Title: RESILIENCE George S. Everly, Jr., PhD, ABPP
1RESILIENCEGeorge S. Everly, Jr., PhD, ABPP
Dept of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, The
Johns Hopkins University School of MedicineThe
Johns Hopkins Center for Public Health
PreparednessThe Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School
of Public Healthgeverly_at_jhsph.edu
2 ObjectivesParticipants will increase their
understanding of
- 1. The JHU resistance, resilience, recovery model
- 2. What returning military members need to feel
resilient. - 3. How large and small group crisis interventions
foster resilience. - 4. What clinicians can do.
- 5. What clinicians should NOT do.
31. Johns HopkinsRESISTENCE, RESILIENCE,
RECOVERY An outcome-driven continuum of care
Build Resistance Enhance Resiliency
Speed Recovery Immunity Rebound
Treatment/Rehab Kaminsky, et al,
(2005) RESISTENCE, RESILIENCE, RECOVERY, Johns
Hopkins.
4Johns HopkinsRESISTENCE, RESILIENCE, RECOVERY
Build Resistance Enhance Resiliency
Speed Recovery Immunity Rebound
Treatment/Rehab Expectancy
CBT, EMDR
Crisis
Intervention Experience
CISM
PFA
Self-efficacy
Group cohesion Kaminsky, et al,
(2007) RESISTENCE, RESILIENCE, RECOVERY, Brief
Treatment Crisis Intervention.
52. What do People Need?
- Honest, Reliable Information
- Interpersonal Support, a Sense of Connectedness
(UDT/SEAL) - Confidence, Self-efficacy
- Faith in Leadership (strength honor)
- Belief in Something Greater than Themselves
(Faith, Duty) - Future Orientation
63. Group Crisis Intervention
- Debriefings (small group - interactive)
- Crisis Management Briefings (Large or small group
- informational) - Battle Mind (Informational and interactive)
7Mechanisms of Action
- Information
- Normalization
- De-stigmatization (Hoge)
- Fosters interpersonal support (Yalom)
- Exerts anti-demoralization effect (Frank)
- Peers communicate with unique ethos
8LAW ENFORCEMENT BEST PRACTICES(Sheehan, 2004,
FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin)
- Peer-based intervention system, consisting of
- Basic communication skills
- Assessment/ triage of benign vs. malignant
symptoms - Chaplain services
- MH consultation/ support
- An integrated continuum of intervention services
9ESSENTIAL CONCEPTS
10Crisis Intervention
- A short-term helping process designed to
- Stabilize distress
- Mitigate distress
- Assess need for continued care
- Facilitate access to continued care, if indicated
- NOT psychotherapy, nor a substitute for
11Crisis Intervention Principles
- Proximity
- Immediacy
- Expectancy
12- ARTISS (Military Medicine, 1963) Regarding
war neurosis, removal of the soldier from the
front returned only five percent of such
casualties to duty (p. 1011). - The treatment principles of immediacy,
proximity, expectancy (PIE) were later applied
and resulted in 70 to 80 percent of combat
psychiatric casualties returning to duty.
13Zahava Solomon
- Tested PIE with Israeli soldiers finding all 3
components active, but expectancy most useful - Re-tested 20 years later finding those who
received PIE did better in post-military life
than did those who did not receive PIE
14Boscarino, et al., 2005, 2006, 2008
- conducted a random prospective cohort study
utilizing a sample of 1,681 New York at 1 year
and 2 years after 9/11. Results indicate that
brief workplace-based crisis interventions,
(CISM), had a beneficial impact including reduced
risks for binge drinking, alcohol dependence,
PTSD symptoms, major depression, anxiety, and
global impairment, compared with individuals who
did not receive these interventions.
15CISM Integrative Crisis Intervention and
Disaster Mental Health(Everly Mitchell,
2008)
- Integrated multi-component intervention system
- Utilizing the most effective intervention for the
target population given the current challenge at
hand - Most widely used model Critical Incident Stress
Management (CISM) - Used by United Nations
16CISM was found to be superior to acute-phase
psychotherapy, post 9/11.Psychotherapy tended
to increase symptoms of PTSD.
174. What Can Clinicians Do?
- Normalize
- Triage
- Provide anticipatory guidance
- Reinforce importance of connectedness
- Foster future orientation
- Foster problem-solving approach to life
- Reinforce role of clinician as consultant
- Practice PFA
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19DysfunctionRed Flags
- Dissociation
- Depersonalization
- Derealization
- Depression and Guilt
- Survivor Guilt
- Psychogenic amnesia
- Persistent sleep disturbance
- Panic
- Violent inclinations
- Psychosis
- Reliance upon self-medication
- Lack of social support
- Hyperarousal (severe exaggerated startle
response, explosive tirades) - Evidence of seizures
- Inability to function after respite
20 Predicting Beyond Immediate Severity
- 1. Dose - response relationship with exposure
- 2. Peri-traumatic dissociation
- 3. Peri-traumatic belief one was going to die
- 4. Negative appraisal of symptoms
- 5. Physical injuries
- 6. Peri-traumatic panic
- 7. Psychogenic amnesia
- 8. Peri-traumatic depression, despair, numbing
- 9. History of significant mental illness
- 10. Significant loss
21 Crisis Intervention Triad(Everly Mitchell,
2008)
- Antidote for impulsivity
- Slowing down the interaction (assuming medical
stability and no other objective urgency)
suggesting a delay in any actions which have
lasting consequences - Antidote for inability to understand
consequences - Using the crisis communication techniques of
summary and extrapolation paraphrasing to assist
individuals in gaining insight into the
consequences of actions and to see options and - Antidote for hopelessness
- A supportive, optimistic presence that corrects
misconceptions, conveys both directly and
indirectly a future orientation, hope
facilitation of access to continued care, if
indicated (friends, family, EAP, MHP, etc.
225. What Clinicians Should Avoid
- Traditional patient-focused psychotherapy
- Non-directive counseling
- Confrontation
- Fostering dependency/ transference reactions
- Paradoxical intention
- I know how you feel
- Fostering affective abreaction, unless
other-initiated
23Dr Everlys MHC Burnout Club
- 1. Be a perfectionist, never accept excellence.
- 2. Never exercise!
- 3. Remember, the glass is always half empty!
- 4. Eat as much fast food as possible only eat
things that had faces (chickens dont count--no
lips). Never eat breakfast. - 5. Blame all of your failures in life on your
parents, your lack of friends, your coercive
unethical money-grubbing outsourcing capitalistic
boss, or the great right-wing conspiracy.
24- 6. Accept responsibility for everything and
everyone, all the time! You must make all
veterans happy. - 7. Engage in an endless process of controlling
everything and everyone, especially those people/
things over which you have no actual control.
Empathizeyou must feel their pain. - 8. Strive to sleep as little as possible!
- 9. Feel guilty when leaving the disaster at end
of deployment. NEVER take vacations, if forced to
do so, feel guilty. - 10.Seek out a routine Sleep until you are
hungry, eat until you are tired use ETOH to
relax, stimulants to get going.
25Resources
- geverly_at_jhsph.edu
- Everly, GS, Jr. (2009), Resilient Child. NY
DiaMedica. - Everly, GS, Jr., etal. (2010). Resilient
Leadership. NY DiaMedica. - Everly, GS, Jr. Mitchell, JT (2007).
Integrative Crisis Intervention and Disaster
Mental Health. Ellicott City, MD Chevron. - Everlybooks.com