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Emergency Responding to the Emergency Responder

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9/4/09. Emergency Responding to the Emergency Responder. Stress, Coping and Surviving in the ... Multiple Romantic Relationship. To obtain positive mirroring ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Emergency Responding to the Emergency Responder


1
Emergency Responding to the Emergency Responder
Stress, Coping and Surviving in the Emergency
Services
Officer Joel Fay Psy.D(415) 720-6653
Joel.Fay_at_SRPD.0rg
2
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder An Assault on
the Mind, Body and Spirit
3
PTSD
  • PTSD is a total person experience
  • Symptoms effect
  • Mental Health
  • Physical Health
  • Family and Friends
  • Work
  • Spirit

4
PTSD Diagnostic Criteria
  • Must be exposed to a traumatic event

Person's response to the event must involve
intense fear, helplessness, or horror
5
The event must be re-experienced by distressing
recollections, dreams, flashbacks, etc.
6
Avoidance of locations, persons, etc
Sense of isolation No one else knows what I am
going through I cant burden other people with
this.
7
Persistent Problems With Increased Arousal
  • Withdrawal
  • Irritability
  • Insomnia
  • Hyper-vigilant

8
Symptoms of the Spirit
  • Hopelessness
  • Helplessness(Locus of Control)
  • Meaning of life
  • Questioning faith

9
How The Brain Processes Threats
And why its NOT our Fault
10
How It Works
  • Thalamus is a routing station for all incoming
    sensory impulses except smell

11
How It Works
  • Thalamus Routes information from eyes and ears
    to the brain

12
Amygdala
  • Small almond shaped structure near the middle of
    the brain.
  • Attaches meaning to memory
  • Places the experience into the context of an
    emotion.

13
  • The Amygdala is the command center of the
    brains fear system.

14
  • A rat lacking an Amygdala will not respond to
    a threat.

15
Brains Response
  • Works with Hippocampus by evaluating threats and
    placing them in the context of a previous
    experience.
  • Prefrontal Cortex Reins in the Amygdala if the
    threat is deemed to be insignificant.

16
What Happens Next?
  • Amygdala If threat is sufficient the body shuts
    down non-emergency services (I.e., digestion and
    immunity)
  • Triggers body wide emergency response within
    seconds

17
Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal System (HPA)
  • Release of Cortisol to activate the bodies
    defense systems
  • Release of Catecholamines - dopamine,
    norepinephrine, and epinephrine

18
Catecholamines
  • Suppress activity in areas at the front of the
    brain concerned with short-term memory,
    concentration, inhibition, and rational thought.
  • This allows a quick reaction to the threat

19
What is Memory?
  • The use of past experiences to affect future
    behavior.

20
  • Heightened alertness in the brain which in
    effect tells the memory centers,
  • Remember what occurred.

21
  • Although cognitively you know that the event is
    over, part of you (your nervous system) still
    feels that the event is happening. This constant
    state of alertness taxes your body and spirit.

22
What makes an incident Critical?
  • Perceived threat / trauma
  • Your bodys reaction
  • What else is happening in your life
  • The meaning you attribute to an event

23
EVENT
Once you crossed over that line there is no
going back.
24
Coping
25
Stress vs. Critical Incident Stress
  • Daily stress
  • Stress v. Distress

26
  • Organizational/ Personal Betrayal

Its about the system
How a person recovers from trauma depends on
the support system available after an event.
Dont punish the victim.
27
How Do We React to Trauma
  • I think I am going crazy
  • There is something wrong with me.
  • My inability to control my symptoms shows how
    weak I am
  • Fearing Fear The anticipation of experiencing
    the symptoms can be almost as debilitating as the
    symptoms themselves.

28
How Do We React to Trauma
  • We have trouble controlling emotions because
    reminders lead to sudden anxiety, anger, or upset
  • We feel anger or aggressive feelings and feel the
    need to defend ourselves
  • We get upset when we are reminded about the
    trauma (by something the person sees, hears,
    feels, smells, or tastes)

29
  • You cannot predict and you cannot control your
    life to the extent that would make you feel
    comfortable and safe.
  • To adjust to this lack of control you check
    out, numb yourself become unavailable.

