Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Critical Incidents: From Response to Action
- Background
- Critical incident
support has
been part of
educational
psychologists'
roles since early
1990s (Posada,
2006)
- Typical pattern of response to trauma
(from Queensland Department of
Education, 1998)
- 1: Pre-trauma stability. 2:
Traumatic incident. 3: Shock. 4:
Denial. 5: Emotional impact. 6:
Working through. 7: Acceptance. 8:
Normal reactions. 9: post-trauma
stability.
- Typical needs of those
affected by critical incidents
(Parkinson, 1997):
acknowledgement and
recognition; information;
opoprtunity to talk; formal
and informal rituals;
routines and normality;
return and reintegration.
- Levels of support (Hindmarch, 2002):
Level 1 = Someone there (first hours).
Level 2 = A listening ear (First days).
Level 3 = Structured group support (first
weeks). Level 4 = Specialist support and
counselling (first months).
- Aims of critical incident support
(Warrington Borough Council, 2007)
- To help those affected to understand
the impact of trauma on themselves
and others
- To plan for people's
reactions and needs of
individuals and groups.
- To coordinate and manage the
organisation and community
response.
- Why have crisis support available for schools? (McCaffrey, 2004)
- Still valid and needed
- Debriefing = useful aid to
cognitive restructuring and
normalisation
- Group work and coaching can
lead to self-help and dispel
misunderstandings
- Work on responding and planning is
highly valued by schools and others
affected
- Evidence-based interventions for individuals
- NICE (2005): guidance suggests the importance of
psychological first aid, watchful waiting, trauma-focused
CBT, and eye movement desensitisation/reprocessing.
- Michenbaum (1994): Trauma-focused CBT to help confront
traumatic memories, modify misinterpretations of threat,
and develop skills to cope with stress. Aims to help a
person restructure their core beliefs, thoughts, and ideas
schemas by...
- Stage 1: Establishing a rapport,
encouraging person to tell story and
express feelings
- Stage 2: Help the person make sense of the story.
New coping skills linked to re-experiencing,
avoidance, arousal, and negative
cognitions/mood.
- Stage 3: Cognitive restructuring to help the person
obtain control, rebuild, and replace shattered
beliefs.
- Stage 4: Re-establish relationships and confidence.
- Stage 5: Develop strategies to prevent relapse.
- Eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing = person recalls an important aspect of a traumatic
event whilst following the repetitive side to side movements, sounds, or taps as the traumatic image is
focused on.
- Evidence base for children and young people
- Intervention of choice is currently trauma-focused CBT for
individual children of 10-11 years and upwards (Wolpert et
al, 2006)
- Little conclusive evidence to support the efficacy of
EMDR and other interventions with children and
young people
- A need for better evidence
base and audit for all
interventions (NICE, 2005
PTSD guidance)
- Types of short-term post-incident support (Parkinson, 1997)
- Demobilisation
- Defusing
- Debriefing
- Based on the models of Critical
Incident Stress Debriefing (Mitchell,
1983) and psychological debriefing
(Dyregrov, 1987)
- A structured group process that seeks to reduce the
impact of PTS and enhance coping mechanisms in
which a group share experiences, thoughts, and feelings
about an incident
- Usually takes 2-3 hours (depends on size of group)
- Aims to... (Mitchell &
Everly, 1996; Dyregrov,
1998)
- Create a shared narrative
- Help integrate cognitive and emotional memory
- Connect past, present, and future
- Provide psychoeducation
- Support normalisation
- Ventilation of
impressions,
reactions, feelings
- Promotion of clear
understanding of
precipitating events
and subsequent
reactions
- Decrease in individual and
group tension and sense
abnormality
- Mobilisation of coping resources
- Preparation for future
symptoms and identification of
avenues for further assistance
- Considerations
for 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
- Potential for secondary
traumatisation/retraumatisation
- Importance of psychological first aid linked to debriefing
- Outcomes of CISD
(Stallard and Law,
1993)
- Reducing intrusive thoughts
- Validating a person's experience of trauma
- Allowing reinterpretation of their attribution
- Providing a forum in
which emotions can be
discharged
- Evidence base for CISD
- Adult studies
- No evidence that it was effective in preventing PTSD in individuals
- Some evidence of its perceived helpfulness and satisfaction of those involved (van Emmerick et al, 2012)
- Evidence for CISD and similar
interventions is inconclusive
(NICE, 2005; Bisson et al,
Cochrane Collaboration (2004)
- Arguments in support of CISD
- Other purposes than preventing PTSD
- Providing psychological first aid, part of a planned response (Mitchall & Everly,
1996), involving the reduction of distress, providing psychoeducation (Dyregrov,
2003)
- It seeks to focus on: psychological responses; PTS, not PTSD; normalising rather than pathologising people's reactions (Parkinson, 1997)
- Research with bereaved and traumatised groups is notoriously difficult and has many ethical challenges
- Real world applied research faces difficulties in establishing
controlled quasi-experimental conditions (Dyregrov, 2003)
- BUT...
- CISD needs to be part of
a group and overall
management response
and package of care
(NICE, 2005)
- Careful consideration of each
element of debriefing is required
(Dyregrov, 2003)
- Its purpose
- Timing and duration
- Group membership
- Training of facilitators
- Follow up
- Important considerations
- Needs to be part of, not the whole,
an overall crisis
intervention/plan
- Not given too early
- Requires follow up
- Assessment of group and individuals
- Trained personnel
- Focus on cognitive
and psychoeducation
- Correct duration
- Impact of traumatic incidents on organisations
- Incidents can directly/indirectly affect a school/organisation
- On-site, offsite, multi-site...
- Generate media
interest,
overzealous helping,
callers, visitors....
- Reaction in parents and staff
- Plans and responses need to be flexible and "wise before the event" (Yule & Gold, 1989)
- Brings out the best and worst in people
- Magnification of difficulties
- Strengthens existing (stable) relationships
- Closing in of ranks, creating in-group vs. out-group
- Competing pressure to stop or to carry on as normal
- Shared experience creates opportunity for people to both
give and seek support (Hindmarch, 2002)
- Managing an incident in schools
- Develop a plan
for handling
people's
feelings/reactions
- Prepare a media statement
- Prepare further information for
parents, pupils, and staff
- Consider and arrange
appropriate support for
the staff, parents, and
pupils involved
- Involve critical incident response team (including EPs)
- EPs role
- Immediate aftermath:
coordinating/facilitating
psychological support
and psychological first
aid
- Short term: working to support
normalisation and
psychoeducation
- Short-to-medium term: identify and support
those individuals who need further support
- Medium-to-long term: referring/offering interventions to individuals and
support school planning, training, follow-up
- Community level
- Coordination/training/planning/working
with: LA emergency planning officers,
HPA, public relations officers, children
social care services, emergency services
- Example: Pousada (2006)
- Components of critical
incident stress
management
- Pre-incident education
and mental preparedness
- On scene crisis intervention support
- Demobilisation, defusing, CISD
- Support for families/children
- Follow-up and link to
appropriate services