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By: William Steele, MSW, PsyD
Research documenting the effects of trauma on learning and behavior
has become increasingly available and consistent in its descriptions
of the cognitive and behavioral alterations following exposure
to trauma. From early infancy through adulthood, trauma can alter
the way we view ourselves, the world around us, and alter how we
process information and the way we behave and respond to our environment.
Without intervention these cognitive processes and behavioral responses
can lead to learning deficiencies, performance problems, and problematic
behavior. School systems need to be encouraged to provide trauma-specific
intervention to its traumatized students to help minimize the learning,
and behavioral difficulties that can result when the needs of trauma
victims go unrecognized or ignored. To appreciate the preventative
need for structured trauma-specific intervention following critical
incidents, one must understand the functions of the brain in the
midst of trauma.
Arousal and Cognitive Functions
Following exposure to a potentially trauma-inducing incident, survivors may
become frozen in an activated state of arousal. Arousal refers to a heightened
state of alert or a persistent fear for ones safety. Short-term and prolonged
arousal can effect cognitive and behavioral functions. In the arousal state,
changes in the brain are triggered
by a variety of stress
related functions (van der Kolk, 1996). Bremmer et al. (1996) found that
victims of physical /sexual abuse traumatization had lower
memory volume in the left-brain
(Hippocampal) area than did the non-abused. This left-brain function refers
to understanding or processing information. One of these functional alterations
takes place in the neocortex. Perry (2000) and others have found that while
in the arousal state it becomes difficult to process information because
of the altered functioning of the neocortex. Anyone who has
had to see a physician
for potentially life-threatening condition may remember very little of what
the physician says. Only after getting home, (a place of safety) comes the
realization of how many questions needed to be asked, which were forgotten
at the time. Health advocates today, understand how difficult it is for a
patient to process information while in a anxious (arousal)
state and recommend that
patients take another family member or friend with them to the doctors office
as well as write down all the questions needing to be asked.
If a child/student who has been traumatized remains in an aroused state of
fear and finds it difficult to process verbal information it then becomes
difficult to follow directions, to recall what was heard, to make sense out
of what is being said. Focusing, attending, retaining and recalling verbal
information becomes very difficult. These are primary learning functions
that can be altered during or immediately following traumatic exposure and
for some continue unrecognized for long periods.
Cognitive deficits such as poor problem solving, (unable to think things out
or make sense of what is happening), low self-esteem (how one thinks of oneself – victim-thinking)
and hopelessness (loss of future orientation) have all been clearly linked
to negative (traumatic) life events (Yang and Clum, 2000). The fact is, trauma
has been shown to significantly compromise cognitive development (Trickett,
McBride, and Chang, 1995). Yang and Clum (2000) using a series of structured
equation analysis showed that “early negative life events” have
a strong impact on cognitive deficits, which are now related to have a strong
impact on suicidal behavior as well (183). Furthermore, stress induces the
release of glucocorticoids, such as cortisol, that can damage the left Hippocampal
area of the brain, increasing memory deficit.
Cognitive alterations following trauma can take place at any age including
early infancy. The right brain is involved “in the vital functions
that support survival and enable the organism to cope actively and passively
with stress (Schore, 2001, p. 41).” “The right hemisphere controls
perception analysis of visual patterns…. and emotions (Alessi & Ballard,
2001, p. 398). Buck (1994) supports the belief that the right brain is where
the dominant reactions to stress occur. Main (1996) observes that the ability
to regulate ones response to stress can be negatively altered even during
early infancy when a child is exposed to such negative environmental influences
as violence. Schore (2001) concurs and Hopkins and Butterworth (1990) support
these and similar findings that appropriate responses to external changes
(stress/crisis) can be altered by activation of the arousal state – the
heightened state of fear induced by traumatic exposure.
Following the September 11, 2001 attack on America, millions in this country
experienced the absence of a sense of safety and, as a result, thought processes
were immediately altered. Unlike the tragedy and massacre at Columbine High
School, parents across the country rushed to school to be with their children,
or to take them home. Their thoughts and behavior reflected fear, terror,
a sense of powerlessness, confusion; the inability to think clearly, to process
all the information. For a brief moment, Americans experienced to some degree
immediate arousal. No matter what was said (cognitive) people no longer felt
safe. Cognitive processes were significantly altered.
