FDNY Crisis Counseling: Innovative Responses to 9/11 Firefighters, Families, and Communities危机辅导:消防员、家庭与社会911式危机创新性应对
分類: 图书,进口原版书,人文社科 Non Fiction ,
作者: Paul Greene,Dianne Kane 著
出 版 社: 吉林长白山
出版时间: 2006-4-1字数:版次: 1页数: 268印刷时间: 2006/04/01开本: 16开印次: 1纸张: 胶版纸I S B N : 9780471714255包装: 精装内容简介
Advance praise for FDNY Crisis Counseling.
"This riveting book . . . underscores the need for creativity, modesty, clinical acumen and cultural sensitivity in response to trauma. One ends up in awe both of the lost and surviving firefighters and their courageous families. And the reader emerges with a profound respect for the extraordinary CSU staff who literally came to their rescue."
—Paul A. Kurzman, PhD, ACSW, Professor and Chair of Work, Employment, and Rehabilitation Programs at the Hunter College School of Social Work of the City University of New York
"This remarkable book comprises a major contribution to the crisis treatment literature. Overall, many will benefit from this careful, well documented explication of an approach to disaster counseling over time."
—Katherine Shear, MD, Professor of Psychiatry in Social Work, Columbia University School of Social Work
Developing and implementing effective crisis counseling techniques in response to mass trauma
Shortly after the September 11th attacks, as the New York City Fire Department (FDNY) started their recovery work in the ruins of the World Trade Center, a large-scale mental health response within the FDNY swung into action, initiated by staff in the department's Counseling Services Unit (CSU). FDNY Crisis Counseling: Innovative Responses to 9/11 Firefighters, Families, and Communities tells the story of this ongoing response from the perspective of those who put it into practice.
Using narrative, case studies, and other real-world examples, this unique new resource lays out a roadmap for applying innovative approaches to disaster response and the prevention of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. The pioneering efforts of the CSU present a model for all mental health professionals working with organizations, communities, individuals, and families.
A brief history of the CSU
FDNY culture and the impact of 9/11
Shaping services to meet 9/11 needs
Providing help to families, including widows and children
Partnering with other agencies and cargivers to deliver services.
目录
Preface
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Coping with Chaos
The Counseling Service Unit Pre-9/11
The CSU Response to 9/11
Assessing the Community
Receiving Outside Help
CSU Expansion
Connecting with the Firefighting Community
Connecting with Families
Family Liaisons
Moving Forward
Defining a Timeline for Your Community
Chapter 3 Understanding Culture
Cultural Identity
Applying Cultural Identity to Intervention
Firefighting History and Tradition in New York
Modern Firefighting in New York City
The FDNY as a Paramilitary Organization
Everyday Life in the Firehouse
Rituals and Rank
Common Bonds
Family Ties That Bind
Heroics, Media, and Politics
The Brotherhood and Its Loss
Chapter 4 Shaping Services to Meet Emerging Needs
Assessment and Planning
How the Nature of the Event Shapes the Response
Listening and Responding to Emerging Needs
Strengthening the CSU Identity
Establishing Provider Networks
Building a Staff: Both Peer and Professional
Care for the Caregivers
Keeping the Machinery Going: Funding and Resource Development
Thoughts for the Future
Chapter 5 Providing Help in the Workplace:
The Firehouse Clinician Project
The Mindset of FDNY Firefighters
The Intervention: Placing Clinicians in Firehouses
The Population: Defining Who Needed Services
Theoretical Orientation
Intervention Goal
Selecting and Training Firehouse Clinicians
The First Visit to the Firehouse
Revamping Professional Boundaries
Preparing to Be a Firehouse Clinician
Termination Countertransference: The Time to Leave the Firehouse
Chapter 6 Modifying Psychotherapy for Individuals
Individual Psychotherapy with Firefighters
The Parameters of Individual Treatment
Choosing Individual Psychotherapy
Implications for Psychotherapy Technique
Summary
Chapter 7 Finding Comfort in Groups
Why Group Intervention?
Therapy Groups versus Support Groups
Trauma Groups
On-Site Interventions
Office-Based Groups: Middle and Later Phase
Importance of Homogeneity in Group Formation
Traumatic Bereavement Groups
Single-Session Groups
A Final Word about Groups
Chapter 8 Providing a Home-Based Therapeutic Program for
Chapter 9 Strengthening Connections within the Family at Home
Chapter 10 Assisting Retirees in Transition
Chapter 11 Conclusion
Postscript
Reerences
Index