Title: Responding to Traumatic Incidents in Schools
1Responding to Traumatic Incidents in Schools
- Nick Durbin
- Joint Programme Director Senior
Educational Psychologist - University of Nottingham Warrington BC
- Doctorate in Applied Educational Psychology
2Aims of Session
- Develop awareness and knowledge of the
psychosocial impact of traumatic incidents on
children and schools - Examine current theory and the evidence base for
practice - Explore what is known to support those affected
by traumatic incidents in schools - Develop your understanding of how educational
psychologists work as a part of a team to plan
for, and support those affected by traumatic
incidents
3Overview of the Session
- Definitions and Impact of Trauma
- Rationale for Support and Intervention
- Levels of Response and Support
- EP practice and Involvement
4Educational PsychologyLevels of Involvement
Community
Organisation
Group
Indl
5What is a Traumatic Incident?
- An incident charged with profound emotion may
involve serious injury or death - Incident generating a high level of immediate or
delayed emotional reaction - Incident involving serious threat or extremely
unusual circumstances - Incident attracting unusual attention from the
community or media - Surpassing an individual, group or organisations
normal coping mechanisms
6Case Study 1 A School Visit Bus Crash
- Issues?
- Contacts?
- Actions?
- Bush crash close to school
- 70 Y6 pupils some with serious injury
- Taken to 2 Hospitals
- 10 adult staff and helpers also on trip some with
injury - 140 concerned parents
- 200 other pupils at school
- 20 staff and governors
- 3 emergency services
- Local authority managers contact EPs ask them to
respond
7Rationale for Critical Incident Support
- Understand the Impact of Trauma
- Individuals
- Organisations
- Plan for Peoples Reactions and Needs
- Manage an Organisation and Community Response
- Wise before an Event rather than after it (Yule
and Gold, 1993)
8Aims of the Critical Incident Support
- Attempt to Minimise Impact
- Ensure Appropriate Support
- Co-ordinate Responses
- Support Normal Processes
9Case Study 1 A School Visit Bus Crash
- Bush crash close to school
- 70 Y6 pupils some with serious injury
- Taken to 2 Hospitals
- 10 adult staff and helpers also on trip some with
injury - 140 concerned parents
- 200 pupils at school
- 20 staff and governors
- 3 emergency services
- Local authority managers and services
10Trauma Some Considerations
- Theory
- definitions
- signs and symptoms
- Impact and Intervention
- individual
- groups
- organisation and community
- Evidence
- research
- practice
11Traumatic Incidents Impact and Intervention
Community
Organisation
Group
Individual
12Common Reactions to Trauma
- Feelings of denial
- Distress
- Guilt
- Anger
- Helplessness
- Re-experiencing events
- Avoidance
- Arousal (high or low)
13Common reactions (continued)
- Flashbacks and intrusive memories
- Headaches
- Difficulty concentrating
- Feeling guilty it was my fault
- Feeling detached from others
14Common reactions (contd)
- Numbness
- Anxiety
- Feeling on edge and Hyper-vigilant
- Depression
- Irritability and anger
- Sleep disturbance, nightmares
15Peoples Reactions and Needs
- Reactions vary depend
- Age
- Experience
- Personality
- Nature of the incident
- Degree of involvement
16Definitions of Post Trauma Stress
- The development of certain characteristic
symptoms following a psychologically distressing
event which is outside the range of normal human
experience (APA, DSM 1987)
17Post Traumatic Stress
- And
- The normal reactions of normal people to events
which, for them, are unusual or abnormal
(Parkinson, 1993)
18Post traumatic Stress Disorder
- Occurs when symptoms of PTS emerge later, persist
or intensify long after the event. i.e. more than
six weeks - and disrupt normal living - Involves three aspectsRe-experiencing, Avoidance
and Arousal - (DSM IV, 1993)
19DSM IV Symptom Criteria
20Trauma, PTS and PTSD
- Dose Symptoms
- The vast majority of people exposed to serious
traumatic events do not develop PTSD (McNally,
2003)
21Normal Features of Grieving
22Stages of Response and Recovery
- Shock
- Denial
- Emotional Impact
- Working Through
- Acceptance
- Normal reactions
- Pre- trauma Stability
- Post trauma Stability
- Traumatic Incident
7
8
9
1
6
2
5
3
4
Adapted from Queensland Dept of Education
23Some common needs
- Information,
- acknowledgement
- opportunity to talk
- formal and informal rituals
- recognition
- routines and normality
- return and reintegration
24Evidence based treatment for Individuals with PTSD
- NICE (2006) guidance suggests the importance
- Psychological first aid
- Watchful waiting
- Trauma focused CBT
- Eye Movement Desensitisation Reprocessing
(Shapiro,1993) - CBT has slightly better evidence base in children
than EMDR (Wolpert,M et al, 2006)
25Psychological treatments for adults
- Interventions need to be focused on trauma and
structured - Trauma focused CBT
- Helps confront traumatic memories with less fear
- Modify misinterpretations which overestimate
threat - Develop skills to cope with stress.
- Eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing
- PTSD sufferer is asked to recall an important
aspect of the traumatic event - Wilst following repetitive side to side
movements, sounds or taps as the image is being
focused on - (NICE, 2005 PTSD guidance)
26In children and young people
- Diagnosis is the same as adults
- Symptoms may differ in younger children may
include re-enacting, repetitive play, emotional
and behavioural difficulties. - Intervention of choice is currently trauma
focused CBT - Need for better evidence base and audit of all
interventions - (NICE PTSD guidance 2005)
27Traumatic Incidents Impact and Intervention
Community
Organisation
Group
Indl
28Case Study 2 Death in the Playground
- 12 noon Pupil aged 7 years
- Suddenly falls and hits head in the playground
- Pupils alert staff who give first aid
- Ambulance is called
- Parent informed
- Ambulance arrives but pupil has died before
arrival at hospital
- Issues?
- Contacts?
- Actions?
29Levels of Support (Hindmarch, 1999)
30Impact of Traumatic Incident
1
2
3
4
5
1. Primary Victims 2. Secondary Victims 3, 4,
5.Tertiary Victims
31Group Reactions and Needs
- Reactions can vary depend
- Previous Experience
- Group Dynamics
- Nature of the incident
- Degree of involvement
- Closeness to incident
32Critical Incident Debriefing
- A structured group process that aims to reduce
the impact of PTS and enhance coping mechanisms - Confidential and supportive service offered
staff, parents and pupils affected by an an
incident - In which group shares experiences, thoughts and
feelings about an incident - Usually takes 2-3 hours ( but can vary depending
on size of the group)
33Critical Incident Debriefing (continued)
- For Adults and Children
- Initial session with follow up
- Between 3-14 days after incident
- Two trained facilitators (lead and support)
- Priority given to those who witnessed or were
closely involved in some other way - Children groups need informed parental consent
34Definition
- a group meeting or discussion, employing both
crisis intervention and educational processes,
targeted towards mitigating or resolving
psychological distress associated with a critical
or traumatic event - (Mitchell and Everly, 1996)
35Psychological Debriefing
- Introduction
- Facts
- Before, during and after
- Thoughts
- Feelings
- Normalisation - psycho-education
- Future
- (Dyregrov, 2003)
36Aims of Debriefing
- Integrate cognitive and emotional memory
- Connecting past - present - future
- Psycho-education
- Normalisation
37Critical incident stress Debriefing Process
Cognitive
Introduction
Re-entry
Facts
Teaching
Thoughts
Symptoms
Reactions
Emotional
(Mitchell and Everly, 1996)
38Objectives of CISD
- Ventilation of impressions, reactions and
feelings - Promotion of clear understanding of precipitating
events and subsequent reactions - Decrease in individual and group tension and the
sense abnormality - Mobilisation of coping resources
- Preparation for future symptoms and
identification of avenues for further assistance
(Hodgkinson and Stewart, 1993)
39Issues of debriefing with Children (Wraith, 2000)
- Involvement of parents
- Developmental issues in child
- Role of peer group
- Modalities of expression and conversation
- Level of engagement
- Self disclosure, confidentiality, coping skills
- Secondary traumatisation/retraumisation
- Importance of trained leadership, psychological
first aid linked to debriefing
40Issues of debriefing
- In a comparative study of adolescents Stallard
and Law (1993) conclude - psychological debriefings can be very effective
in reducing intrusive thoughts, possibly by
validating the persons experience of trauma,
allowing re-interpretation of their attribution
and providing a forum in which emotions can be
discharged (p.663)
41Debriefing
- Questions have been raised as to efficacy of
single session debriefing in preventing PTSD in
individuals - Needs to be part of group and overall management
response and package of care - Careful consideration of elements of debriefing
- Purpose
- Timing and Duration
- Group membership