At some point, trauma victims must begin or have help to think differently
about what they experienced, how they view themselves and the world. For
many trauma victims, increased arousal keeps them frozen, thinking as a “victim”– powerless,
hopeless, under constant threat. The reduction of arousal is essential to
the restoration of these functions. Such intervention can be applied in school
settings the days and weeks following trauma-inducing critical incidents,
which impact school students and staff.
Interventions must help trauma victims become trauma
survivors by helping them to change their thought processes. However,
cognitive intervention can only be successful when first the sensory
experience to trauma is altered. Following September 11th, for
example, Americans were repeatedly reassured (cognitively) they
were safe, but this could not be accepted until they first felt
safe – a sensory experience. Parents who saw uniformed police
officers in the parking lot when they arrived at their child’s
school, felt safer than those who saw no visible sign of safety.
What was seen communicated a greater sense of safety than what
was being heard. Understanding trauma as a sensory experience is
also critical to understanding the levels of intervention necessary
to restore cognitive functioning as well as behavioral appropriateness.
Sensory Functions – Behavioral Responses
We have learned that while in the arousal state or, not feeling safe at the
sensory level, cognitive functioning and processing is altered. Short-term
memory suffers (Staknum, Gebarskie, Berent, and Schfeingart, 1992); verbal
memory also decreases (Bremmer, 1995). Behavior is in response to what is
sensed. Aggression, agitation, exaggerated withdral, loss of small motor
activities; like being unable to unlock a door, make a phone call, unable
to talk (stuttering), unable to sleep, are not uncommon behaviors in response
to trauma (Le Doux, Romanski, and Xagoraris, 1991). Children can be easily
startled and become behaviorally reactive to perceived threats. A study on
children’s recall following a horrific earthquake found that 90% remembered
the earthquake, but their memory was very selective and related to events
that had personal meaning for them (Azarian, Lipsett, Miller, and Skriptchenko-Gregorean,
1999). If that meaning involves a sensory (felt) threat, real or perceived,
behavior changes accordingly. Even though the danger may be over the “sense” that
it is not can lead children, for example, into being fearful of leaving home.
Behavioral changes in addition to the alterations of cognitive processes
discussed earlier are often misread for resistance, stubbornness, over reactiveness,
impulsiveness, confrontation or a having a learning disability or Attention
Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD) (ADHD Report, 2000).
As a sensory experience trauma is encoded in the implicit memory (right-brain
area). Implicit memory also referred to as “procedural memory” refers
to how an event is remembered by the body and central nervous system (van
der Kolk, et. al 1996; Squire, 1994; Rothchild, 2000). The trauma experience
is stored implicitly via images, sensations, affective and behavioral states.
Although in the early days following the attack on America, Americans were
repeatedly reassured of their safety by the President, The Wall Street Journal
(date unknown) reported that for several weeks the consumption of mashed
potatoes had significantly increased. In other words, it was comfort food
(a sensory experience) that brought some relief. In the midst of trauma,
and for some, following their traumatic experience cognitive reassurances,
attempts to appeal to our “explicit” or “declarative” memory
simply is not enough. At the sensory level what we see, what we “sense” becomes
far more important to survival than verbal information. Telling parents their
children were safe at school was not enough on September 11, 2001; parents
needed to be with their children and to “see for themselves” that
they were safe.
Behavior
This “sensory state” of trauma is defined by a sense of terror,
powerlessness, and the absence of a sense of safety. In this sensory state,
behavior is altered in response to the danger we sense. Well-trained and knowledgeable
educators on September 11th left television sets on all-day in elementary classrooms
across the country. In their panic and terrifying alarm, they lost sight of
the undue exposure they inadvertently provided their students. Weeks later,
when some sense of safety was returned, the very same educators reported they
now realized that, in their own panic, they left the children unprotected and
over exposed; they weren’t thinking clearly at the time. They were functioning
at a sensory level, not a cognitive level.
van der Kolk, (1994); Levine, (1997); Saigh, (1999) have supported that trauma
is experienced as a sensory experience and only later ordered as a cognitive
experience. Another way to state this is that students who do not feel safe,
find it difficult to learn; they even find it difficult to remember (Matthews
and Saywitz, 1992) and, while in an aroused state, begin to behave in ways
that are problematic. Not until a “sense of safety” is returned
are cognitive processes restored, behaviors returned to pre-trauma level.
The questions this presents, therefore, are what type of intervention can
best restore this sense of safety (decrease arousal); how soon can we intervene
and can these interventions be provided in the school setting?
