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Jonathan Bosworth Counselling Psychologist Johannesburg
16 Seventh Avenue
​Melville
Johannesburg
2092

Mobile: 083 703 5121
Email: [email protected]

The Dangers of Trauma Debriefing

12/5/2013

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Trauma debriefings often have been seen as an important preventative intervention for survivors of trauma.  The trauma survivor is expected to express and process their emotions in this single "counselling" session soon after the actual trauma event.  However, research has shown that this actually may be more detrimental to the trauma survivor than not having an intervention at all.  Despite these findings and specific recommendations by the World Health Organisation trauma debriefing is still a common practice.

Only a fraction of persons who experience trauma will actually go on to have "abnormal" responses to trauma that require psychological intervention.  Most people that experience trauma will understandably go through some distress but are actually able to go on to reconcile their experience by themselves or with the help of their family, friends and community.  Thus forcing people to debrief directly after a trauma may disrupt "normal" processing of the event.  What is also particularly disconcerting about the research findings on trauma debriefings is that many people interviewed about their experience of trauma debriefing expressed they found the trauma debriefing helpful.  However, research actually indicates that the debriefing is still more detrimental than no debriefing despite what the trauma survivor may perceive.

The following article goes into some more detail about this and specifically talks of the dangers of well-intentioned trauma debriefings in the contexts of disaster relief (such as the 2004 Asian tsunami and the more recent events in Boston, Dhaka, Syria and Mali): Minds traumatised by disaster heal themselves without therapy  

It is important to note that some survivors of trauma will experience particular difficulties and symptoms that may require psychological intervention.  These symptoms are likely to  include persistent re-experiencing of the event, avoidance of stimuli associated with the trauma and increased arousal (difficulties sleep, anger, concentration and hyper-vigilance).  These symptoms persist for more than several weeks and cause significant distress, and  impairment in social and occupational functioning.  There are various psychological interventions - that are not debriefings directly after the trauma - that have been shown to help with these difficulties.

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