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10/6/2015

Kindling Kindness for Compassionate Disaster Management – PLOS Currents Disasters

Kindling  Kindness  for  Compassionate Disaster  Management October  5,  2015  ·  Perspective

Citation Johal  S.  Kindling  Kindness  for  Compassionate  Disaster  Management.  PLOS  Currents Tweet Disasters.  2015  Oct  5  .  Edition  1.  doi: 10.1371/currents.dis.078959ba72f0d133cd2d8fd7c7d9b23d.

Author Sarb  Johal Joint  Centre  for  Disaster  Research,  Massey  University  /  GNS  Science,  Wellington,  New  Zealand.

Abstract In  the  health  sector,  it  has  become  clear  that  staff  who  feel  better  supported  deliver  better  care.  Can disaster  management  learn  from  this  drive  to  ensure  compassionate  care  to  avoid  the  perils  of  burnout and  empathy  exhaustion?

Funding  Statement This  article  was  written  as  part  of  the  author’s  role  at  Massey  University,  as  Associate  Professor  in Disaster  Mental  Health.  No  specific  funding  was  given  to  the  production  of  this  article.  The  funders  had no  role  in  study  design,  data  collection  and  analysis,  decision  to  publish,  or  preparation  of  the manuscript.  The  authors  has  declared  that  no  competing  interests  exist.

Perspective In  recent  years,  evidence  has  emerged  that  disaster  management  places  significant  burdens  on  those tasked  with  carrying  out  planning,  response  and  recovery  functions,  especially  where  human  contact  is involved1,2,3.  Research  has  identified  that  rescue  and  recovery  workers  engaged  in  disaster  relief  are  at increased  risk  of  developing  mental  health  problems  such  as  post-­traumatic  stress  disorder,  depression and  anxiety4.  They  are  also  at  increased  risk  of  empathy  exhaustion,  burnout,  compassion  fatigue,  and vicarious  traumatisation5.  In  addition  to  this,  an  increasing  number  of  hereto  thought  of  low-­frequency-­ high-­impact  events  has  placed  further  pressure  on  resource  allocation  issues,  as  well  as  calls  and  new frameworks  proposed  for  reform  about  how  disasters  are  managed  in  the  context  of  sustainable economies  in  the  face  of  climate  change  at  local,  regional,  and  global  levels  (e.g.  Sendai  Framework  for Disaster  Risk  Reduction  2015-­20306). The  challenge  of  approaching  disaster  management  across  all  sectors  of  society  and  the  economy while  paying  attention  to  the  human  impacts  of  identified  risks  and  as  well  as  the  impacts  of  preferred mitigation  solutions  is  a  mammoth  task  of  scale  and  coordination.  Implementing  a  framework  to  meet http://currents.plos.org/disasters/article/kindling-kindness-for-compassionate-disaster-management/