Trauma Intervention
As detailed earlier, trauma can trigger (arouse) the activation of the autonomic
nervous system to ready itself to resist or solve the real or perceived threat
presented by exposure to a critical incident (van der Kolk, et. al 1996).
If the response (arousal) is not discharged or deactivated, the sustained
arousal state can lead to sustained cognitive and behavioral dysfunction
(Grill, 2001). Trauma being a sensory experience (Lang, 1979; Steele, & Raider,
2001; Rothchild, 2000), arousal is experienced as an absence of the “sense
of safety” and as a “sense of powerlessness.” Aggressiveness,
over reactive responses and exaggerated withdrawal (Le Doux, Romanski, & Xagoraris,
1991) are survival behaviors – attempts to feel safe, in control. As
long as a child is not feeling safe and in control, this aroused state makes
it difficult to process verbal information, attend, focus, retain and recall
(Perry, 2000, Starknum, Gergarski, Berent, & Schteingart, 1992; Saigh,
1999). Intervention designed to deactivate the arousal state and return the
child to a sense of safety and a sense of power or control, helps to restore
previous cognitive and behavioral patterns (Thompson, Charlton, Kerry et
al. 1995). The most immediate, short-term and long-term intervention, therefore,
must be designed to restore that sense of safety and power.
Four Levels of Intervention
It is important to understand that not all students/staff exposed to a critical
incident will need all four levels of intervention. Not all students/staff
will experience a critical incident with the same level of vulnerability.
Some victims will feel safer and more in control than others. Some will perform
better at a cognitive level than others. To pull all students, or all staff
for example into debriefing (second level of intervention) may needlessly
overexpose some of the participants and worsen their original reactions (Mc
Farlane, 1994).
We must, therefore, be careful to apply the least intense and least intrusive
interventions first (Rando, 1993). The National Institute for Trauma and
Loss in Children (TLC) approaches trauma intervention at four different levels.
Level one – crisis intervention, level two – debriefing, level
three – social responsiveness, and level four – structured sensory
intervention. These interventions are detailed in TLC’s Trauma
Response Protocol Manual, Debriefing Handbook for Schools and Agencies, Structured
Sensory Interventions for Children, Adolescents and Parents (SITCAP),
and Schools Response to Terrorism: A Handbook of Protocols. This
format only allows us to identify the key elements of these four levels of
intervention which help to deactivate the state of arousal or restore a sense
of safety and power (control) as quickly as possible.
Level One - Crisis Intervention
The value of crisis intervention was established as early as 1944 by Eric Lindemann
(1944), who detailed the grief reactions of those involved in the Coconut
Grove fire in Boston. Hundreds of books and research projects have since
detailed its benefits for children and families (Caplan, 1964; Rapoport,
1970; Johnson, 1993; Webb, 1994). Schools became familiar with the importance
and need for crisis intervention in the early 80’s when suicide among
children became an epidemic. Most schools today have, in place, a set of
protocols to initiate when a critical incident takes place. Some, of course,
are more comprehensive, more practical, and more user-friendly than others.
TLC’s Trauma Response Protocol Manual (Steele, et. al 2000)
was developed with the help of some 1,500 school professionals across the
country who had first-hand experiences with critical incidents. It is written
in a format that details specific tasks needed following those situations.
What is most important concerning the types of crisis intervention initiated
is that it directs itself to restoring a sense of safety and control, for
all students and staff. Crisis intervention is the first level of intervention.
It is initiated immediately following a critical incident and continues for
two-to-three days. It consists of organized responses (protocols), dissemination
of information, in part through classroom presentations and, attending to
the emotional needs of those involved.
How important is it to have an organized protocol? We have learned that in
the midst of trauma normal cognitive functions can be overwhelmed and disappear
because of the sensory nature of trauma. Hundreds of examples exist which
show that otherwise calm, organized staff lose their ability to think clearly
in the midst of trauma. In a sense, protocols exist so people don’t
have to think in the midst of chaos, yet still act appropriately. Protocols,
in other words, are the result of an orderly “thinking things through” before
they happen, so that appropriate actions are immediate. “A time of
crisis is not conducive to improvisation. Prior preparation and orientation
of staff members regarding management of a crisis will greatly assist those
expected to assume leadership roles and, initiate actions appropriate to
the time of need” (Webb, 1986, 476).
This following scenario illustrates the need to have protocol that are designed
to keep everyone safe, regardless of their ability at the time to think clearly.
