This chapter covers the following topics:
Just as you can’t predict when an emergency will hit, you can’t calculate when it truly will have ended in the hearts and minds of your employees. Long after all physical evidence of a disaster is gone, people may still be suffering adverse effects from the experience. This is why flexibility in planning and in executing your plan is important; you need to acknowledge that disasters don’t have neat and tidy endings. You may have to continue to provide expert support and counseling to help employees deal with the trauma and grief and continue on the road to recovery long after the event.
The discussion of emotions and conditions such as anger, weariness, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder in this chapter is not meant to imply that everyone involved in a disaster will become one of the walking wounded for the rest of his or her working life. Individuals who have been employed for a 112 significant portion of their lives tend to be highly functional human beings. They also tend to be resilient, which means that they are capable of both recovering from disaster and adjusting to change. Our goal is to shorten this period of recovery and adjustment by taking constructive steps.
Recent research confirms that a large number of individuals who experience trauma are indeed resilient.1 Resilient individuals exhibit flexibility. They may experience some distressing emotions, but they promptly confront their challenges and engage in problem solving over the issues they face. Research also shows that brief workplace crisis interventions can positively affect the psychological well-being of individuals who have experienced a disaster. For example, New Yorkers who participated in just two or three brief counseling sessions at work after the events of 9/11 faced less long-term risk and overall mental health impairment for up to two years after the disaster compared with those who did not receive counseling.2
Leaders should keep in mind the following three guidelines when helping employees to recover psychologically from trauma:
In your plans and actions, always keep in mind that the speed at which people recover, restabilize, and resume their lives can vary dramatically, depending on their proximity to the disaster, degree of involvement, prior experience with disasters, tolerance for stress, self-awareness and self-control, physical and psychological well-being, coping skills, and resiliency, as well as the actual and perceived helpfulness of others and a multitude of other factors, including the risks involved.
114Throughout this book we have suggested the utilization of Employee Assistance Programs, which usually provide crisis support. Since the 1950s these programs have evolved to become freestanding entities, available through contracts with HMOs, managed behavioral health firms, and insurance companies. A few EAPs function as company-operated crisis and counseling resources, although this situation is becoming increasingly rare.
An EAP can provide confidential, short-term counseling and referrals for employees and often for dependents and retirees as well. The counseling services may range from personal life adjustment sessions to workshops that target such common issues as balancing work and family life and handling interpersonal relationships in the workplace. In work-related disasters, most EAPs can provide trained counselors to conduct “critical incident stress debriefings,” as well as to facilitate group discussions, meet with affected individuals one on one, hold workshops on living with sadness or stress, or provide other types of interventions. It
Publicizing EAP Services and Other Support Programs
To ensure that employees and their families know about EAP services and any other support programs that are available, communicate information about them regularly, especially in places where family members are exposed to the information. For instance, print and mail postcards to the home, insert reminders on pay statements, post flyers and posters at the work site, and include an announcement in all benefits updates. Be sure to feature the EAP in any special websites that go live after a crisis.
In addition to alerting employees and their families that the services exist, you need to explain how to use them. Also, specify who is eligible, especially if the services are available to extended family members.
For the first year after the disaster, consider monthly reminders. Don’t worry about being repetitive. When stressed, people often can’t absorb new information easily. Or if people don’t think the information is immediately useful to them, they’ll ignore it.
is important to be knowledgeable on the types of crisis services a particular EAP claims to supply.
By providing crisis support within 24 hours or sooner, an EAP can help affected employees and their families to realize that others share their reaction to stress, and to identify stressful situations and defuse them when possible. The EAP can also make referrals to other professionals if an individual needs more help or therapy.
If the EAP is your first line of defense, familiarize yourself with its capabilities, especially the services it offers and recommends and the qualifications of the counselors dispatched for your account. Make sure the EAP has the ability to send in specialized counselors on short notice (generally 24 to 48 hours), from their own staff or through partnerships with expert consultants in all of your locations.
Ask whether the EAP routinely provides follow-up services to help those most at risk. These services can range from coping skills, individual support through the EAP, mental health benefits, and community resources.
For instance, Magellan Health Services, a U.S.-based behavioral health disease management and employee assistance company, has developed a “Critical Incident Severity Index Scale” to assess the significance of traumatic workplace events. The higher the score on a number of factors, the greater the risk of negative impact on employees at the workplace.