30
The Cost of Denying Emotions
  • In 2002, 437 paramedics were tested to look at
    long term effects of suppressing emotions.
  • The greater the emotional suppression the
    greater the physical and psychological stress
    symptoms.
  • Wastell, 2002

31
  • Our strengths are the other side of our
    weaknesses

Self- Control Physical and Psychological
Not affected by what we experience
Command presence
32
Commonly Used Maladaptive Coping Techniques
  • Harder, Faster, Better
  • Hyper-Activity
  • Counter Phobic Behavior
  • Impulsive and Reckless Behavior w/o Thought

33
Commonly Used Maladaptive Coping Techniques
  • Multiple Romantic Relationship
  • To obtain positive mirroring
  • I cant be bad, look how much she loves me

34
More
  • Overcompensation
  • Token attempts seeking professional help.
  • Alcohol / Substance Use

35
What These Coping Strategies Have in Common
  • An attempt to recapture the ability for denial
  • They work for a while for some
  • They are avoidance techniques
  • They do not include conscious grappling with the
    issues and fears generated by Cognitive Dissonance

36
  • Often the symptoms of a stress reaction are
    misdiagnosed by supervisors, families, doctors
    and the individual.

Anger, Somatic Reactions, Frustration, Burn Out
Person
Self-Blame
Guilt
Second Guessing
37
The Aftermath of Failed Repaired Efforts
  • Each failed attempt at restoring the Self-Concept
    further proves fraudulence
  • Isolation
  • From work, friends, family and prior activities.
  • Occurs because there are fewer and fewer people
    you can reveal ones self to.
  • There is a fear of being found fraudulent

38
What Do We Do?
  • Alcohol/ Drugs
  • Thought Suppression
  • Risky Behavior
  • Excess Work
  • AVOIDANCE

This works until it doesnt
39
The Aftermath of Failed Repair Efforts
  • Panic Attacks
  • Fear of Fear
  • Self-Blame and Self- Guilt
  • Depression
  • Psychic Exhaustion
  • Global Negative Self Appraisal
  • Job Site Becomes Toxic
  • Emergency Responder Exhaustion Syndrome

40
Survival
What Can You Do?
41
Peer Goals
  • Provide acceptance, validation and empowerment
  • Breaks the fallacy of uniqueness by
    demonstrating that they are not alone and that
    what they are experiencing is normal

42
Peer Goals
  • Help clients cope with the myth of
    invulnerability which has been shattered
  • Provides hope

43
Police Chaplains
International Conference of Police Chaplains
44
EAP
  • Are they culturally competent?
  • Do you have a list of clinicians you could call
    on in case of an emergency?
  • Create a program where local clinicians go on
    ride-a-longs, do FATS, etc

45
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46
Who Attends WCPR
  • Police, fire and emergency services personnel are
    the typical residents.
  • People affected by the CI for whom a debriefing
    or individual therapy has not been sufficient to
    reduce symptoms.
  • Most clients come because they are in crisis and
    not coming was not an alternative.

47
Why Residential Treatment ?
  • Program must be of sufficient impact / relevance
    to effectively challenge long held faulty
    self-concepts.
  • Robust peer-support network.
  • VERY culturally competent mental health
    professionals.
  • A true collaboration which is peer driven and
    clinically informed.

48
Primary Goals
  • Keep the person alive / Do no harm
  • Restore psychological and emotional functioning
  • Reduction of physical symptoms
  • Restore ability to participate in their own
    recovery
  • Link client to appropriate resources

49
Program Components
  • Initial Phone Intake
  • Intake First, Worst and Last, DAPS
  • 5 CISD Phases
  • Education Modules
  • Family/Relationship Debriefings
  • Individual / Group
  • EMDR
  • Chaplain
  • AA
  • 90 Day Relapse Prevention Plan

50
Some Data
  • Gender 75 male
  • Substance Abuse Issue 43.7 Yes
  • How They Came
  • 29 Workers Comp
  • 13 Department Training Funds
  • 28 - Self Pay
  • 20 - Scholarships
  • 6 - Donations (Police Associations)

51
Where They Come From
  • Northern California 63
  • Central California 14.1
  • Southern California 2.3
  • Arizona 5.5
  • Military 6.3
  • Others International and other states

52
Work Status on Arrival
  • Working 51.5
  • Not Working 40
  • Retired - 10

53
Follow-Up
  • 95.7 of those who were working were still
    working.
  • A small percentage of those not working were able
    to return to work.
  • Early intervention works best
  • Often is it about saving a life.

54
  • Officer Joel Fay Psy.D.
  • San Rafael Police Department
  • 1400 Fifth Avenue
  • San Rafael, CA 94901
  • (415) 485-5773 ex 111366
  • Joel.Fay_at_srpd.org
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