Literature DB >> 29788814

Advancing a Model of Secondary Trauma: Consequences for Victim Service Providers.

Colter Ellis1, Kelly E Knight1.   

Abstract

A burgeoning body of scholarship is attempting to understand, normalize, and ameliorate the emotional strain of victim service provision. The literature, however, has yet to fully theorize the hazardous process of empathetic engagement with victims. As a result, concepts, mechanisms, and outcomes are often conflated, making it difficult to understand the etiological path of this occupational risk. The goal of this article is to attend to this gap by accomplishing three objectives. The first is to engage with the perspective of symbolic interaction to theoretically ground a conceptual model of secondary trauma. The second objective is to propose a model of secondary trauma that acknowledges its inherently interactional, interpretive, and, thus, vicariously transmissible nature. The third objective is to begin the work of empirically supporting this model with data from a sample of victim service providers (n = 94) collected using in-depth interviews, focus groups, ethnographic participant observation, and community-based participatory research. Our findings suggest that victim service provision, in the form of empathetic engagement, can blur the boundary between self and other, and lead to a sense of damage in the self that manifests in unreliable self-agency, untrustworthy coherence of other, desensitized self-affectivity, and fractured self-history. This work has significant implications. We illustrate an important paradox by showing how victim service provision can be helpful to victims but harmful to providers. We also offer a pathway for reducing this harm. By specifying mechanisms of damage, the model can be used to inform policies and practices supportive of victim service providers' health and well-being.

Entities:  

Keywords:  empathy; secondary trauma; trauma; victim service providers; victims

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29788814      PMCID: PMC6212337          DOI: 10.1177/0886260518775161

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Interpers Violence        ISSN: 0886-2605


  21 in total

1.  Compassion fatigue: psychotherapists' chronic lack of self care.

Authors:  Charles R Figley
Journal:  J Clin Psychol       Date:  2002-11

2.  A quantitative meta-analysis of neurocognitive functioning in posttraumatic stress disorder.

Authors:  J Cobb Scott; Georg E Matt; Kristen M Wrocklage; Cassandra Crnich; Jessica Jordan; Steven M Southwick; John H Krystal; Brian C Schweinsburg
Journal:  Psychol Bull       Date:  2014-11-03       Impact factor: 17.737

3.  Impact of trauma work on social work clinicians: empirical findings.

Authors:  Maddy Cunningham
Journal:  Soc Work       Date:  2003-10

4.  The historical trauma response among natives and its relationship with substance abuse: a Lakota illustration.

Authors:  Maria Yellow Horse Brave Heart
Journal:  J Psychoactive Drugs       Date:  2003 Jan-Mar

5.  Early childhood experiences and current emotional distress: what do they tell us about aspiring psychologists?

Authors:  Ana V Nikcević; Jana Kramolisova-Advani; Marcantonio M Spada
Journal:  J Psychol       Date:  2007-01

6.  Childhood abuse history, secondary traumatic stress, and child welfare workers.

Authors:  Debra Nelson-Gardell; Deneen Harris
Journal:  Child Welfare       Date:  2003 Jan-Feb

Review 7.  Meta-analysis of risk factors for secondary traumatic stress in therapeutic work with trauma victims.

Authors:  Jennifer M Hensel; Carlos Ruiz; Caitlin Finney; Carolyn S Dewa
Journal:  J Trauma Stress       Date:  2015-04

8.  A meta-analysis of the relationship between job burnout and secondary traumatic stress among workers with indirect exposure to trauma.

Authors:  Roman Cieslak; Kotaro Shoji; Allison Douglas; Erin Melville; Aleksandra Luszczynska; Charles C Benight
Journal:  Psychol Serv       Date:  2013-08-12

Review 9.  Current status on behavioral and biological markers of PTSD: a search for clarity in a conflicting literature.

Authors:  Phillip R Zoladz; David M Diamond
Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev       Date:  2013-04-05       Impact factor: 8.989

10.  Life Course and Intergenerational Continuity of Intimate Partner Aggression and Physical Injury: A 20-Year Study.

Authors:  Kelly E Knight; Scott Menard; Sara B Simmons; Leana A Bouffard; Rebecca Orsi
Journal:  Violence Vict       Date:  2016-04-08
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