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Compassion Fatigue: What

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Compassion Fatigue: What s New? What Works? Fran oise Mathieu, M.Ed., CCC. Certified Canadian Counsellor & Compassion Fatigue Specialist www.compassionfatigue.ca – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Compassion Fatigue: What


1
Compassion Fatigue Whats New? What Works?
  • Françoise Mathieu, M.Ed., CCC.
  • Certified Canadian Counsellor Compassion
    Fatigue Specialist

www.compassionfatigue.ca
2
  • Background Robin Cameron

3
www.compassionfatigue.ca
4
My amazing team
Diana Tikasz, MSW RSW Hamilton
Rebecca Brown, MSW RSW London
Lori Tomalty-Nusca, ECE Burlington
Meaghan Welfare, BA Kingston
5
Ten Years On
  • Walking the Walk CF workshop has been offered to
    thousands of Canadians across the country
  • Nurses, social workers, MH counsellors, PSWs,
    teachers, physicians, allied health
    professionals, victim service workers, court
    reporters, lawyers, judges, ministers, chaplains,
    police officers, paramedics, prison staff,
    alzheimers societies, palliative care
  • Approx 300 CF Educators trained through Train
    the Trainer program
  • Various organizations implementing CF education
    as part of their staff wellness plan (Peel
    Region, York Region, Bruyere Continuing Care,
    Yukon and NWT Victim Services, to name a few).
  • Now more attention being given to
    organizational health and how agencies can help
    reduce/prevent CF-VT

6
The Current Reality
  • Deeply compromised system
  • Ongoing challenges and cutbacks
  • Difficult stories
  • Increasingly complex cases (even in schools, end
    of life care)
  • Big org health assessment interviewed all
    staff individually. What came out? Who coped well
    and who didnt?
  • Those who struggled the most were those who did
    not have an external practice of some kind to
    manage their stress, people who were angry and
    resentful and held on to it.

7
The Compassion Fatigue Workbook Published by
Routledge - December 2011
8
  • The expectation that we can be immersed in
    suffering and loss daily and not be touched by it
    is as unrealistic as expecting to be able to walk
    through water without getting wet.
  • Remen, 1996

9
Definitions
  • Compassion Fatigue
  • Vicarious Trauma
  • Moral Distress
  • Burnout
  • Chronic stress

10
Compassion Fatigue
  • A profound and gradual emotional and physical
    exhaustion that helping professionals and
    caregivers can develop over the course of their
    career.
  • An erosion of all the things that keep us
    connected to others in our caregiver role our
    empathy, our hope, our ability to tolerate strong
    emotions/difficult stories in others, and of
    course our compassion - not only for others but
    also for ourselves.
  • Changes in our personal and professional lives
    we become dispirited and increasingly bitter at
    work, contribute to a toxic work environment,
    more prone to clinical errors, violate client
    boundaries, lose a respectful stance towards our
    clients. short-tempered with our loved ones and
    feel constant guilt or resentment at the never
    ending demands on our personal time.
  • Can also happen to caregivers (caregiver
    fatigue)

11
Vicarious Trauma An Occupational Hazard
12
Laura Van Dernoot Lipsky
13
Vicarious Trauma
  • Repeated exposure to difficult stories changes
    our view of the world.
  • Can cause nightmares, difficulty getting rid of
    certain images, an intense preoccupation with a
    particular story or event weve been exposed to.
  • When external trauma becomes internal reality
  • Lipsky 2009 Impacts the entire nervous system
  • Can happen through work (stories we are told or
    stories we read) and through media exposure.
  • Accumulates over time across clients.
  • Both CF and VT are occupational Hazards

14
  • What happens to the stories you hear at work?
  • What are your particular vulnerabilities?
  • How do you protect yourself while doing this very
    challenging work?
  • Were you trained for this?

15
Primary vs Secondary Trauma
  • Secondary Trauma Trauma reactions that
    involve others trauma imagery or trauma stories
    characterized by panic, horror or helplessness
    in relation to the event (Tikasz)
  • Primary Trauma
  • As a consequence of the work e.g. EMS car
  • accidents, fatalities involving children
  • From our personal lives, our own past
  • Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

16
(No Transcript)
17
Moral Distress
  • happens when there are inconsistencies
    between a helpers beliefs and his or her
    actions in practice (Baylis 2000)
  • when policies or routines conflict with
    beliefs about patient care
  • (Mitchell 2000)

18
Burnout
  • Physical emotional exhaustion as a result of
    prolonged stress and frustration
  • Depleted ability to cope with work demands
  • Sense of powerlessness to achieve goals
  • Does not necessarily alter our view of the world,
    but our view of the workplace
  • Can happen in any occupation

