Top Banner
Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008
46
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Vicarious traumatization

Dr. Patricia Sherman

June 19, 2008

Page 2: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

The capacity for compassion and empathy seems to be at the core of our ability to be

wounded by the workStamm, B,H, (1995). Secondary traumatic stress: Self-care issues for clinicians, researchers, and educators.

Page 3: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Introductions and what do you take home with you?

Page 4: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

CountertransferenceAdapted from Pearlman, L.A., & Saakvitne, K.W. (1995). Trauma and the therapist. NJ: W.W. Norton & Co.

• The affective, ideational, and physical responses a therapist has to the client, the client’s clinical material, transference, and reenactments.

• The conscious and unconscious defenses against the affects, intra-psychic conflicts, and associations aroused by the above.

Page 5: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Some signs of countertransference in trauma

workAdapted from Wilson, J. (2004). Empathy, trauma transmission, and countertransference in posttraumatic psychotherapy.

In J. Wilson & B. Drozdek (Eds.) Broken spirits. NY: Brunner-Routledge. P. 306

• Unreasonable dislike for client• Failure to identify with client• Non-responsiveness to emotional distress of

client• Overwhelmed by client’s problems• Excessive liking of client

Page 6: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Dread therapy session/uncomfortable during session

• Preoccupation with client outside office• Inattention, problems of concentration,

drowsiness, sleepiness during session• Preoccupation with own personal affairs• Coming late to session• Argumentative with client• Client appears in dreams

Page 7: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Vicarious traumatizationAdapted from Pearlman, L.A., & Saakvitne, K.W. (1995). Trauma and the therapist. NJ: W.W. Norton & Co.

• The transformation in the inner experience of the therapist that comes about as a result of empathic engagement with clients’ trauma material.

• It is the result of an accumulation of experiences across clients.

• It is permanently transformative, while countertransference is temporally and temporarily linked to a particular client.

Page 8: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Effects of Vicarious traumatization

• Frame of reference• Identity • World view• Spirituality • Self capacities• Ego resources

Page 9: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Psychological needs– Safety

– Trust

– Self esteem

– Intimacy

– Control

Page 10: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Sensory system– Imagery

– Bodily experiences

– Sensitivity to sounds, smells, and tastes

Page 11: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

aspects of the work

• Empathic engagement– Graphic trauma material– Intentional cruelty– Client resentment

• Context – Workload– Confidentiality– Management support

Page 12: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Nature of trauma treatment• Clientele – Current living situation– Adaptation• Suicidal preoccupation• Interpersonal style (BPD)

• Professional context• Social context

Page 13: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Aspects of the therapist

• Self– Identity– Worldview– Spirituality– Affect style– Ability to recognize and meet one’s needs

• Personal history

Page 14: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Current personal circumstances

• Current professional circumstances– Training and supervision– Professional identity– Control

Page 15: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Type of empathic connection

Cognitive Empathic

Time Frame

CognitivePast

EmpathicPast*

*Most stressful

CognitivePresent

Empathic Present

Page 16: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Hazards of practiceAdapted from Skovnit, T.M. (2001). The resilient practitioner

Page 17: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

The difficult nature of the work with clients, students, and

patients

• They have an unsolvable problem that must be solved

• They are not “Honors students”

Page 18: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• They have motivational conflicts

• There is often a readiness gap between them and us

• Sometimes they project negative feelings onto us

Page 19: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Sometimes we cannot help because we are not good enough

• They have needs greater than the social service, educational, or health system can meet

Page 20: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Managing major professional stressors

• Our inability to say “No” – The treadmill effect

• Living in an ocean of stress emotions

Page 21: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Ambiguous professional loss – ending before the ending

• The covert nature of the work

• Constant empathy, interpersonal sensitivity, and one-way caring

Page 22: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Elusive measures of success

• Normative failure

• Regulation oversight and control by external, often unknown others

Page 23: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Cognitive deprivation and boredom

• Cynical, negative colleagues and managers

Page 24: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Legal and ethical fears

