Title: Crisis Theory and Intervention
1Crisis Theory and Intervention
- SOW6425 Assessment and Planning
- Professor Nan Van Den Bergh
2THE NATURE OF CRISIS
- A crisis is the perception of an experienced
event as an intolerable difficulty - A crisis is an upset in a steady state. ( from
a previous equilibrium) - A person experiencing a crisis may be lacking
- knowledge about how to manage the situation
(cope) - ability to focus and utilize her or his strengths
- A crisis often results when we face a serious
stressors - Biological ( illness, disability, loss of prior
physical functioning) - Psychological (a sense of loss of esteem, self
worth) important relationship ending) - Social (ending of valued relationship/s)
- Economic (economic insecurity, poverty, layoff,
etc ) -
-
3STAGES OF A CRISIS
- There is a sharp and sudden increase in the
persons level of tension. - The person tries to cope, but fails, experiencing
stress - tension increases and contributes to the sense of
being overwhelmed. - The crisis resolves (normatively within 4 to 6
weeks) - negatively (with an unhealthy coping solution)
- positively (with successful management leading to
enhanced sense of personal competence) - With prior level of functioning intact
4A PERSONS RESPONSE TO A CRISIS
- The growth pattern - the client recovers from the
event and then develops new skills and strengths. - The equilibrium pattern - the client returns to
the pre-crisis level of functioning - The frozen crisis pattern - the client does not
improve. New coping strategies may be harmful
such as - Withdrawal
- Self destructive behaviors
- Violence
-
5TYPES OF CRISES
- Developmental crises occur in the normal flow of
life as significant changes in life status - college graduation
- marriage/committed partnership
- birth of children
- midlife career change
- retirement from work
- Situational crises refer to extraordinary events
that a person has no way of forecasting or
controlling - physical injuries
- sexual assault
- loss of a job
- the death of a loved one
6Types of Crises (cont.)
- Existential crises are characterized by inner
conflicts related to - searching for a sense of meaning and purpose in
life - Experiencing remorse over past life choices,
- questioning of ones basic values or spiritual
beliefs
7STRESS, COPING, AND ADAPTATION
- Stress is the emotional, cognitive, physiological
and behavioral result of an event in which
environmental or internal demands exceed a
person's coping capacity. - Psychological stress can be experienced as
- Harm effects of a damaging event that has
already occurred (victimization) - Threat potential for harm in the future (layoff,
bankcruptcy) - Challenge appraisal of opportunity, not harm
(downsizing) - Coping is a persons efforts to master the
demands of stress. It includes - thoughts, feelings, and actions that constitute
those efforts. - Adaptation involves adjustments the person makes
in biological responses, perceptions, or
lifestyle.
8BIOLOGICAL COPING - THE GENERAL ADAPTATION
SYNDROME
- Alarm - the body becomes aware of a threat
- Resistance - the body attempts to maintain or
restore homeostasis. - Endorphins and specialized cells of the immune
system fight off stress and infection - Exhaustion - the body terminates coping efforts
because of its inability to physically sustain
the state of disequilibrium. - Cumulative wear and tear of stress episodes can
gradually depletes the immune system. - Outcomes include some physical and emotional
disorders.
9PSYCHOLOGICAL COPING
- Problem-focused coping to change the stressful
situation (cognitive problem solving strategies) - This method is appropriate when we view the
situation as changeable or controllable via
taking action. - In emotion-focused coping (distancing, avoidance,
and reappraisal of the threat) - The external situation does not change, but our
behavior or attitudes change with respect to it. - Psychologically, the primary coping method
employed is denial and repression (emotional
numbing)
10Relational Coping
- Relational coping takes into account actions that
maximize the survival or others - Research has shown that within stressful
situations, rather that fight or flight women
may be more likely to gather the brood - Oxytocin is produced
11SOCIAL SUPPORT
- Social support interpersonal interactions and
relationships that provide people with
assistance or positive feelings of attachment - Family
- Friends
- Neighbors
-
- Material support food, clothing shelter,
transportation, other tangible items or services - Instrumental support services provided by
casual contacts, such as grocers, hairstylists - Support clusters - distinct categories of people
such as the nuclear family, extended family,
friends, neighbors, school peers, work peers,
church associates, recreational groups
12HOW SOCIAL SUPPORT AIDS COPING
- Nurtures and promotes an ordered worldview
- Promotes hope
- Promotes timely withdrawal and initiative
- Provides guidance
- Provides communication channels with the social
world - Affirms personal identity
- Provides material help
- Modulates distress through reassurance and
affirmation - Ensures adequate rest
- Mobilizes other personal supports
-
13Clinical Aspects of Crisis Assessment
- Rapid establishment of a constructive
relationship - acceptance,
- empathy
- verbal reassurance
- Eliciting and encouraging the clients expression
of feelings - reduces anxiety,
- promotes return to focusing,
- assists re-establishing a sense of calm
- Assessment is rapid but thorough enough to result
in a well-crafted plan.