Imagine a school building under attack. Panic sets in: some freeze, some
flee, and some stand ready to fight. Those who freeze or run in terror will
find it very difficult to take verbal directions. They need to first see
someone they recognize and then either be physically led or guided to a predesignated
area of safety. This tells us that we must have personnel in that school
who are clearly identifiable (staff identification badges) and who position
themselves as visible reference points for those in panic to run to and then
be directed to a predesignated safe area. There will also be a need to physically
assist those who freeze and are unable to move into that safe area. Those
certified by TLC understand that the use of personnel in this fashion address
sensory reactions in the midst of trauma versus basic cognitive functions
which may not be accessible to many at the time of the trauma. Many elementary
teachers across the country left television sets turned on the day of the
9/11 terrorist attacks. We cited the example earlier that adults had a need
to know what was going on in order to try and manage their anxiety. However,
they unduly over-exposed the children. Weeks later, when feeling safe, most
were able to cognitively understand that they had not afforded their children
protection from over-exposure. They also now understood, that in the midst
of trauma, we do not always, cannot always, rely on cognitive processes to
assist us. These same teachers will act differently the next time because
of what they have learned.
Organized protocols, therefore, help support the deficiencies in cognitive
functioning that can occur in the midst of trauma.
Authority – Information
Imagine being in a surgical waiting room. The doctor tells you he/she will
be out at 3:00PM to let you know how your loved one is doing. It is now 3:05PM.
You begin to think the worst has happened. What you need more than anything
else is a person in authority (the doctor in this case) presenting information
to calm and reassure you. In school settings it is critical that students,
staff, and parents hear from someone in authority – the principal/superintendent.
It is important that factual information be presented and reassurance given
that the school is prepared, and its staff trained to manage these situations.
Classroom presentations in the first two days accomplishes this element of
crisis information.
Keep in mind that not everyone can process all the information presented during
those initial days. However, for many, information is what lowers their arousal
(anxiety, fear) and restores their sense of safety. The important issue related
to classroom presentations is that all students are given the same presentation
and information. If each group hears something different it only creates confusion
as students begin to talk to one another about what they were told. For this
reason TLC has a classroom presentation model that it encourages all presenters
follow. This maintains the orderly response so critical in the first few days.
This process also allows students and staff the opportunity to develop a uniform,
cognitive understanding of what has happened as well as be prepared for what
will be happening the remainder of that day and the days that follow.
Emotional Needs
For many, no additional intervention will be needed. However, some will need
additional crisis intervention to attend to their emotional reactions. Listening,
attending, acknowledging, summarizing, reflecting, normalizing, nurturing,
correcting false information, planning for the remainder of the day, the
evening, empathetic responses are the primary crisis responses at this time.
This type of special attention, for those having a difficult time emotionally,
often is all that is needed.
Level Two – Debriefing
In research evaluating the outcome differences between those exposed to debriefing
and those not involved in debriefing, those groups who participated in debriefing
reported having shorter duration of reactions and less intense reactions.
Debriefing can accelerate symptom reduction (Hokanson & Wirth, 2000;
Everly & Mitchell, 2000; Eid., Johnson, & Weisaeth, 2001). Dr. Jeffrey
Mitchell, a former fireman, is credited with establishing the Critical Incident
Stress Debriefing Model and process designed to assist rescue workers and
survivors of catastrophic situations. Other models have been developed: Armstrong,
et. al (1991), Raphael (1986), Hobfoll (1994), but Mitchell’s model
receives the most attention.
The purpose of debriefing is to give participants the opportunity to tell their
story by using very focused questions that identify the cognitive, affective
and behavioral experiences of the participants. The formal debriefing model
is, however, very cognitive and its processes do not address the unique needs
of schools and students. The National Institute for Trauma and Loss in Children,
with the help of some 1,500 professionals across the country developed several
models to meet the needs of the various ages of students; the needs of the
most exposed and least exposed, the needs of staff and of administrative
response. Trauma Debriefing for Schools and Agencies (Steele, 1999)
is now used in schools across the country. Defusing for younger children,
debriefing for adolescents and adults, operational debriefing for all staff
and debriefing crisis teams are the major models used by TLC. Debriefing
is only for the most exposed and takes place in most situations about the
third or forth day following the incident. In New York following 9/11 over
8,000 students were evacuated from the target area and relocated to other
schools and sites (Lehmuller & Switzer, 2002).
Because of all that was actually happening, debriefing was not a possibility
for several days. In situations where major everyday functions or resources
cease like electricity, or water supply, inaccessible roads, etc. the initiation
of debriefing may not occur until these services and resources are returned.
