Bringing
Your Debriefers Home After A Disaster:
Debriefing
the Debriefers
Dennis Potter,
MSW, BCETS
When you are preparing to send team members out to
do work after a disaster, you need to do some things differently. First, you
should send your most experienced personnel, people who not only know the
model, but also have used it on many occasions. You may think that because you
have experienced personnel going out, they know how to take care of themselves
and each other. This is probably true for as long as they are in the field, but
they will need help when they return home to their own community. You must plan
for this before they leave. I would offer the following suggestions.
Before the team leaves, they should be briefed with
as much information as you can give them about what they will be doing, and
what they might experience. Working with first responders and others after a
disaster is not like anything they have done before. The closest experience
that seems to compare is a line of duty death. The experience for the
debriefers is overwhelming, with story after story of heart wrenching scenes,
visual imprints, and seemingly never ending pieces of emotional trauma. A
disaster, by its nature, extends for a far longer time on scene, with more
visual devastation and trauma than most of us see in a lifetime. This may very
well be a life changing event for many debriefers, especially if they are
debriefing personnel after a particularly intense disaster.
Teams should not work more than a week at the disaster
site. The trauma to the team will build with each day. The team should meet
with each other at the end of each workday to do a mini-debriefing of
themselves. This helps prepare them for their work of the next day, and reminds
them to do some of the things that they have been teaching victims during their
debriefing work. The team needs to take of itself each day.
Second, before the team leaves, each member should
sign an agreement that commits him or her to attending a Debriefing of
Debriefers within 24 to 48 hours after their return. This is one of the most
important things you need to do. Most volunteers returning from a disaster
scene just want to escape it, and often think they are handling things just
fine. This seems to be especially true for our teams. It will not be true.
Third,
the Debriefing of the Debriefers should be completed by a team with at least
one mental health professional. Some of the debriefers may be in need of a more
thorough mental health assessment or follow up activities. This team should not
have been on site, so they do not have any direct trauma from this event. The
Debriefing Debriefers Team should be very experienced personnel who are trusted
by their teammates.
The
Debriefing of Debriefers for major disasters is slightly different than the
model that Paul LaBerteaux and I have recommended and that is outlined in the
ICISF Advanced Workbook
The Debriefing Debriefers process is a variation of
the ICISF Model. It consists of three phases, REVIEW, RESPONSE, and REMIND.
The REVIEW phase is essentially a combination
of the Introduction/Fact/Thought phase of the regular debriefing. It utilizes
questions designed to have members think about and discuss the debriefing and
their participation in it. The following questions are examples of this phase:
·
How
did it go?
·
How
do you think you did?
·
What
“ditzy” thing did you do?
·
What
themes emerged?
·
Is
there anything you are worried about?
During this phase, the leader can guide the
discussion into teaching what made the debriefings go well or give examples of
other ways to have handled some of the problems experienced. Mostly you are
trying to provide constant positive feedback on their work. Remember, you are
validating their reactions to the experience and providing guidance on handling
their reactions.
The RESPONSE phase is a condensation of the
Reaction/Symptom phase of the ICISF Model and works to elicit comments on the
self-perception of the team members and any reactions they may have. The following
types of questions seem to work well:
·
What
did you say that you wish you hadn’t?
·
What
didn’t you say that you wish you had?
·
How
has this experience affected you?
·
What
is the hardest part of this experience for you?
During this phase, the leader guides some group
discussion of the member’s self-impressions. If the person is blaming
themselves for something or worried that they did something really wrong, it
usually comes out during this phase. What then usually follows is reassurance
by the other team members that no major errors occurred. This is also an
opportunity for the team leader and team members to reassure each other that
each individual contributed to the process and to offer alternative methods for
handling problem issues. This is the prime time to teach new techniques or
reinforce what the team actually did.
The REMIND phase correlates to the
Teaching/Re-entry phase of the Mitchell Model. Questions in this step serve to
help the team remember to do the same sort of things that we encourage the
debriefees to do.
·
Is
there any follow up to be done?
·
What
are you going to do to take care of yourself in the next 24-48 hours?
·
What
will it take for you to eventually “let go” of this experience?
The Debriefing Debriefers model described above is
offered as one activity for team maintenance. But, of course, there are others
that include:
·
Follow
up phone calls to provide private processing time for each team member
·
Journaling
or reporting about lessons learned
·
Other
opportunities to talk with one another about their experiences in a structured
way
·
An
opportunity for the debriefing team to report to others about their experience
and what they learned through the debriefing
By
using this type of structured approach to Debriefing Debriefers, you will help
to minimize the effects of the disaster experience for your team members.
Helping
them to recover as quickly as they can and preventing them from having long
term effects should be the natural goal of all people involving in doing CISM
work. It is the thing that keeps us strong and ready to go out again. It is
vital that we take care of ourselves as well as we take care of others.
Take
care out there, we need you back again.