- Training of facilitators
- Follow up
42Criticisms of CISD and its impact on PTSD
- Evidence base for CISD and other interventions
are inconclusive - A meta analysis by Van Emmerick et al (2002)
adult CISD studies found no evidence of
prevention of PTSD - But some evidence of perceived helpfulness and
satisfaction - But CISD has other purposes too
- contributing to psychological first aid and part
of a planned response - reduction of distress and psycho-education
- Ethical and research issues
- Normalising rather than pathologising
- Research with bereaved and traumatised groups
notoriously difficult
43Methodological criticisms of the critics of
debriefing
- Analyse single session debriefing
- Use self selection and groups not adequately
matched - Actual debriefing used not defined
- Timing of intervention variable
- Intervention insufficient
- Training of facilitators not clear
- Not part of Critical Incident Stress Management
(Dyregrov, 2003)
44Context for debriefing
- Needs to be part of overall crisis intervention
or plan - Not given too early
- Or without follow-up
- Assessment of group and individuals
- Trained personnel
- Focus cognitive and education
- Not too long or too short
- (Hodgkinson and Stewart, 1993)
45Case Study 3 Young Person Missing and Suspected
Murder
- Young Person Aged 17 missing
- Concerned friends tell teacher who reports this
to police - Frequent news stories and bulletins over months
- Body found and confirmed it is the young person
- Suspected Murder
- Family members arrested then released
46Traumatic IncidentsImpact and Intervention
Community
Organisation
Group
Indl
47Impact on Organisations
- Incidents can directly or indirectly affect a
school and organisation - Can be an onsite, offsite or multi-site
- May directly/indirectly affect school staff
including senior managers - May generate a lot of media interest
- May generate reaction in parents
- May generate over zealous helping, callers and
visitors - Plans and responses need to be flexible and Wise
before the event
48Impact of trauma in Organisations
- Brings out the Best and Worst in people
- Magnify difficulties or strengthens existing
relationships - Close ranks in group versus out group
- Competing pressure to stop or carry on
- Opportunity to share and support
49Impact of Trauma School as an Organisation
(Attneave, C cited in Hindmarch, C (1999))
9
- Pre- trauma Context
- Crisis
- Retribalisation
- Polarisation
- Mobilisation
- Depression
- Breakthrough
- Exhaustion/Elation
- Post-trauma Context
1
2
3
4
8
5
7
6
50Managing an incident in school
- Action within Hours
- Obtain and Collate Information
- Convene Critical Incident Management team
- Create Incident room and phone line
- Contact Families affected
- Make arrangements for informing other parents
- Inform school staff
- Inform Pupils
- Inform Local Authority and Communications
Department - (Managing the response to critical incidents in
schools (Cheshire CC Guidance, 1995)
51Managing an Incident in School
- Develop a plan for handling the feelings and
reactions of people - Prepare a more detailed media statement in
association with Communications Dept - Prepare further information for parents, pupils
and staff - Contact Critical Incident Support Team (CIST)
- Consider and arrange where appropriate debriefing
for staff, parents and the pupils involved - (Managing the response to critical incidents in
schools( Cheshire CC Guidance, 1995)
52Case Study 4 Child found in a swimming pool
- Child aged 6 with learning difficulties
- Enters swimming through an unlocked door and pool
is unsupervised - Staff supervising other children getting changed
- Child found face down in pool but is resuscitated
by school nurse - Sent to hospital but is discharged later that day
53Traumatic Incidents Impact and Intervention
Community
Organisation
Group
Indl
54Core Components of Critical Incident Stress
Management
- Pre-incident education/mental prepardness
- On scene crisis intervention support
- Demobilization
- Defusing
- Critical Incident Stress Debriefing