Exposure
Not everyone will need debriefing. Debriefing is generally reserved for the
most exposed. There are four possible ways to be exposed, 1) as a surviving
victim – victim of physical/sexual abuse, other assaults, community
violence, critical injuries, catastrophic situations, etc., 2) as a witness
to any potential trauma-inducing incident; violent or non-violent – murder,
suicide, assault, car fatality, bus tragedy, house fire, drowning, etc.,
3) being related to the victim – as a family member friend, or peer.
(“Being related” can also include one’s perceived similarity
to or personal identification with victims.) Milgram and associates (1988)
found in their study of 268 seventh graders following a tragic school bus
accident that “personal involvement” with the victims, rather
than the incident itself, increased the level of prevalence. A study of 64
children (Schwarz & Kowalski, 1991) following a school shooting showed
that irrespective of physical nearness to the event, emotional stress resulting
from personal identification also led to Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD);
4) Verbal exposure – Saigh (1991) found that listening to the details
of traumatic experiences, traumatic stress reactions can be induced. This
is especially true for professionals responsible for intervention with traumatized
children. Vicarious traumatization is always a potential development. Children
who are exposed to repeated media coverage of details and survivors, understandably
still may be vulnerable to trauma reactions.
Being “related to” and a “witness to” is far more frequent
in today’s technological society. Approximately six months after the
Oklahoma City bombing this author was speaking to a group of Head Start teachers.
During the presentation, on of the teachers told the story of how her children
spontaneously devised a game where one half of them took all their sleeping
(floor) mats and covered themselves. The other half, in pairs of two, one at
a time would go over to the other children, lift up the mat, picked up the
child under the mat and then escort that child over to the other side of the
room by their indoor soccer nets. They did this until all of the children under
the mats were rescued and taken to the “safety” nets. Afterward,
they switched sides. Rescuers became victims trapped under the mats; victims
were now rescuers.
By being witnesses to the tragedies of the bombing and seeing the rescue workers
carry out children their own ages from the rubble of their day care center,
these children identified with the victims and consequently needed to find
a way to conquer the fear induced by being witnesses and recovery themselves
to be “related to” the victims.
Debriefing is unlike any counseling process. Training is necessary to learn
how to conduct debriefing. In school settings, debriefing should only be
conducted by trained social workers, counselors with experience in working
with the age level of those being debriefed and who also have a working knowledge
of the developmental issues at the various age levels. Debriefing six-year-old
children is far different than debriefing sixteen-year-old adolescents.
Level Three –
Social Responsiveness and Empowerment
Level three is not a formal intervention for persistent reactions, but is actually
happening concurrently with debriefing. It applies itself to the general
population who needs to do something to feel better.
These intervention activities are sometimes spontaneous and can be initiated
by staff or students. In most cases, they begin three or four days following
the critical incident, but can begin earlier. They are sensory in nature, in
that participants are actively involved in doing something in response to the
trauma experienced. Following 9/11, for example, blood drives were initiated,
monies were collected, letters written, pictures drawn that were then sent
to victim’s families and students in the attack area, vigils were held,
community forums addressing cultural and religious issues triggered by the
attack were convened, the meaning of such an attack were discussed in social
science and history classes.
It is this kind of social response at a sensory level that helps to return
a sense of control and power to those who were left feeling vulnerable following
exposure. They can help to empower not just individual students or staff,
but an entire community. They also provide the opportunity to teach children
about the value of life, respect for diversity, generosity of spirit, care
for others, and how to collaboratively work together to support one another
in a time of crisis. They generate a social conscience as well as help teach
children difficult lessons. They also help restore a sense of hope.
Numerous activities were encouraged and supported by the US Department of Education,
Parent Teacher Associations, American Psychological Association, National
Association of School Social Workers, Educators for Social Responsibility,
American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, National Institute of
Mental Health, National Institute for Trauma and Loss in Children, and many
other state and local organizations. Schools Response to Terrorism: A
Handbook of Protocols, published by TLC (Fall, 2002) provides a wide-range
of social responsive and empowerment activities and resources.
Research related to the value of such activities is limited, yet administrators
across the country saw how such activities had value in not only giving their
students a voice, but in helping them collectively feel better. They become
a way to help the “negativity” and “impotence” survivors
can be left with immediately following exposure (Rowlands, 1998). They help
children “gain control of the intense emotions and sense of helplessness
that follow community disaster” (Austin, 1992). For immediate survivors,
the outpouring of support helps to “validate” the value of the
sacrifices made by their loved ones (van der Kolk, 1996).