• Practitioner emotional trauma

• Practitioner physical trauma

Page 25: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Videothe cost of empathy

Page 26: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Self tests

• ProQOL R IV

• Silencing Response

• Personal mission statement

Page 27: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

How to cope with vicarious traumatization

• Recognize and accept VT• Limit exposure• Attend to empathy• Name re-enactments• Set limits• Create balance

Page 28: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Maintain professional connections– Personal psychotherapy– Rest and play– Education– Support groups– Supervision and consultation– VT consultation

• Seek spiritual renewal• General self care

Page 29: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Overcoming vicarious traumatization

Page 30: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Videotransforming the pain

Page 31: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

How do you cope with stress?

Page 32: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Some stress reduction techniques

Page 33: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

progressive muscle relaxation

• Lie down or sit comfortably and close your eyes

• Tense the muscles of a particular body part• Hold the tension for about 10 seconds• Let go of the tension quickly, letting the

muscles go limp• Repeat • Go on to different muscle groups

Page 34: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Stretch• Massage – self; partner• Shake it out• Shower or bath• Breathing• Aromatherapy• Exercise• Hypnosis

Page 35: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Animal therapy• Gardening • Spiritual practices• Expressive therapies• Acupuncture/acupressure• Homeopathy• Self-help groups• Any other pleasurable activity

Page 36: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Imagery – guided exercise

Page 37: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Irrational beliefs - ellis• It is a dire necessity for adult humans to be

loved or approved by virtually every significant other person in their community.

• One absolutely must be competent, adequate and achieving in all important respects or else one is an inadequate, worthless person.

• People absolutely must act considerately and fairly and they are damnable villains ifthey do not. They are their bad acts.

Page 38: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• It is awful and terrible when things are not the way one would very much like them to

be.• Emotional disturbance is mainly externally

caused and people have little or no ability to increase or decrease their dysfunctional feelings and behaviors.

• If something is or may be dangerous or fearsome, then one should be constantly and excessively concerned about it and should keep dwelling on the possibility of it occurring.

Page 39: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• One cannot and must not face life's responsibilities and difficulties and it is easier to avoid them.

• One must be quite dependent on others and need them and one cannot mainly run one's own life.

• One's past history is an all-important determiner of one's present behavior andbecause something once strongly affectedone's life, it should indefinitely have a similar effect.

Page 40: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

• Other people's disturbances are horrible and one must feel upset about them.

• There is invariably a right, precise and perfect solution to human problems and it is awful if this perfect solution is not found.

Page 41: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Rebt – albert ellis

• A – activating event or potentially stressful situation

• B – beliefs, thoughts, or perceptions about A• C – emotional consequence that results from

holding these beliefs

• A potentially stressful situation + your perceptions = your stress level

Page 42: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

Plan of action• Stress diary

• Stress dots

• Stress reduction program

• Fifteen things to add to quality of life

• Ten habits of highly effective stress managers

Page 43: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

GOAL SETTING: WHAT DO I WANT AND WHY DO I WANT IT?

•WHEN THE WHY GETS STRONGER, THE HOW GETS EASIER

•GOALS NEED TO BE SPECIFIC,DOABLE, and MEASUREABLE

Page 44: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

SETTING PRIORITIES

• WORK• FAMILY• FRIENDS• COMMUNITY• SPIRITUAL/RELIGIOUS• RELAXATION• HEALTH

Page 45: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

GOAL SETTING

GOALREASON

Objective #1Objective #2Objective #3

Example:Improve health in order to

have more energy Exercise 30 minutes 4

times/week Lose 1.5 pounds/week

for a total of 25 pounds Eat 1800-2000

calories/day

Page 46: Vicarious traumatization Dr. Patricia Sherman June 19, 2008.

SUCCESS QUESTION

WHAT CAN I DO TODAY THAT WILL HELP ME TOWARDS MY GOAL?

What can I do for exercise today?What can I do today to enhance myrelationship with my partner?What can I do today to nurture myself?