For those incidents with a moderate to severe risk, Magellan suggests that employers adopt a three-phase extended follow-up for managers and employees. The first phase starts one or two days after the initiation of on-site services, which occurs shortly after the critical incident. The second phase is about a month later. The third takes place about 8 weeks later. In the case of severe incidents, such as the hurricanes of 2005, some organizations had a phase 4 follow-up about 12 weeks later. The follow-up can involve telephone consultations, group briefings, individual sessions, or other interventions that are appropriate for the situation, organization, and individuals. After each phase, Magellan captures information about the extent to which employees are functioning and approaching their pre-incident state. These extended services not only help affected individuals, but also demonstrate the employer’s commitment to its employees.
116Also, the EAP should be able to coordinate well with your internal security department, external health services, police, and your HR function. Once you know your EAP’s strengths and deficiencies, plan how you will supplement its services in the face of a disaster or major risk.
One national expert in risk assessment and trauma counseling is Stephen White, President of Work Trauma Services, Inc. Dr. White has extensive experience helping people cope with crises, and he often provides backup or specialized services to EAP counselors. When an organization is faced with a damaging event of large
If an EAP Is Not Available
If your organization doesn’t have an EAP, you have several options available to you, including the following ones, in order from the most extensive range of services to the least.
In any of these situations, suggests Suzanne Gelber—who specializes in substance abuse, mental health, and chronic disease and has worked with many EAPs—you’ll need to vet the organizations and individuals ahead of time. Dr. Gelber also recommends that they be licensed as mental health counselors with emergency certification or be affiliated with CEAP (Community Emergency Assistance Program) and have emergency certification.
scope, services such as his, coupled with what the EAP provides, can be enormously valuable. From the employer’s perspective, the sevices pay off not only by helping employees to stabilize more quickly, but also by preventing higher costs and more serious problems down the road. For example, a business that does not address employees’ emotional and psychological problems can experience higher costs from medical claims, more absenteeism, higher turnover, and lower productivity over the next several years.
Disaster Packs
Consider providing disaster packs for employees, especially if your organization doesn’t have an EAP.
Disaster packs are self-contained packages (such as manila envelopes) kept at the work site that individuals can open when a disaster strikes. The contents include action-oriented information, such as:
According to Toni McClure, Chief Clinical Officer for Magellan Health’s Midwest Care Management Center, these packages can be very helpful to employees, especially if the contents include a mix of information specific to the employer and guidelines on how to deal with the trauma.
Of course, these packs are helpful only if you prepare them in advance and make sure that employees know how to access them when a disaster occurs.
Dr. White assisted First Interstate HR leaders and employees who had worked in the building that burned. He worked with the staff to educate them on dealing with the anger and weariness brought on by the situation and other, associated symptoms. 118 “These phenomena can be seen in other trauma-inducing incidents. Each case, though, is unique in terms of the nature of the stressor event, the various feelings manifested, and the severity of impact,” he explained.
In First Interstate’s experience, the affected staff went through three stages:
When individuals experience great loss, their feelings can quickly transform to anger, according to Dr. White. This anger stems from numerous sources, including the need to:
This anger is compounded by weariness that results from the drama and trauma in the days immediately following an emergency or a disaster. People will either show the anger directly or mask it with some other behavior. It’s important to defuse anger and combat weariness so that employees can return to productive work without experiencing long-term adverse effects.
According to Dr. White, HR leaders and other managers should watch out for these negative adaptive behaviors:
Leaders and managers should also watch themselves and other managers for these problem behaviors:
Dr. White suggests that leaders and managers take these steps to deal with anger and weariness symptoms observed in themselves or in others:
Symptoms of Depression and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
According to the National Institute of Mental Health,3 you need to be on the alert for the following symptoms:
Because each situation is special, individuals are unique, and the resources available can vary widely based on your geographic location, you should plan to get professional help to address psychological problems immediately after a disaster, including screening for the degree of impact. This way you can be sure that bodies, hearts, and minds are coping adequately or are in the process of healing, and that people can begin to resume their lives.
Any major crisis can be a life-changing event. When we are shaken physically, mentally, and emotionally, we lose a little more of our innocence and we have to recalibrate our sense of what’s normal. We will never be able to recapture our former state, but with effort we can create a new state of healthy normalcy.
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