- Additional support for families and children
- Follow up services and appropriate
- (adapted from Mitchell Everly, 2000)
55Case study 5 Meningitis Death
- Suspected meningitis death of Child aged 5
- A member of school staff ill also with suspected
meningitis - Community and parents very upset and concerned
- Parents keeping children away from school despite
advice to the contrary
56EP involvement in Strategic Development
- Involvement in development and revision of
policy, procedures and guidance for schools - Training and development activities provided for
Staff in LA, Schools and other settings to ensure
they are aware of issues related to bereavement
and loss, psychological impact of trauma and
effective management - Coordination and Liaison with other agencies e.g.
Health Protection Agency
57Authority and Community Wide Involvement and
Support
- Emergency Planning
- Team Development and Co-ordination
- Simulation and practice
- Links and Liaison with other services
- Training and Development
- Support and Response
- (See Pousada, 2006 for example)
58Crisis Support to Schools
- Crisis support to schools is still valid and
needed - Psychological debriefing useful aid to cognitive
restructuring and normalisation - Group work and coaching can lead to self help and
dispel misunderstandings - Work on planning and response is highly valued by
schools - (adapted from McCaffrey, 2004)
59Critical Incident Support Three Teams with
Links and Roles
- Immediate Aftermath
- - Local Authority Managers and Officers
- Short-term
- Multi-Disciplinary Critical Incident Support Team
- Medium-term
- Other Specialist Support Services
- including Occupational Health, CAMHS and
bereavement services - Long-term
- Critical Incident promotion, planning and
preparing - Local authority and other services
60EP involvement in Multi-Agency CIST working
- Involvement in responding and supporting
- Co-ordinated Multi-Agency Critical Incident
Support Team involving - Including educational psychologists, Child health
and social care professionals - Trained and developed for role
- Involvement in Coordination, Training, Planning
and Working with - Emergency Planning Officer
- Health Protection Agency (HPA)
- Public Relations and Communications Teams
- Children and Social services
- Emergency services
- (see Pousada, 2006, for example)
61EP Position in the Chain of Command
Incident
62Case Study 1 A School Visit Bus Crash
- Bush crash close to school
- 70 Y6 pupils some with serious injury
- Taken to 2 Hospitals
- 10 adult staff and helpers also on trip some with
injury - 140 concerned parents
- 200 pupils at school
- 20 staff and governors
- 3 emergency services
- Local authority managers and services
63Case Study 1 The Incident
- The Incident
- The Hours following
- The rest of the day/night
- The next day
- The day after that
- The rest of the week
64Case Study 1 The Response
- Information and support for
- Pupils
- Family
- Parents Group
- Staff
- Media
- Others (inc Governors, LEA etc)
65Case Study 1 Team and EP Response
- The Call
- The Reactions
- The Response
- Issues, Actions and Contacts
- Evaluation and Learning points
66Support Needs
- Support needs
- In The Immediate Aftermath
- The Short Term ( up to 4weeks)
- The Medium Term ( 1 month to year)
- The Long Term ( 1year on and beyond)
67Some feedback
- The Critical Incident Team were a tower of
strength to us all. They handled the whole
incident in a very supportive and caring way
without being intrusive. I feel that they were
excellent in very way and do not lack in any
area
68Educational PsychologyLevels of Involvement
Community
Organisation
Group
Indl
69Aims of the Session (Revisited)
- Develop your awareness and knowledge of the
psychosocial impact of traumatic incidents on
children and schools - Examine current theory and the evidence base for
practice - Explore what is known to help support those
affected by traumatic incidents in schools - Develop your understanding of how Educational
Psychologists work with other professionals to
support those affected by traumatic incidents
70Remember ..
