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NUTS AND BOLTS OF TRAUMA RESPONSE. Lenore B. Behar, PhD, Director Child & Family Program Strategies Durham, North Carolina. Bibliography. Go to: www.lenorebehar.com See: Presentations
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NUTS AND BOLTS OF TRAUMA RESPONSE Lenore B. Behar, PhD, Director Child & Family Program Strategies Durham, North Carolina
Bibliography Go to: www.lenorebehar.com See: Presentations Community Based Interventions In Two Parts: Systems of Care and Approaches to Recovery from Psychological Trauma or E-Mail: lbehar@nc.rr.com
Learning Objectives • Gain understanding of how to develop and use trauma response teams • Gain understanding of group interventions to reduce the impact of trauma • Gain understanding of when to refer adolescents to professional treatment following exposure to trauma
Types of Trauma • Significant losses • Domestic violence • Community and school violence • Complex trauma (multiple trauma) • Medical trauma • Refugee and war zone trauma • Natural disasters • Terrorism National Child Traumatic Stress Network, 2006
What Do We Use as Evidence? • Scientific literature • Data/Experience from the field: • Reports from key informants • Expert consultation • Needs assessment data
What Can an Evidence Informed Approach Tell Us? • Who will need help • Critical issues • When to intervene • What to do and what not to do • What we might expect from interventions • Important clues on group differences
What to Do when Evidence-Based Practices Have Not Been Established Use an “Evidence Informed Approach”
What Does the Evidence Indicate? • Proximity to disaster affects the psychological impact • Previous exposure to trauma affects the impact • Cultural groups respond differently • Impairments affect how people respond • Perception is reality • Most people recover without problems
How Do Children/Youth Respond to Trauma? • They worry about their own safety • They may become re-traumatized through overexposure to media • Trauma seems ubiquitous and not isolated
Children React Differently • Reaction depends on developmental level—the capacity to understand • Reaction depends on family functioning and other support systems • Reaction depends on resiliency • Reaction depends on physical or psychological proximity to the traumatic event • Reaction depends on culture
Other Ways to Describe Responses • Reactions unfold over time • May follow a process of shock, sadness, anger, acceptance, then adjustment • The unmoved or detached child may be concerning but is sometimes normal • Prolonged behavior may signal need to intervention
Responses to Trauma • Related to amount of destruction or amount of loss • Related to perceived support • Related to resiliency • Nightmares and sleep disorders common • Persistent thoughts or triggers shape behavior Macy, 2006
Human Stress Response Continuum • Overwhelming stress • Traumatic stress • Persistent stress • PTSD Macy, 2006
Shock Numbness Crying Sadness Anger Feeling guilty Keep concerns inside Increased clinging Deny or avoid feelings Repeated crying Depression or suicidal thoughts Persistent anger Persistent unhappiness Social withdrawal Decreased school performance Feldman-Winter & Christie, 2004 Range of Responses Normal Signs of Problems
Disaster Trauma:Affected PopulationsEvans, 2003 Victims, eyewitnesses
Disaster Trauma:Affected PopulationsEvans, 2003 Victims, eyewitnesses Victims’ families & close friends
Disaster Trauma:Affected PopulationsEvans, 2003 Victims, eyewitnesses Victims’ families & close friends Emergency responders
Disaster Trauma:Affected PopulationsEvans, 2003 Victims, eyewitnesses Victims’ families & close friends Emergency responders Vulnerable people, teachers, neighbors
Disaster Trauma:Affected PopulationsEvans, 2003 Victims, eyewitnesses Other children & parents Victims’ families & close friends Emergency responders Vulnerable people
Disaster Trauma:Affected PopulationsEvans, 2003 Victims, eyewitnesses Other children & parents Victims’ families & close friends Emergency responders Vulnerable people Entire population
The seriousness of the response is related to durability/longevity primarily, and somewhat to intensity80% recover—no PTSD
Disaster Stages Before Preparedness During Acute/ Intermediate After Recovery
Other Players in Crisis Response Public Safety Public Health Behavioral Health
Forming a Trauma Response Team Members of “The Team” • Mental health providers • School counselors and teachers • Community leaders • Police • Faith-based leaders • Community-based workers • Pediatricians/health providers
Implications • Need outreach and direct care • Build community capacity • Rely on existing resources • Utilize a phased approach • Build in diverse strategies • Form new collaborations and partnerships