19
Occupational Hazards
  • We dont get CF/VT because we screwed up, we get
    it because we care
  • Vicarious Trauma is a natural consequence of
    trauma exposure

20
Primary Trauma
Compassion Fatigue
Vicarious Secondary Trauma
Burnout
21
A workbook on Vicarious Traumatization
22
(No Transcript)
23
  • Beth Stamm (1995)

24
Current ResearchTerminology - A need for more
clarity
  •  Beth Stamm "The controversy regarding secondary
    trauma is not its existence but what it should be
    called.
  • Nadine Najjar et al 2009 review of all the
    research to date on compassion fatigue in
    cancer-care providers
  • Conclusion there still exists "an ambiguous
    definition of compassion fatigue that fails to
    adequately differentiate it from related
    constructs (e.g. burnout, secondary traumatic
    stress)."
  • We are working on getting a set of working
    definitions we all agree on, but we're not there
    yet.
  • Stamm (1995)
  • Najjar, Nadine et al (2009) Journal of Health
    Psychology, Vol 14(2) 267-277.

25
Some recent data
  • Depending on the studies, 40-85 of health care
    professionals were found to have CF and/or high
    rates of STS
  • 57 of SW have been threatened, 16 physically
    assaulted
  • 40 of nurses physically assaulted
  • 52 military chaplains at medium to high risk
    for anxiety and depressive disorders - this is
    twice as high as the norm for CF members and
    higher than general population

26
Some recent data
  • 2009 AMA study of junior doctors
  • 54 met the criteria for CF
  • 69 met the criteria for burnout
  • 71 had lower than average levels of job
    satisfaction
  • Markwell Wainer, Doctors Health, MJA Vol 191,
    No 8, 19 Oct 2009

27
Data cont
  • 2005 survey of the health of nurses (Canada)
  • 8/10 nurses had accessed their EAP which is over
    twice as high as the EAP use by the total
    employed population
  • DV lawyers significantly higher levels of STS
    and burnout compared to other mental health
    providers
  • 2011 study of US surgeons had thought about
    suicide 1.5-3 times more than the general
    population. Only 26 of them had sought
    psychological help for their SI.
  • US immigration judges higher levels of burnout
    than hospital physicians and prison wardens
  • 59 of MH professionals are willing to seek help
    vs 15 of law enforcement professionals

28
Green Cross Standards of Self Care Guidelines
  • First, do no harm to yourself in the line of duty
    when helping/treating others
  • Second, attend to your physical, social,
    emotional and spiritual needs as a way of
    ensuring high quality services for those who look
    to you for support as a human being

29
What Works?7 steps individuals (and
organizations) can take to reduce CF/VT
30
What Works?
  • 1) SOCIAL SUPPORT IN THE WORKPLACE
  • "the most significant factor associated with
    compassion satisfaction (Killian 2008 study of
    trauma counsellors)
  • 2) TRAINING ON SELF CARE AND SELF AWARENESS
  • "... most of the therapists interviewed
    observed that they had not had any courses or
    specific training on professional self-care, and
    this was an important but neglected area in
    training. Killian 2008
  • Killian recommends that self awareness and self
    care become integral parts of the curriculum for
    all helping professionals.

Killian, K.D. Helping Till it Hurts? A
Multimethod Study of Compassion Fatigue, Burnout,
and Self-Care in Clinicians Working With Trauma
Survivors in Traumatology, Vol 14, No 2, June
2008.
31
Step Two Self Awareness
Psychoneuroimmunology Dr Gabor Maté
32
  • Step Two Self Awareness cont
  • Long term effects of chronic stress
  • Our immune system does not exist in isolation
    from daily experience. (Maté, 2003, p.6)

33
Step Two Self Awareness cont
  • Chronic stress chronically high cortisol levels
    destroy tissue. Chronically elevated adrenalin
    levels raise the blood pressure and damage the
    heart. (Maté, 2003 p.35)
  • See p 35 for alzheimers disease eg.