14Aspects of Assessment (cont.)
- Assessment includes
- Investigating precipitating factors of the crisis
- Determining the meaning of the precipitating
event to the client - Clarifying the clients capacities for adaptive
functioning - Determining the clients potential and actual
support systems
15ASSESSMENT QUESTIONS
- What factors can the client identify relative to
the onset of the crisis? - What is the current quality of the clients
affective, cognitive, and behavioral functioning?
- Which areas appear to be the most adversely
affected? - Is the client self-destructive?
- Does the client require immediate medical or
psychiatric attention? - How does the clients current level of
functioning compare with pre-crisis functioning? -
16ASSESSMENT QUESTIONS (Cont.)
- Has there been significant trauma, illness,
pathology, or substance abuse in the clients
past? - What are the clients strengths? Areas of life
stability? - What are the clients realistic alternatives for
managing the distress? - What are the clients formal, informal, and
potential support systems? - Are there financial, social, or personal
impediments to the clients progress? -
17 Crisis Interventions
- Two unique features of crisis interventions
- Social worker's short term and intensive
involvement with client ( and others if needed) - Workers active use of the environment in
establishing linkages plus concrete and social
support - Crisis interventions are adapted from other
practice theories ego psychology, cognitive,
behavioral, solution-focused, narrative,
structural family therapy - Intervention is present-focused
- Clinical case management will almost always be
provided
18Three Major Clinical Case Management Tasks in
Crisis Intervention
- Forge relationship and make positive connection
- Nature of the relationship will depend upon
characteristics of the client - Highly interactive
- Formal and distant
- Facilitate client moving from dependence to
greater self-sufficiency - Alter the client's physical environment to
facilitate improved adjustment to crisis
19Skills Needed for Clinical Case Management in
Crisis Intervention
- Recognize a clients fluctuating competence
- Develop a realistic view of the client's
strengths and limitations - Continue to reinforce client's strengths so the
s/he can acknowledge and utilize them - Adjust levels of support to maximize a clients
capacity for self-efficacy - Facilitate client moving from dependency to
greater self-sufficiency - Determine the biological and psychological
reaction to the crisis
20Skills Needed for Clinical Case Management in
Crisis Intervention (cont.)
- Help the clients significant others cope with
the crisis situation - Appreciate the effects of social factors on a
clients sense of competence - Appreciate a client's conscious and unconscious
motives for behavior - Maintain relationship boundaries during
often-intensive work - Provide agency, but not, personal phone number
- Clarify need to maintain appointments, not just
drop in - Provide information on how to access emergency
services -
21INTERVENTIONS FROM EGO PSYCHOLOGY
- Ego-sustaining techniques help clients become
mobilized to resolve their crises and to
understand their motivations and actions more
clearly - Sustainment
- Exploration-description-ventilation
- Person-situation reflection
- Education
- Direct influence
- Structuring (Partializing)
22Interventions From Ego Psychology (cont.)
- Restoration of cognitive functioning techniques
- Worker utilizes reflective statements regarding
nature of crisis and its meaning to client - Normalizes the clients experiences based on the
nature of the crisis and its meaning to the
client - Affirms the clients capacity to make lemonade
out of lemons
23INTERVENTIONS FROM BEHAVIOR THEORY
- Classical conditioning
- Systematic desensitization surrounding responses
to cues reminding client of crisis event - Operant conditioning
- Providing reinforcements for changes in client
behavior related to attempts to manage crisis - Modeling
- Covert Social worker guides client through a
process of imagining resolution of the crisis - Behavioral rehearsal Worker role plays client
engaging in a crisis resolution task - Life skills training
- Navigating systems
- Stress management training
- Breathing
- Progressive muscle relaxation
24 Intervention Strategies From Cognitive Theory
- Cognitive restructuring
- the ABC review (event/thought/feeling)
- the point-counterpoint techniques (costs and
benefits of current beliefs) - Cognitive coping via education and skills
training - self-instruction internal cognitive framework
for instructing themselves on how to cope with
problem situations - communication skills training attention to
clients social, assertiveness and negotiation
skills - Use of I messages
- Active listening skills
- Make specific requests of others
25Crisis Intervention Strategies From Cognitive
Therapy (con.t)
- Problem solving structured five step method for
clients who dont have to eliminate cognitive
distortions - Define the problem
- Brainstorm solutions
- Evaluating the alternatives
- Choosing and implementing an alternative
- Role play this for trial run.