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these  challenges  is  an  even  bigger  task. In  the  health  sector,  patients  problems  are  becoming  increasingly  complex  and  the  care  provided  for them  more  and  more  fragmented.  Efficiency  savings,  greater  population  disease  burden,  and  constant pressure  for  cost  savings  place  increasing  pressure  on  resources,  along  with  strain  on  relationships between  staff  members,  and  staff  and  the  patients  they  care  for.  We  know  that  all  staff  members  in  the healthcare  professions  are  affected  by  the  emotional  demands  of  caring  for  patients.  Whether  this shows  itself  in  increased  rates  of  work  related  anxiety  and  depression  absentees,  or  staff  burnout,  both clinical  and  non-­clinical  staff  are  at  risk.  In  such  circumstances,  it  has  been  noticed  that  care  can become  rapidly  depersonalised  with  sometimes  catastrophic  consequences7. One  possible  solution  to  this  sense  of  depersonalisation  and  burnout  has  emerged  from  the experiences  and  writing  of  Ken  Schwartz.  During  a  harrowing  10-­month  ordeal  before  Schwartz  died  of advanced  lung  cancer,  he  recorded  his  reflection  that  what  mattered  most  during  an  illness  is  the human  connection  between  patients  and  their  caregivers.  In  his  book,  ‘A  Patient’s  Story,  he  encouraged healthcare  professionals  to  stay  person-­centred:  “…the  smallest  acts  of  kindness”,  he  argues,  make “the  unbearable  bearable”8. Schwartz  recognised  that  one  way  of  supporting  staff  through  the  brutality  of  their  everyday  experience was  to  give  them  the  space  to  reflect  and  talk  –  a  space  to  be  able  to  tell  stories  about  things  that happened  to  them  during  their  work.  The  mission  of  the  Schwartz  Centre  for  Compassionate Healthcare,  established  after  Ken  Schwartz’s  death,  was  to  promote  compassionate  care  so  that patients  and  their  caregivers  relate  to  one  another  that  offers  “hope  to  the  patient,  support  to  caregivers, and  sustenance  to  the  healing  process”8. Schwartz  Centre  ‘Rounds’  are  a  multidisciplinary  forum  designed  for  staff  together  once  a  month  to discuss  and  reflect  on  the  non-­clinical  aspect  of  caring  for  patients,  that  is  the  emotional  and  social challenges  associated  with  their  jobs.  Schwartz  Rounds  have  been  successfully  running  in  hospitals  in the  USA  for  over  17  years,  and  have  also  been  used  to  good  effect  in  the  UK9.  The  general  format  of Rounds  is  as  follows:  a  pre-­selected  panel  spend  1-­15  minutes  presenting  a  case  story  and  describing their  role,  the  issues  the  case  raised  for  them,  and  how  this  made  them  feel.  It  is  critical  not  to  be diverted  into  the  technical  aspects  of  the  case,  as  per  a  usual  hospital  Case  Round,  but  to  remain  with the  how  the  case  made  them  feel.  Under  the  guidance  of  a  skilled  facilitator,  discussion  then  opens  up to  the  larger  group  of  participants  for  the  remainder  of  the  hour  long  meeting,  asking  questions  to encourage  sharing  of  experiences  and  to  reflect  on  the  challenges  of  care.  Rounds  are  designed  to  be a  safe,  confidential  environment  that  are  not  designed  to  focus  on  problem  solving,  but  to  instead  to consider  the  implications  of  the  case  for  staff.  Rounds  are  generally  held  over  lunch,  with  food  provided for  staff  (which  seems  to  be  a  critical  part  of  the  Rounds’  recipe  for  success). The  underlying  premise  for  Rounds  is  that  compassion  shown  by  staff  can  make  all  the  difference  to  a patient’s  experience  of  care.  In  order  to  provide  care  with  compassion,  however,  staff  must  in  turn  feel supported  in  their  work.  What  the  Schwartz  Centre  promotes  is  no  ordinary  ‘debriefing’  experience.  In broad  terms,  staff  are  unprepared  for  and  unaccustomed  to  reflective  practice.  Staff  are  rarely encouraged  to  stop  to  consider  how  their  work  feels,  or  what  it  means  to  do  the  work  they  do,  for example,  the  ethical  dilemmas,  the  existential  issues  of  dealing  with  life  and  death,  or  the  day-­to-­day stresses  and  rewards. Schwartz  Rounds  are  not  intended  to  produce  actionable  outputs  at  the  end  of  the  process.  Instead, their  value  lies  in  the  process  of  both  recounting  the  story  from  an  overtly  subjective  point  of  view,  and the  act  of  listening  and  responding.  These  spaces  are  intended  as  times  to  be  able  to  recognise  and discuss  the  processes  that  healthcare  workers  find  themselves  deeply  involved  in.  They  provide  an opportunity  to  share  narratives  with  one  another,  and  provide  an  experience  through  which  to  socialise http://currents.plos.org/disasters/article/kindling-kindness-for-compassionate-disaster-management/