34
Step Two Self Awareness cont
The Gut Feeling
  • we have lost touch with the gut feelings
    designed to be our warning system. We keep
    ourselves in physiologically stressful
    situations, with only a dim awareness of distress
    or no awareness at all.
  • Maté, 2003 p36

35
Self Awareness a Key Strategy for CF/VT
  • Being aware of our current feelings, actions and
    reactions
  • Gaining an understanding and an awareness of how
    we deal with anger, hurt and resentment
  • Being aware of the dynamics from our past that
    influence the every day choices we make Why did
    you choose to go into this field and not another?
    Did you pick this profession because of a trauma
    or loss you experienced in your own life? Were
    you already a helper in your family of origin?
    Are you the go-to person in your personal life?
    Do you feel empty or unimportant unless you are
    in a helping role?
  • Understanding how your own childhood history
    affects your reactions to your clients stories
    (countertransference) 
  • Being in tune with your stress signals Do you
    have a good sense of how your body communicates
    to you when it is overwhelmed? Do you get sick as
    soon as you go on vacation, develop hives, get a
    migraine when you are stressed? Many of us live
    in state of permanent overload and are dimly
    aware of it. What happens when you feel angry? Do
    you explode or do you swallow your rage? Where in
    your body do you feel your anger?
  •  Are you aware of the ways in which you sabotage
    your self care? (by saying yes to requests you
    dont have time for, by taking on more
    responsibilities, by drinking excessively, by
    cancelling a therapy appointment) 

36
Jon Kabat Zinn Mindfulness Stress Reduction
Step Two Self Awareness cont
  • Stress Reduction in 6 parts Video on Youtube

37
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction
  • Article on website www.compassionfatigue.ca
  • Book Full Catastrophe Living by John Kabat-Zinn

38
Mindfulness Stress Reduction
Research on the effectiveness of MBSR is highly
conclusive over 25 year of studies clearly
demonstrate that MBSR is helpful in reducing
emotional distress and managing severe physical
pain. MBSR has been used successfully with
patients suffering from chronic pain, depression,
sleep disorders, cancer-related pain and high
blood pressure. (Cohen-Katz et al, 2005) Based
at Toronto's CAMH, Zindel Segal has developed a
mindfulness-based cognitive therapy program for
treating depression that has shown to be highly
effective MBSR and Compassion Fatigue
www.compassionfatigue.ca
39
3) Rebalancing Caseload Workload Reduction"To
combat compassion fatigue and burnout, agency
administrators and therapists may also wish to
ask themselves "How many cases are too many?
Killian, 2008
What works? Cont
40
What works? Cont
4) Limiting Trauma Inputs Limiting media
exposure/traumatic stories
Low Impact Debriefing aka sliming see my
website for an article describing this process
www.compassionfatigue.ca resources
41
Step Four cont - Limiting Trauma Inputs
Low Impact Debriefing
  • Increased Self Awareness
  • Fair Warning
  • 3) Consent
  • 4) Low Impact Disclosure

42
5) Improved Work/Life Balance
What works? Cont
  • 2009 Duxbury report on role overload in health
    care
  • 3/5 health care workers suffering from role
    overload
  • 36 report high levels of depressed mood
  • 1 in 4 employee was planning on leaving their job
    at the hospital - not for higher pay, but for
    greater control over work hours and more
    respect

43
Take Time for Your LifeCheryl Richardson
Step Five Cont
  • The best Work-Life balance resource available

44
RelationshipsEnvironment (clutter etc)Body,
mind and spiritWorkMoneyCheryl Richardson,
Take time for your Life (1999)
Step Five Cont Improved Work-Life Balance
45
6) Developing CF resiliency through relaxation
training and stress reduction techniques
What Works?
46
Step 6 Cont Developing Resiliency
  • Help for the Helper the psychophysiology of
    compassion fatigue and vicarious trauma

47
7) Accessing Coaching/Counselling/Clinical
Supervision as needed
What Works?
48
Increased recognition that this is an
organizational health concern (CSST report Summer
2007, Mental Health at Works CMHA and
Desjardins)The bottom line high attrition,
poor retention, soaring costs of LTD and sick
leave
A changing landscape, for the better
49
Managing workplace toxicity
  • Feeling wronged bitter A sense of
    helplessness, of persecution
  • We become convinced that others are responsible
    for our well-being and that we lack the personal
    agency to transform our circumstances Lipsky P93
  • Laura van Dernoot Lipsky (2009) Trauma Stewardship

50
Key Tools for Dealing with CF
  • Knowing your big three
  • Your warning signs physical, behavioural and
    psychological symptoms

51
The Warning Signs Continuum
Talking to my neighbours
Hiding from neighbours
Avoiding neighbours
52
ProQol Inventory
  • Testing for CF, burnout and Compassion
    Satisfaction
  • www.proqol.org

53
The Four Steps of CF Strategies
54
Upcoming events
  • The Compassion Fatigue Conference June 2011,
    Kingston. www.cfconference.com
  • Workshop for Managers on Organizational Health,
    June 2011, Kingston. www.compassionfatigue.ca

55
  • The heart must first pump blood to itself
  • Shapiro

56
Get in touch
  • whp_at_cogeco.ca
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