- Evaluate the implemented option
26Solution Focused Strategies and Crisis
Intervention
- Focus on solutions and exceptions
- Identify and amplify clients strengths
- Builds positive feelings and hope
- What will be different for you when our
collaboration on resolving this crisis has been
successful? - Ask strengths-reinforcing coping questions
- How have you been able to manage this crisis so
far? - Explores exceptions to the client's feelings and
behaviors - Are there times when you think you can stand up
to this crisis? How so? - Ask miracle question
- If you were to wake up tomorrow and this crisis
has been resolved, what would be the first things
you would notice.? - Elicit solution-focused tasks
- Between now and the next time we meet, I would
like you to call at least one of the people we
have identified as your supports, on a daily
basis -
27Narrative Theory and Crisis Intervention
- Many crises that people experience may be
complicated by life narratives that exclude
possibilities for a successful resolution - Feeling hopeless, helpless, worthless, unlovable,
incompetent..etc. - Normalizing and strengthening
- Encourages client to describe how s/he
understands and approaches the crisis situation - Anyone who is given a cancer diagnosis finds it
difficult to be task-focused, initially - Affirms clients resources for dealing with
crisis - Consider all of the challenges you have met
through your life to date raising a family,
having a job, caring for your parents..and your
capability to do that is based on your own
strengths! - Reflecting (deconstructing)
- Helps client analyze assumptions about self and
world to uncover ideas that are represented by
the crisis ( Im not able to because I am
a.. ) - Helps client identify vales that underlie her/his
beliefs about crisis and social conditions that
contribute to clients assumptions about the self - Because you have had a mastectomy, you dont
believe that anyone could ever find you desirable
as a woman.
28Narrative Theory and Crisis Intervention(cont.)
- Enhancing changes (Reconstructing)
- Help client to give up stories that result from
rigid narratives - Being a desirable woman is more than wearing
lingerie and being sexually attractive. - Consider alternative stories about the past,
present and future - You can join that army of breast cancer
survivors who see themselves as strong, proud
and awesome women! - Celebrating and connecting
- Help client to make plans to sustain the new
narrative and new self after crisis resolution - You have so many opportunities to expand your
social network by getting involved with all the
breast cancer support and advocacy activities
within our community.. - You are more than your hair..
29TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION
- Share examples of crises that you or people you
know have experienced. - What was the nature of the crisis?
- How did the person (or group) respond, and what
factors seemed to influence the response? - Psychological stresses can be categorized as
involving harm, threats or challenges. - Identify examples of each of these stress
perceptions as they are seen in clinical
practice. - How does the way in which the situations are
perceived influence clients reactions? - Are client perceptions generally realistic in
this regard? - In this chapter crisis intervention strategies
are described from the perspective of six
clinical practice theories. - Consider the types of client presentations that
would be suited to each of these intervention
perspectives.
30ROLE PLAYS
- Each role play scenario has two parts. First, the
social worker and client are meeting for the
first time. Second, the social worker and client
have met twice already and are now engaging in
their final conversation (the client may be
terminating or referred to another provider for
ongoing assistance) - A 52-year-old working mother with a spouse and
two children (aged 25 and 20) learns that she has
pancreatic cancer and will probably not live
through another year. - A family of four (father, 46 mother, 45, and two
daughters, 16 and 11) has lost its home due to
hurricane damage. They must break up temporarily
to occupy other living quarters (the homes of a
friend and a relative, and a shelter). - An adolescent learns that his single father is
going to prison. He will be living with an aunt
in another city whom he knows but is not close
to. - After each role-play discuss the actions of the
social worker, their rationales, and their
apparent effectiveness.