Operational Assumptions • No new resources for ongoing development and maintenance • Address surge capacity • Connect to local and regional emergency response systems • Community needs assessment • Population based
Results • Intensive training of trauma response team members • Identification of key members in communities • Identification of local resources for referral • Linkages to hospitals/emergency medical services • Linkages to public safety/public health response networks
COMMUNITY STRESS PREVENTION CENTER NEIGHBOURHOOD COMBINED TEAM • SOCIAL / COMMUNITY WORKERS (TEAM LEADER) • NURSE AND OR MEDICAL DOCTOR • PSYCHOLOGIST (PSYCHIATRIST-ON DEMAND) • SCHOOL’S EMERGENCY INTERVENTION TEAM • COMMUNITY / TRANSLATOR / VOLUNTEER • LOGISTICS REPS. • ARTS INSTRUCTOR
COMMUNITY STRESS PREVENTION CENTER GEOGRAPHICAL PROXIMITY POPULATION AT RISK PSYCHOSOCIAL PROXIMITY CIRCLES OF VULNERABILITY MAPPING BY THREE DIMENSIONS
COMMUNITY STRESS PREVENTIONCENTER CIRCLES OF VULNERABILITY PRINCIPAL WHO IS GOING TO HELP? TEACHERS INSPECTOR CLASSMATES FRIENDS ALL THE STAFF PARENTS PEOPLE IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD INJURED CHILDREN, FAMILY WITNESSES OTHER CLASSES OTHER SCHOOLS
COMMUNITY STRESS PREVENTION CENTER CIRCLES OF VULNERABILITY CIRCLES OF SUPPORT PRINCIPAL PRINCIPAL INSPECTOR TEACHERS INSPECTOR CLASSMATES TEACHER PSYCHOLOGIST FRIENDS FRIENDS ALL THE STAFF PARENTS THE WHOL NEIGHBOURHOOD INJURED CHILDREN, SOCIAL WORKER COLLEAGUES FAMILY FAMILY NEIGHBOURS WITNESSES OTHER CLASSES COMMUNITY MEMBERS OTHER SCHOOLS
COMMUNITY STRESS PREVENTION CENTER SECONDARY PREVENTION HELPING WITH INFORMATION & LOCATING RELATIVES. OUTREACH & SUPPORT TO PEOPLE IN NEED. ACTIVATING EDUCATIONAL AND COMMUNITY-BASED PLANS. PSYCHOLOGICAL FIRST AID - CIPR INTERVENTION vs TREATMENT.
COMMUNITY STRESS PREVENTION CENTER TERTIARY PREVENTION TRACING, FOLLOW UP & ADMINISTRATING PSYCHOLOGICAL REHABILITATION INTERVENTIONS. ENCOURAGING & PROMOTING GETTING BACK TO ROUTINE. COORDINATING THE GRADUAL ASSIMILATION OF EMOTIONALLY & PHYSICALLY INJURED PEOPLE IN THEIR NATURAL ENVIRONMENT. PREPARING FOR THE FUTURE.
Thank you THE COMMUNITY STRESS PREVENTION CENTER For further information please contact cspc@telhai.ac.il www.icspc.org
Another Model of Crisis Management Crisis intervention (caring for people during the crisis) Short term relief in order to prevent collapsing of persons or systems Crisis prevention (caring for people before the crisis) Caring for people after the crisis (support & long-term healing) Long term planning of prevention; optimizing crisis management Support short- to long-term copings, preventing secondary symptoms Englbrecht & Storath, 2005
Basics of Work • Model of crisis management • Psychological first aid • Circles of vulnerability and support • Basic elements of crisis intervention • Focus on resiliency: BASIC - PH • Neurophysiological approach • Systemic approach
Psychological First Aid Goal: To increase coping skills and restore functioning • Establish safety • Provide comfort • Work toward stabilization • Provide clarifying information • Identify support systems
Psychological First Aid Is Not • Psychotherapy • Research • An emergency response • A long-term intervention • A “stand-alone” intervention • A chance to identify future clients
Normal AssumptionsWhen Threat is Minimal • I am in control • I am safe • I am worthy • The world is meaningful • It can’t happen to me
Traumatic Stress Response & Shattered Assumptions • I am not in control • I am not safe • I am not worthy • The world is not meaningful • It can happen to me or those I love
The Human Stress Response ContinuumMagnitude of Impact I • Single event • Repeated events • Amount of stress in your life • Prior trauma history • Prior exposure(s) to critical incidents Macy, 2006
The Human Stress Response ContinuumMagnitude of Impact II • Nature of event • Involvement, degree of control, threat loss • Degree of warning • Ego strength/coping style/resiliency • Prior mastery of experience (challenges) • Proximity variables: time & distance • Nature & degree of social support/resource Macy, 2006
Traumatic Stress ResponseTime Lines: 0 - 72 Hours • Fight & flight & appraisal systems • Freeze systems • The “crying curve” • Temporary cognitive distortions • Temporary performance interruptions Macy, 2006
Traumatic Stress ResponseTime Lines: 72 Hrs – 3 Weeks • Disruption of self regulatory capacity • Neurobiology of attachment disruption • Memory interruption • Distorted perceptions • Recognized shattered assumptions • Approach & withdrawal cycle • Incident identity
Traumatic Stress ResponseTime Lines: 3 Weeks – 12 Weeks • Memory distortion • Amnesia or memory intrusions • Longer lasting dissociation • Cognitive impairment, perseveration • Blunted/numbered emotions • Flashback/nightmares • Performance decline • Chronic sleep disturbance
Types of Interventions Provided in school, in shelters, community settings • Orientation groups • Stabilization groups • Coping groups • Individual stabilization and referral