This article does not permit a full discussion on memorial services within
school settings, which is a level three intervention. The National Institute
for Trauma and Loss in Children recommends that memorial services not be
conducted in school settings, especially following a suicide because of the
risk of contagion (Phillips & Carstensen, 1986; Gould & Schaffer,
1986). If one understands the nature of trauma, one understands that prolonged
exposure via physical proximity to memories of the deceased can leave survivors “frozen” in
their grief and trauma. This was the primary reason, that administrators
decided to build an entirely new library for Columbine High School (Semas,
2001). (Additional protocol following student deaths can be found in the Trauma
Response Protocol Manual and activities for students following terrorism
or when multiple deaths occur can be found in Schools Response to Terrorism:
A Handbook of Protocols (Steele, Brohl, N. and Brohl, P. 2002).
The social aspect of this level of intervention may not help individuals with
more intense or severe levels of trauma reactions. For some, it may even
delay reactions. Think in terms of rescue workers, who work hard at doing
what they are trained to do. When all of the activity ceases, the reality
of what they have been exposed begins to take hold and reactions emerge.
For some of these rescue workers, additional intervention will be needed.
Level Four –
Structured Sensory Intervention
This final level of intervention responds to those victims who are experiencing
PTSD weeks following exposure, even months or years later. It also responds
to those who may not fulfill the criteria for PTSD but are, in fact, experiencing
one or more trauma-specific reaction and/or delayed grief reactions (traumatic
grief). This level of intervention can actually be used with students who
have been exposed to a singular incident or chronic multiple traumatizations.
Structured Sensory Intervention for Traumatized Children,
Adolescents, and Parents (SITCAP) (Steele & Raider,
2001) is the result of eleven years of development, field-testing
in school and agency settings, and research by The National Institute
for Trauma and Loss in Children (TLC). SITCAP includes
trauma-specific intervention programs for pre-school children
three-to-six years - What Color Is Your Hurt?; children
six-through-twelve years I Feel Better Now!; children
six-through-twelve years and thirteen-through-eighteen years Trauma
Intervention for Children and Adolescents, formerly known
as – Trauma Response Kit; adults – Adults
and Parents in Trauma: Learning to Survive and Trauma Debriefing
for Schools and Agencies.
TLC has over 3,000 certified Trauma and Loss School Specialists, Consultants,
and Consultant Supervisors using these intervention programs across the country
in school and agency settings with children and families exposed to such
incidents as murder, suicide, sexual/physical assault, domestic violence
and other forms of violent acts; car fatalities, house fires, drownings,
critical injuries, terminal illnesses, divorce, separation from parents and
other non-violent critical incidents. These interventions are based upon
well-researched cognitive-exposure based intervention strategies (Saigh & Bremmer,
1999; Malchiodi, 1998; Deblinger et. al, 1996; Roje, 1995; van der Kolk et.
al, 1996; Pynoos, 1998).
The restoration of a sense of safety and power is a primary concern in each
program. The activities are primarily sensory activities, as trauma is experienced
at a sensory level, not a cognitive level. The structure of the intervention,
however, directs those sensory experiences into a cognitive framework, which
can then be reordered in a way that is manageable and empowering for children
(Steele & Raider, 2001; Saigh, 1999). This intervention “is structured
because with structure come a sense of control and safety” (Steele & Raider,
2001, p. 63). Trauma-specific questions are used to help the victim give their
experience a language, to tell their story. Sensory activities are used to
help the victims make us a “witness” to what the experience was
like. Once those tasks are completed, the child can now think differently about
what happened.
Example
It was New Year’s Eve. A high school senior
was ushering at a movie complex where several movies ran concurrently.
He was slated to graduate in the spring and had been accepted into
the police academy. Also a football player, he was physically quite
strong and stood over six feet tall. Several kids in the movie
he was assigned to were causing trouble. He attempted to get control
but was unable to do so. He sought out the manager for help, but
the manager had a full house and told him he would just have to
handle it on his own. The situation did not change. In this complex,
movies were scheduled so several let out at the same time. There
was a “common” area that the theatres opened into,
so everyone was moving into this area simultaneously. The youngster
took his post across the common area outside the doors of the movie
he was responsible to monitor. When the youths he had trouble with
came out of the movie and into the common area they spotted him,
rushed him, knocked him down and began beating on him. They broke
his nose and several ribs. About a month later his parish priest,
who was trying to help this youngster, called for assistance. The
boy was skipping school and not attending the youth activities
at church, which was not at all like him.