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us  to  be  able  to  do  so. Staff  who  have  participated  in  rounds  report  that  they  feel  better  supported  in  their  patient  care,  and their  levels  of  stress  and  isolation  have  been  shown  to  decline.  Furthermore,  it  was  found  that  the  more rounds  attended,  the  greater  the  positive  impact  on  staff10  and  it  seems  that  the  very  act  of  attending Rounds  regularly  focuses  staff  attention  on  the  need  for  compassion.  A  separate  study  of  regular Rounds  attendees  concluded  that  compassionate  caring  requires  “a  lifetime  of  continuous  support”11. In  the  field  of  disaster  management,  Schwartz  Rounds  have  been  used  with  some  success.  In  July 2014,  the  Schwartz  Centre  published  a  White  Paper  describing  how  the  protocol  was  used  to  help caregivers  to  collectively  process  the  complex  and  challenging  feelings  and  emotions  that  may  arise when  caring  for  the  injured  and  dying  after  a  traumatic  event  –  in  this  case,  the  Boston  Marathon bombing12.  It  is  notable  that  one  of  the  facilitators  observed  how  she  was  struck  by  the  fear  that  people were  facing  about  attending  the  race  one  year  later,  indicating  that  they  were  not  just  processing  the past  but  also  facing  the  fear  that  something  dangerous  could  also  happen  in  the  future12. The  World  Conference  on  Disaster  Risk  Reduction  in  Sendai6  recently  issued  a  15-­year  action  plan urging  countries  forward  on  several  fronts.  Five  of  the  seven  targets  identified  are  particularly  relevant for  health.  Moreover,  this  Framework  is  only  one  of  four  global  level  deals  to  be  finalised  this  year,  the others  being  on  sustainable  development  and  climate  change,  as  well  as  the  first  World  Humanitarian Summit  in  2016.  More  and  more  targets  and  processes  continue  to  emerge  that  place  ever  increasing burdens  on  disaster  management  staff,  in  all  parts  of  the  policy  and  practice  arena There  is  a  risk  that  in  focusing  on  the  delivery  of  actions  related  to  these  international  frameworks  that disaster  management  becomes  depersonalised,  and  becomes  disconnected  in  a  critical  way  from  its core  goals  of  reducing  risks  and  impacts  of  disasters  while  improving  lives  and  livelihoods.  In conjunction  with  these  developments,  and  increasing  reliance  and  focus  on  using  ‘Big  Data’  to  unlock some  of  the  public  health  challenges  of  the  modern  world  can  lead  to  the  use  of  cognitive  heuristics  that can  lead  to  both  blindness  to  scale  and  empathy  loss.  Though  there  is  little  doubt  that  a  more  strategic and  purposeful  interrogation  of  complex,  large  datasets  may  result  in  fresh  insights  to  deliver  the  core goals  of  DRR,  this  is  but  one  of  many  tools  available  to  disaster  and  health  managers.  The  associated risk  is  that  large  numbers  and  datasets  can  be  dehumanising,  and  disaster  management  and  health professionals  need  to  be  sensitised  to  this13. The  ethos  and  protocols  offered  by  Schwartz  Rounds  offers  an  opportunity  to  reduce  an  increased  risk of  dehumanisation  and  empathy  loss  that  a  focus  on  global  scale  frameworks,  or international/national/regional  datasets  might  bring.  In  healthcare  settings  it  has  not  been  unusual  for  a false  dichotomy  to  be  set-­up:  that  once  must  choose  between  compassionate  or  competent  care, assuming  that  you  cannot  have  both.  The  evidence  indicates  that  this  is  untrue14.  Organisations  that focus  on  delivering  compassionate  care  benefit  from  lower  staff  turnover,  higher  retention,  recruitment of  more  highly  qualified  staff,  and  better  health  outcomes.  Moreover,  caregivers  who  are  able  to express  compassion  for  patients,  families,  and  each  other  experience  higher  job  satisfaction,  less  stress and  a  greater  sense  of  teamwork.  A  similar  set  of  processes  supported  by  careful  facilitation  that  enable disaster  managers  and  their  interdisciplinary  colleagues  to  regularly  discuss  the  social  and  emotional dimensions  of  their  work  in  an  open  and  honest  manner  may  help  to  deliver  similar  benefits  in  disaster management  settings.  Staff  can  be  provided  with  an  opportunity  to  share  their  experiences,  thoughts and  feelings  on  thought-­proving  subjects  drawn  from  real-­life  disaster  response  and  recovery  cases. The  critical  premise  is  that  staff  are  better  able  to  make  personal  connections  with  their  colleagues  and those  they  are  trying  to  assist  when  they  have  greater  insight  into  their  own  responses  and  feelings.  In this  way,  Schwartz  Rounds  or  similar  processes  can  decrease  feelings  of  stress  and  isolation,  and increase  openness  to  giving  and  receiving  support. http://currents.plos.org/disasters/article/kindling-kindness-for-compassionate-disaster-management/

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A  focus  on  the  impact  of  the  human  scale  and  impact  of  working  in  disaster  management,  whether  in  a health  context  or  more  broadly,  can  help  to  increase  the  sense  that  staff  feel  supported  in  their  work, and  can  still  be  in  touch  with  their  empathic  concern  when  working  in  difficult  contents  –  from  active disaster  response  to  working  to  deliver  actions  determined  by  international  agreements.  In  this  way,  we can  help  and  support  our  most  valued  resource  –  our  skilled  workforce  –  to  deliver  effective,  competent, and  compassionate  disaster  management.