- The normal reactions of normal people to events
which, for them, are unusual and abnormal
(Parkinson, 1993)
71Responding to Traumatic Incidents in Schools
72Responding to Traumatic Incidents in Schools
- I hope that you now feel Wise before the Event
(or is it Exam!) - Good Luck!!
73References
- American Psychiatric Association (1993)
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders Washington APA Carroll,D., Frew, D.,
Futcher,A., Ladkin,M., Morey,Y., price,T.
Smith, A. (1997) The educational psychology
crisis intervention service. Educational
Psychology in Practice, 13, 2, 112-114 - Dyregrov, A. (2003) Psychological Debriefing A
leaders guide for small group crisis
intervention USA Chevron Publishing - Everly, G.S., Mitchell, J.T. (1999) Critical
incident stress management(CISM) A new era and
standard of care in crisis intervention.
74References (Continued)
- Hindmarch, C (1999) On the Death of a Child.
- Hodgkinson, P.E. and Stewart, M(1998) Coping with
Catastrophe. London Routledge - OHara, D.M., Taylor, R., Simpson, K.,(1994)
Critical incident stress debriefing bereavement
support in schools - developing a role for an LEA
educational psychology service. Educational
Psychology in Practice, 10, 1, 27-34 - Mallon, F., Best, C., (1995) Trauma in School A
psychological service response Educational
Psychology in Practice, 10, 4, 231-237
75References (continued)
- Mitchell, J.T., and Everly, G.S. (2000)Critical
Incident Stress management and critical Incident
stress debriefings evolutions, effects and
outcomes. In Raphael, B., and Wilson, J.P.(2000)
(Eds) Psychological Debriefing Cambridge
Cambridge University Press - National Institute of Clinical Excellence (2005)
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Guidance - Parkinson, F. (1993) Post trauma stress. London
Sheldon Press - Parkinson, F (1997) Critical incident stress
debriefing. London Sheldon press - Resnick, P.A. (2001) Stress and Trauma East
Sussex Psychology Press
76References (Continued)
- McCaffrey, T (2004) Responding to Crises in
Schools A consultancy model for supporting
schools in Crisis educational and child
psychology 2004, 21, 3, 109 -120 - McNally., R.J., Bryant, R.A., Ehlers, A. (2003)
Does early psychological intervention promote
recovery from post traumatic stress?
Psychological science in the Public interest 4,
2, 45-96 - Pousada, S.(2006) Applying Psychology in Local
Authority Emergency Planning Processes
Educational Psychology in Practice, 22, 3,
199-214 - Shapiro, F. (2001) Eye movement
Desensensitization and Reprocessinig. New York
Guilford Press
77References (continued)
- Van Emmerik, A.P.A., Kamphuis, K.H., Hulsbosch,
A.M. Emmelkamp, P.M.G.(2002) Single session
debriefing after psychological trauma a
meta-analysis Lancet, 360, 766-771 - Wolpert, M., et al (2006) Drawing on the Evidence
London EBPU - Wraith, R. (2000) Children and debriefing
theory, interventions and outcomes. In Raphael,
B., and Wilson, J.P.(2000) (Eds) Psychological
Debriefing Cambridge Cambridge University Press - Yule, W.,and Gold, A.(1993) Wise before the
event. London Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation