trauma,
boundary management - Self-care as part of supervision
- Peer consultation
- Early (self) assessment and intervention
- Early (self) referral before actionable
violations have occurred
74Resilience and Self-Care
- Maintaining physical health
- Developing insight into ones emotions and
reactions - Learning new skills
- Education and experience
- Community and family support
- Strengthening self-esteem
- Spirituality
75Positive Peer Partnering For Psychologists
- This concept encourages psychologists to engage
in a collaborative, informal connection with 1 or
2 colleagues to help - Maintaining mind/body wellness
- Reducing levels of stress, especially when
working with critical incidents/DMH - Collaborating due diligence regarding our
client services ethical responsibilities - Practicing Prevention to assure healthiness
with respect to self, others clients -
-
76Positive Peer Partnering For Psychologists
- Consider identifying and then checking in with
one or two colleagues about developing such an
informal arrangement - Be flexible, creative, develop guidelines
together that will help to structure and honor
healthy mind and body care for you and your
professional efforts - Consider how often to connect, what setting,
perhaps during a walk, lunch, stretch class, yoga
class, sharing joyful moments over tea, or just a
telephone check-in
77Informal Peer Supervision Groups
- Choose a group of colleagues/friends with similar
interests - Allows more comfort than with someone assigned to
you - Allows self-assessment in safe environment
- Prevents sense of being alone with ones concerns
78Present CE Workshops
- Half day/day long workshops on self-care
- Workshops on resilience
- Yearly Association conference to include stress,
trauma, self-care, or resilience workshops - Utilize resources from APA and others
79Colleague Assistance Programs
- APAs Advisory Committee on Colleague Assistance
(ACCA) - Recognize and investigate occupational
vulnerabilities and need for assistance - Promote development of state colleague assistance
programs
80Purposes and Goals of Colleague Assistance
Programs (CAPs)
- CAPs intended to benefit/protect both the public
the profession - Educate psychologists on how to prevent
ameliorate the effects of stress through
self-care - Provide treatment and support services for those
who self-refer or are referred by others
(including licensing boards) - The most effective and efficient CAPs result from
collaboration between psychology associations and
licensing boards
81CAPs in SPTAs
- Half of associations have never had or no longer
have CAPs - A large decrease was seen in the last decade
- The most common reason for discontinuing a
program was lack of use
82Barriers to CAPs
- Focus on substance abuse or impairment
- Stigma, shame
- Fear of censure or discipline
- Denial of need for assistance
- Lack of models for intervention
83How Associations Can Help
- Develop a CAP for your Association
- Work with Licensing Board and Ethics Committee to
develop the CAP - Work with Licensing Board and Ethics Committee to
utilize the CAP first instead of taking negative
actions - Allow the CAP confidentiality within state laws
- Publicize the CAP
84Disaster Response Network Helping Disaster
Responders
- Emphasis on training
- Being ready before, during and after the event
- Utilizing support systems
- Offering information before response
- Checking in after response
- Availability of ongoing support
85Thank you to ACCA members
- Diane Bridgeman, PhD
- Raymond F. Hanbury, PhD, ABPP
- H. Katherine (Kit) ONeill, PhD
- Martha F. Simpson, PhD
- From their presentation at the 2009 APA State
Leadership Conference Helping Others While
Helping Ourselves During Challenging Times
86Thank You!
- Raymond F. Hanbury, PhD, ABPP rhanbury_at_verizon.ne
t, - H. Katherine ONeill, PhD Kit.oneill_at_ndsu.edu
- Richard A. Heaps, PhD, ABPP richard_heaps_at_byu.edu
- Suzan M. Stafford, EdD suzanms_at_verizon.net
- Ester Cole, PhD ester.cole_at_sympatico.ca