Introduction To Cisd
Introduction To Cisd
Introduction To Cisd
INCIDENT STRESS
DEBRIEFING (CISD)
Important considerations and preparation
Introduction
• The Critical Incident Stress Debriefing (CISD) is the
most complex of all the Critical Incident Stress
Management (CISM) interventions.
• This is so whether the process is employed by CISM
teams in their work with emergency personnel, or
Community Response Teams(CRT) which work
with the citizens of various communities, schools
and other organizations after traumatic events.
• The CISD was originally designed to reduce stress
in emergency personnel after extremely traumatic
experiences.
• In other words, the average victims of the
traumatic experience does not have to keep up a
good “front” before his or her colleagues as a police
officer or fire fighter or other rescuer might have to
do.
• CISD is a useful tool for stress mitigation when
applied properly. The overuse of the procedure on
relatively minor events is not a proper application
of the process.
• Nor is it a proper application for organizations to
use too broadly for events that are not truly critical
incidents to nature, such as mediating
management-employee conflict or investigating
employee’s behavior. Other procedures would be
more applicable to these situations.
Debriefing Defined
• A CISD is a group process . It can best defines a group meeting or
discussion, employing both crisis intervention and educational
processes, targeted toward mitigating or resolving the
psychological distress associated with a critical incident (a
traumatic event).
• The CISD team consist of one mental health professional and one,
two or three peer support personnel when a CISD is applied to
emergency services personnel or disaster workers.
• The structure of the team often is modified when a debriefing is
applied to community groups, schools, industries or other
populations.
• The CISD team is spaced more or less equally among the group
members.
• The door to the debriefing room should be closed, but not locked.
• If unwanted people show up, that peer does not permit them to
enter the room.
Figure 10.2
Figure 10.3
Figure 10.4
• They should be instructed by means of a sign to knock in order to
get into the room
• The more a team knows about the incident before starting the
debriefing, the better they will be able to do their job.
TEAM MEMBER DEBRIEFING ROLES
• The CISM team must perform numerous functions during and
after the CISD. No person can perform all the functions single-
handedly and expect to do an excellent job with all of them. The
tasks of the debriefing must be divided up among the team
members. Peer support and mental health professionals need to
blend their talents and abilities for the benefit of the entire group.
TEAM LEADER
• The team leader is the person who is assigned to be primarily
leader in the group.
• The team leader starts the questions for each segment of the CISD.
TEAM LEADER
• Whether he or she is in the term leader role, needs to keep a careful eye on
the overall psychological well-being of the group and especially on any one in
the group who may ne experiencing more distress than the others.
• The team leader should be very involved in the teaching aspects of the
debriefing and attempt to help people clarify their own perspectives of the
incident.
• The team leader frequently has to weave the various aspects of the group
experience into a coordinated patterns so that people can recognize their
own part of the experience as a part of a bigger picture.
• Good team leaders develop their skills over time and with a variety if
experiences.
CO-LEADER
• If the debriefing is with the emergency services professions, the co-
leader is one of the peers.
• The co-leader’s main role is to share and support the leadership of the
group with the team leader.
• The co-leader watches the group members for signs of distress and
questions, clarifies and makes statements whenever appropriate.
CO-LEADER
• The co-leader plays a significant role in the teaching phase of the
debriefing.
• The doorkeeper has another vital role. If someone leaves the debriefing,
it is the doorkeeper's job to go out after that person and encourage that
person to return.
• The doorkeeper simply has to remind the person to come back into the
debriefing as soon as possible.