“What was the worst part for you?” was one of the trauma specific
questions that helped to encourage this youngster’s telling of the story
and focusing on specific details. When this case was presented in trainings and
participants were asked to anticipate what the “worst part” must
have been, their numerous responses rarely identified what the worst part was
for this teenager. Responses ranged from the anger he felt at the manager for
leaving him on his own, the embarrassment and shame that he couldn’t help
himself and the pain he felt during the beating. The point is, what we often
as observers consider to be the worst part is not necessarily experienced by
the victim. Only by giving the victim the opportunity to make us a witness can
we truly know his experience as he knows it.
The teen’s response was as follows:
“I can see it as if it is happening all over again.
I’m on the ground and they’re kicking me. As they
are kicking me I can see between their legs. (This kind of
detail is unique to trauma in which events seem to happen almost
in slow motion so that such details emerge.) As I’m looking
between their legs, I see all these people standing around
and no one is helping me.”
At that moment in time, he experienced complete abandonment, betrayed by the
adults in his world. Without appropriate intervention this could have easily
triggered very self-defeating, even destructive responses. He had already
begun to isolate himself, was missing school and was putting his future in
jeopardy. If he had gone much longer without help, it would not have been
unusual for him to start carrying a weapon, join a gang, or even actively
seek out the kids who beat him with the intent of getting revenge. Being
unable to trust the adult world was the worst part of his experience and
one that often leads to destructive behavior and identification with the
aggressor.
By asking this one trauma-specific question, the specialist was able to help
this teen work through the abandonment and cognitive distortion he experienced;
a focus that likely would have otherwise gone untreated.
Cognitive Reframing
Cognitive reframing is scripted to insure that the victim is provided a “survivors” way
of making sense of the trauma experience. The goal is to help move the victim
from “victim thinking” to “survivor thinking” which
leads to empowerment, choice, active involvement in their own healing process
and a renewed sense of safety and hope.
Activities also assist in supporting the reframing of the experience. The high
school senior, in our earlier example, who was beaten on New Year’s
Eve and had lost trust in the adult world, withdrew. By having him draw what
his fears looked like and later giving them a name, he realized he was responding
as a victim to his own fear that, if the police academy found out, they would
never allow him to start his training. This was irrational, but not from
a “victim’s” viewpoint. A sense of shame also emerged,
as his view of self was not being able to take care of himself. When asked
why standard operating procedure of police was to always work with a partner,
he was able to refocus on the reality that alone, even in the midst of bystanders,
protection and help was not always given. Working in pairs, he realized,
dealt with the reality that even police could find themselves suddenly overwhelmed.
At a cognitive level, he was then able to reframe that what happened to him
was not his fault and that as a police officer he would be doing for others
what others could not do for him - help. In this sense, cognitive reframing
allowed him to reorder his experience in a way that gave his future new meaning.
Cognitive approaches are largely used with exposure techniques. Frank (1988),
Meichenbaum (1974), Saigh (1999), have all found the use of cognitive restructuring
/reframing to be a valuable component for helping individuals move from “victim
thinking” to “survivor thinking”. Cognitive reframing occurs
everyday of a student’s life as a result of daily experiences with
teachers and the education process. It is an essential component of trauma
intervention and needs to be a part of the schools response.
Parent Involvement
A good deal of research has concluded that parents are also critical to their
child’s ability to recover from trauma. Pynoos & Nader (1988) and
Vogel & Verberg (1993) cited parents as the single most important support
for school age children following a disaster. Byers (1996) reported that
studies following World War II showed that the level of upset displayed by
the adult in the child’s life, not the war itself, was the single most
important factor in predicting the emotional well being and recovery of the
child. We see the same relationship today.
An unstable parent creates an unstable child. A traumatized adult will find
it difficult to help her traumatized child. Schwarz (1991) and many others
have found that adults (parents), more frequently then children, experienced
the greatest distress when presented with a trauma. van der Kolk, et. al
(1996) wrote “most children are amazingly resilient as long as they
have caregivers that are emotionally available.” When a child has been
traumatized, parents also experience extreme distress and often are unable
to adequately respond to their traumatized children without appropriate intervention.
Learning about trauma helps parents, especially when their experience is brought
back to life (triggered) by their child's traumatic experience. Education is
an essential, necessary component to help the parent become aware of how her
own unresolved fears may block her ability to allow her child to openly tell
his story. The child needs a parent who is not terrified and emotionally overwhelmed.
