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Why is attention to 1st responders' well-being important in Disaster-Preparedness and Response?. First responders are oftentimes at-risk for burnout and compassion fatigue before they even deployFieldwork contexts are ready-made stages for burnout and compassion fatigue to evolvePreparing beforehand can buttress breaking down processesHealing and Resiliency are multi-systemic.
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1. Healers’ Healing and Resiliency in the Aftermath of Disaster:Harnessing Our Resources across Individual, Family, and Social Systems Tai J. Mendenhall, Ph.D., LMFT, CTR
University of Minnesota Medical School
Family Medicine and Community Health
2. Why is attention to 1st responders’ well-being important in Disaster-Preparedness and Response? First responders are oftentimes at-risk for burnout and compassion fatigue before they even deploy
Fieldwork contexts are ready-made stages for burnout and compassion fatigue to evolve
Preparing beforehand can buttress breaking down processes
Healing and Resiliency are multi-systemic
3. Why are 1st responders at Risk? Common characteristics of Responders
Do not tend to practice what they preach
Reluctant/resistant to seeking help
Under-report symptoms of hurting (broadly defined)
High capacities for empathy are highly correlated with compassion fatigue
Lives are already over-scheduled with self-imposed pressures
Selves (and oftentimes family) are lower-priorities vis-ŕ-vis work
4. Why are 1st responders at Risk? Common characteristics of Responding
Unpredictable deployments
Long-hours
Few creature-comforts
Unsafe (often) work and living conditions
Institutional / Turf / Political battles
Fieldwork vs. Day-job vs. Family obligations
Physically-exhausting
Emotionally-exhausting
5. When Healers Hurt Physical
Psychological
Institutional
Social
6. Compassion Fatigue Common themes relate to breaking-down processes in which our physical, psychological, social, even spiritual resources are depleted
Signs/Symptoms are extant across multiple systems levels
Higher risk for ethical violations
7. Compassion Fatigue Physical Symptoms
Exhaustion / Fatigue
Insomnia
Headaches
GI distress
Alcohol / Drug abuse
Loss of Appetite
8. Compassion Fatigue
Psychological Symptoms
Irritability / Outbursts
Spontaneous crying
Poor concentration
Depression / Anxiety / Panic
Capacity for empathy isolates to fieldwork (i.e., deteriorates with family, friends)
Overall capacity for empathy declines (? apathy)
9. Compassion Fatigue Institutional Symptoms
Poor work performance
Irritability with co-workers
Social Systems
Increase in family conflict or distance
Social isolation
10. What do we do to Prevent or Repair Compassion Fatigue? Attention across multiple systems levels is essential
Physical
Psychological
Institutional
Social
11. Preparing / PreventingCompassion Fatigue Physical
Be assertive about self-care
Taking breaks by self and with others
Eating and drinking (water, juice, etc.)
Exercise
Creature comforts
Healthy strategies for sleep
12. Preparing / Preventing Psychological
Recognize and honor your own humanness
Recognize and honor normalcy of your own reactions to stress, traumatic stories, and disaster contexts
Do not minimize or catastrophize your symptoms
Do not play therapist or provider in your own personal relationships
If you need help, seek it
13. Preparing / Preventing Institutional
Discuss what to expect beforehand
Encourage responders to talk about their feelings
Daily defusings/group-processing sequences
Deployments are generally = 2 weeks
14. Preparing / Preventing Institutional (con’t)
Sequential teams sent to a single location overlap by a couple of days to effectively and smoothly transition one team to another
While in the field, team members work for only 3-5 consecutive days – followed by 1-2 days of rest
15. Preparing / Preventing Social
Establish support(ive) systems
Be social with partners / family
Be social with friends / colleagues
Professional and lay organizations
16. Recovering from Compassion Fatigue: Healer’s Healing Physical
Exercise (e.g., casual, intense)
Relaxation (e.g., hot baths, stretching, massage)
Meditation (e.g., music, art, special places/activities)
Sleep (e.g., follow the sleep hygiene strategies that you tell your patients to do)
Diet (e.g., decrease junk food, alcohol)
17. Healer’s Healing Psychological
Self-time (e.g., have it – literally – on your “to do” list)
Pursue interests outside of profession
Again, if you need help – seek it
18. Healer’s Healing Social
Couple-time with spouse/partner
Family-time
Seek out positive people
Avoid negative people
Support(ive) groups
19. Closing Thoughts Be intentional about your own health and well-being in the context(s) of attending to others’
Remember the Starfish-Story
20. Resources Compassion Fatigue Self Tests
http://www.traumatologyacademy.org/Training/2004/Blackmountain/CFTWorkbook_v2.pdf
http://aafp.org/fpm/20000400/39over.html
Further Readings
Rothschild, B., & Rand, M. (2006). Help for the helper: The psychophysiology of compassion fatigue and vicarious trauma. NY: Norton & Co.
Skovholt, T. (2000). The resilient practitioner: Burnout prevention and self-care strategies for counselors, therapists, teachers, and health professionals. NY: Allan & Bacon.
21. Contact Information Tai J. Mendenhall, Ph.D., LMFT, CTR
University of Minnesota Medical School
Dept of Family Medicine & Community Health
717 Delaware St., Suite 422
Minneapolis, MN 55455
Office: 612-624-3138
Email: mend0009@umn.edu