Trauma in Organisations:

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Transcription:

Trauma in Organisations: The impact of trauma and development of effective post trauma responses Dr Noreen Tehrani Chair Crisis, Disaster & Trauma Section British Psychological Society www.noreentehrani.com

www.noreentehrani.com

Occupational Health Psychology Emergency Services Police Fire & Rescue Ambulance Other Organisations Social Work Education Accident/Incident Investigators Safeguarding (youth groups, church) Retail Financial Consultancy/Support Policy Development & Training Disaster Planning Disaster Management Dealing with everyday crisis/disasters Clinical Governance

Duty of Care Every employer shall ensure that his employees are provided with such health surveillance as is appropriate having regard to the risks to their health and safety which are identified by the assessment. Health and Safety at Work Act (1999)

Exposure to actual or threatened death, serious injury or sexual violence in one of the following ways: Criteria for Developing PTSD (DSM5) Direct experience Witness in person of events that happen to others Learning that a traumatic event has happened to a close family member or friend Experiencing repeated or extreme exposure to aversive details of the traumatic event e.g. first responders, police officers (and others) exposed to details of child abuse must be work related

Three Types of Organisational Trauma 1. Response Trauma Part of the job Random Unpredictable 2. Secondary Trauma/Compassion Fatigue Working with traumatised people Predictable Duty of care 3. Crisis and Disasters Unpredictable Overwhelming Need to maintain business as usual

Response Trauma

Response Trauma Interventions 1. Psycho-Education Symptoms and signs of trauma Resilience building tools 2. Supervisor Support Regular team time Daily wellbeing checks Situational risk assessments Team & personal stress assessments 3. Referrals Early interventions Debriefing/Psychological First Aid Psychological Screening, Assessments & Referral

Secondary Trauma

Comparisons between different groups Clinical Symptom On-line Child Abuse (n=557) Child Abuse (n=843) Family Liaison Officers (n=304) Humanitarians (n=238) Youth Safeguarding (n=217) General Public Anxiety 18% 28% 24% 36% 11% 3.5% Depression 24% 29% 28% 41% 15% 8-12% PTSD 8% 13% 7% 19% 5% 3% Burnout 19% 23% 22% 39% 16% NA Secondary Trauma 14% 21% 20% 38% 11% NA

Dealing with Secondary Trauma 1. Psychological Surveillance Role Risk Assessments Psychological screening Referrals Monitoring 2. Management Information Benchmarking Intervention evaluation Senior Management Presentations 3. Interventions Psychological Assessments Referrals for Trauma Therapy Short Term organisation Long Term - NHS

Crisis & Disaster Trauma

Preparing for Crises and Disasters in Organisations 1. Risk Assessments Exploring the potential risks Examine the operational and employee implications Define the seriousness and probability of risks and response required 2. Responding Identify ways to eliminate, mitigate or reduce the risk Implement any changes to systems, processes, relationships, support Define disaster management team 3. Recovering Plan for immediate aftermath First month Next six months/year 4. Learning Monitor and review Evaluate actions and interventions Review risk assessments

How does trauma affect Organisations?

Parallel Organisations are living, growing, changing system with their own unique dynamics Like individuals they are susceptible to stress, strain and trauma Complex interactions occur between the public, clients, employees & the organisation which can lead to the use of abusive power www.noreentehrani.com Process

Symptoms of a Traumatised Organisation Avoidance Elephant in the room syndrome Involvement in displacement activities Hyperarousal Hyperactivity Over reaction to information or data Re-experience Tendency to repeat the same ineffective behaviours/mistakes Reacts emotionally to traumatic triggers Dissociation Lack of awareness of reality (operational numbing) Responding to people/events without feelings or empathy

Trauma, Chaos and Complexity Traumatic events are: Unexpected Shocking Unpredictable Frightening Challenging Disrupting Trauma creates chaos and complexity

Agreement Stability/Complexity/Chaos LOW Chaos Complexity Preference Stability Good Luck HIGH Predictability/Certainty 18 LOW

Living with Chaos and Complexity (Olson and Eoyang, 2001) Many variables involved in determining outcomes Outcomes emerge through the participation of many people Individual and systems behaviour is unpredictable and unknowable Relationships are empowering Each trauma is unique Leaders need to become facilitators and supporters

Understanding organisational vulnerability History Success v Failure Purpose Clear v Uncertain Structure Formal v Informal Responsiveness Active v Passive Communications Open v Closed Risk taking High v Low Relationships Warm or Distant Leadership Control v Support

Individual pain is played out Teams begin to engage in destructive behaviours Energy is used up in maintaining destructive cycles of behaviour Conflict becomes commonplace Litigation increases Organisational purpose is lost

Essentials for Resilient Organisations (Sandra Bloom 2013) Provides an environment which is physically, psychologically, socially and morally safe Accept the expression of feelings without becoming defensive or destructive. Recognises organisational pain and loss and is prepared to learn and change Has vision and looks to the challenges of the future with enthusiasm Is safe and secure Emotionally intelligent Accepts loss & change Future focus 22

Organisational Calming Through normal problem solving, decision making and conflict resolution methods that must exist for any organisation to function effectively The more complex the work demands, the greater the necessity for collaboration and integration and therefore the more likely that a system of teamwork will evolve For a team to function properly there must be a certain level of trust among the team members who must all share in the establishment of satisfactory group norms 23

Becoming a resilient organisation (Bloom, 2013) Increased emotional intelligence Balancing rational and intuitive problem solving Use of open communicate Democracy and involvement Commitment to non-violence Learning from success and failures