He aha te mea nui o te ao What is the most important thing in the world? He tangata, he tangata, he tangata It is the people, it is the people, it is the people. —  Maori  proverb

References 1. Johal  S,  Mounsey  Z,  Tuohy  R,  Johnston  D.  Coping  with  Disaster:  General  Practitioners’  Perspectives on  the  Impact  of  the  Canterbury  Earthquakes.  Version  1.  PLoS  Curr.  2014  April  2;;  6 2. Johal  S,  Mounsey  Z,  Tuohy  R,  Johnston  D.  (2014b).  Patient  Reactions  after  the  Canterbury Earthquakes  2010-­11:  A  Primary  Care  Perspective.  Version  1.  PLoS  Curr.  2014;;October  2;;6 3. Johal  S,  Mounsey  Z.  (2015).  Finding  positives  after  disaster:  Insights  from  nurses  following  the  2010-­ 2011  earthquake  sequence  in  Canterbury,  NZ.  Australasian  Emergency  Nursing  Journal,  2015;;  in  press 4. Benedek  DM,  Fullerton  C,  Ursan,  RJ.  2007.  First  responders:  mental  health  consequences  of  natural and  human-­made  disasters  for  public  health  and  public  safety  workers.  Annu  Rev  Publ  Health.  2007;; (28):55–68. 5. Byrne  MK,  Lerias  D,  Sullivan  NL.  Predicting  vicarious  traumatization  in  those  indirectly  exposed  to bushfires.  Stress  Health,  2006;;(22):167–177. 6. United  Nations  International  Strategy  for  Disaster  Reduction  (UNISDR).  Sendai  framework  for disaster  risk  reduction  2015−2030.  2015;;  website: http://www.wcdrr.org/uploads/Sendai_Framework_for_Disaster_Risk_Reduction_2015-­2030.pdf. Accessed  Jul  22,  2015. 7. The  Mid  Staffordshire  NHS  Foundation  Trust  Public  Inquiry,  February  2012;;  website: http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20150407084003/http://www.midstaffspublicinquiry.com/report Accessed  July  22,  2015 8. Schwartz  B.  A  Patient’s  Story.  1995;;  Boston  Globe,  July  16,  website: https://www.bostonglobe.com/magazine/1995/07/16/patient-­ story/q8ihHg8LfyinPA25Tg5JRN/story.html#  Accessed  July  15,  2015 9. Goodrich  J.  Supporting  hospital  staff  to  provide  compassionate  care:  Do  Schwartz  Center  Rounds work  in  English  hospitals?  J  R  Soc  Med,  2012;;105(3):117-­122. 10. Goodman  Research  Group.  Schwartz  Center  Rounds  Evaluation  Report.  2008;;  Cambridge,  MA: Goodman  Research  Group.  Website: http://www.theschwartzcenter.org/media/PTXAAE65CHR5UU4.pdf  Accessed  July  15,  2015 http://currents.plos.org/disasters/article/kindling-kindness-for-compassionate-disaster-management/

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11. Sanghavi  DM.  (2006)  What  makes  for  a  compassionate  patient-­caregiver  relationship?  Jt  Comm  J Qual  Patient  Saf,  2006;;  (32)5:283–292. 12. The  Schwartz  Center  for  Compassionate  Healthcare,  White  Paper.  2014.  website: http://www.theschwartzcenter.org/media/81BIRIK40MBJ72N.pdf  Accessed  July  15,  2015. 13. Harrison  M.  Large  numbers  are  dehumanising,  so  should  big  data  worry  us?  The  Guardian, 2015,16  April.  website;;  http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/apr/16/large-­numbers-­ dehumanising-­so-­should-­big-­data-­worry-­us  Accessed  on  July  17,  2015. 14. Schwartz  Center  for  Compassionate  Healthcare,  White  Paper  (2015).  Building  Compassion  into  the Bottom  Line:  The  Role  of  Compassionate  Care  and  Patient  Experience  in  35  U.S.  Hospitals  and  Health Systems

http://currents.plos.org/disasters/article/kindling-kindness-for-compassionate-disaster-management/

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