Parents with their own history often discover that their child's experience
threatens to bring all the terror of their own experience back to life. Unknowingly,
they reject their child's cry for help, or minimize the child’s terror
in hopes of calming the child.
Given the reality that parent involvement in intervention can be minimal, two
sessions with parents can still support significant reduction of trauma reactions
in their children. This is especially the case if those sessions are structured
and focused on helping the parent become “a witness” to their
child’s experience as well.
Summary
Research (Steele & Raider, 2001) documented that TLC’s intervention
programs reduce severe levels of trauma reactions following violent as well
as non-violent incidents. It demonstrated that the most severe victims saw
the greatest reductions in reactions; contrary to the myth that little can
be done to help those exposed to multiple traumas. It demonstrated that trained
school counselors, social workers and psychologists can assist traumatized
children in the reduction of symptoms across all diagnostic subcategories of
PTSD, and for most, continue that reduction months after the last intervention.
Structured sensory interventions developed by TLC are unique for several reasons.
They have been field-tested and researched in school settings and can be
applied to students exposed to either violent or non-violent trauma inducing
situations. Because grief is part of any trauma reaction, they are beneficial
for managing grief as well as trauma. They are short-term, no more than eight
sessions with each session following in a sequential manner addressing the
major themes of trauma: fear, terror, hurt, worry, anger, revenge, guilt,
accountability absence of safety, powerlessness, and victim thinking versus
survivor thinking. Not all children will need all eight sessions, yet the
design is such that each session is self-contained and outcome driven. Resource
materials are provided for parents as well as students to assist in the education
of victims and their families as to the nature of trauma and the normalization
of its reactions.
Today, crisis intervention is a standard response in schools settings following
critical incidents. Unfortunately, responses are not always orderly, nor
appropriately used because of the lack of awareness and understanding of
the nature of trauma, the way it can impact victims, the different levels
of needs of victims, and the training needed to appropriately initiate the
different levels of intervention from the least intrusive to the more intense
strategies. Age appropriate resource materials (tools) are also needed to
help facilitate successful intervention at the sensory level.
Understanding that trauma is not a cognitive experience, but a sensory one,
dictates strategies that immediately restore, to victims, a sense of safety
and renewed sense of empowerment/control in the face of fear and uncertainty
generated by the incident. Reduction of the arousal level is critical to
the restoration of pre-trauma cognitive processes, learning functions, behavior
and performance. However, this must be approached systematically, as students
or staff exposed to traumatic situations will have many varied reactions,
some resolved with level one interventions, others needing up to level four
intervention.
Children are most accessible in the school environment. We also learned as
early as 1986 (Terr, 1990), following the Challenger space shuttle disaster,
that children are vulnerable to trauma reactions even fourteen months later.
Most educators understand that availability to the media today has left children
overexposed to life events far too early in life and, as a result, children
live in greater fear and anxiety than in past years. The school setting becomes
an opportunity to help minimize that fear and restore a sense of safety.
Valuable lessons can be learned if taught.
Students fully expect to hear from the adults in their environment following
critical incidents. When educators fail to discuss the kind of critical incidents
children are exposed to personally, via their school neighborhood or via
the media coverage of major disasters, they are left to believe that “adults
are afraid to talk”; “nobody knows what to do”; and/or “I
better not bring this up – there is something wrong about it” (Terr,
1992 p.87). Critical incidents/disasters present and opportunity to teach
children to alter or expand their cognitive reactions, to stimulate their
emotional growth, to be better prepared to negotiate the realities of today’s
world.
Administrators generally appreciate the value of structured, orderly process
when faced with difficult situations. It is far easier to exercise flexibility
to unique elements of situations when structured boundaries exist. Crisis
intervention in school settings need to also be structured and orderly, not
only to minimize liability issues, but to maximize the opportunity to provide
an immediate, efficient, outcome oriented resolution of that crisis. In essence,
all members of school crisis teams need to be “on-the-same-page,” know
exactly what their roles are, how and when they are to carry out these roles,
and what is to be communicated to students, staff, families and communities.
This is accomplished through a systematic initiation of protocols and levels
of interventions of the kind discussed. The National Institute for Trauma
and Loss in Children has been working with school districts across the country
since 1990. Its protocols, intervention programs, strategies, and resource
materials continue to be used and endorsed by schools and agencies across
the country.
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