Sample Strategies to Enhance Employee Support and Engagement

Description: This resource from Rose Brooks Center (the largest domestic violence agency in Missouri, USA) is a sample of key practices in 10 areas used to "engage staff, build strength, collective resilience, and at the same time improve services for survivors" (pg. 1). 

The headings for the key practices are as follows:

    1- Hiring process
        Organised and thoughtful hiring process
        Staff onboarding and new hire training
    2- Staff/employee performance evaluation
    3- Support to address trauma exposure (secondary trauma)
        Staff wellness
        Organisational response to vicarious trauma
        Flexibility/work-life balance
    4- Compensation
        Salary
        Leave time
        Benefits
    5- Staff development
        Meaningful and challenging development plans
        Training
    6- Leadership strategies
        Integrate staff retention into agency policy, formal practices, and resource development
        Staff involvement and feedback to inform staff retention strategies
        Leadership conducts annual evaluation of factors impacting staff retention, quality of services, and sustained agency operations
    7- Workplace environment and culture
        Space
        Employee feedback/input
    8- Communication
        Management transparency
    9- Organisation staff meetings
    10- Clear mission and values
        Sense of purpose in the workplace

What's the evidence base for this resource: This resource is a sample of Rose Brooks Center's policies and procedures, and does not provide any evidence itself. However, the agency is recognised by accrediting bodies as adhering to best practice standards and has won awards for its services.


Potential uses and limitations: This resource is a useful high-level map of organisational strategies to enhance employee support/engagement and address vicarious trauma. It does not provide detailed guidance for any particular issue, but may serve as inspiration or generate ideas on organisational and workplace strategies.


Where it comes from: This resource was presented as a handout within the webinar 'Strategies to Enhance Employee Resilience and Engagement within Survivor-Serving Organizations' hosted by Futures Without Violence in May 2020. Rose Brooks Center's Chief Operating Officer was one of three presenters in the webinar.

Rose Brooks Center is the largest domestic violence agency in the American state of Missouri. The agency has 100 employees and reaches approximately 15,000 individuals annually.


When Compassion Hurts: Burnout, Vicarious Trauma and Secondary Trauma in Prenatal and Early Childhood Service Providers

Description: Comprehensive resource book including information about Vicarious trauma and related issues. While many of the practical tools are for individual level reflection, there is clear discussion about risk factors and protective factors in the work environment. Also addresses the broader community context, including cultural practices and social inequality. Includes worksheets and reflection guides.

Chapter headings:

Definitions
Biology of Stress and Trauma
Signs and Symptoms
Risk Factors
Protective Factors
Resilience and Self-care
Reflective Practice
Taking Action

 Link to resource


What's the evidence base for this resource:  Based on comprehensive literature summaries and extensive consultation in the field.

 

Potential uses and limitation: The resource is created for Early Childhood services, however much of the content is relevant for all types of trauma-related services.

The practical tools (e.g. worksheets, assessment guides) tend to be geared towards individual level self-care, even though the work environment is clearly discussed as a key factor.

 

Where it comes from: Best Start Resource Centre, Ontario, Canada.


Creating a Trauma-Informed and Disability Inclusive Workplace

Description: This set of Supervisory Guides provides advice on creating trauma informed workplaces that are disability inclusive for both staff and clients.

The four themes covered are:

Part 1: Hiring
Part 2: Onboarding New Staff
Part 3: Supervision
Part 4: Supporting Staff with Boundaries and Safety

 Downloadable from the Boston Area Rape Crisis Center website.


What's the evidence base for this resource: These are practice based resources, developed from the experiences of partner organisations.

 

Potential uses and limitation: They are best used along with in-person, interactive training to allow executive leadership, human resources, and supervisors the opportunity to practice skills and discuss challenges and ideas with each other. Particularly helpful to support supervisors prepare for conversations about both accessibility and vicarious trauma with new staff members.

 

Where it comes from: US based coalition MASS (Movement for Access, Safety & Survivors),



Resisting Burnout With Justice-Doing

Description: This series of video presentations critiques the notions of 'burnout' and 'vicarious trauma'. Instead, Dr Reynolds suggests 'spiritual pain' as a more accurate term to describe what happens when workers are faced with the effects that oppression has on the lives of clients. She argues that the key question for workers and organisations is not 'how is your mental health?', but rather 'how are we treating each other?'

Dr Reynolds has also written about her approach to 'centring ethics' in supervision to explore the harms experienced by workers in this article which she has made freely available through her website.

Dr Vikki Reynolds is an activist/therapist who works to bridge the worlds of social justice activism with community work & therapy.

 

What's the evidence base for this resource:  Dr Reynold's experience includes supervision and therapy with refugees and survivors of torture, sexualized violence counsellors, mental health and substance misuse counsellors, housing and shelter workers, activists and working alongside gender and sexually diverse communities.

 

Potential uses and limitation: Provides a perspective on "vicarious trauma" that challenges clinical, symptom focused frameworks. Useful for workplaces that place ethical considerations at the centre of their work, to think about how teams and organisations can develop effective practices of collective care and accountability.

 

Where it comes from: Dr Vikki Reynolds' professional development presentation for the BC Settlement and Language Service Providers' Provincial Meeting hosted by AMSSA, 2017.






Compassion Satisfaction & Compassion Fatigue

Description: A range of resources related to the Professional Quality of Life (ProQOL) assessment tool.

What's the evidence base for this resource: The ProQOL is a widely used measure of Compassion Satisfaction and Compassion Fatigue. The training slides describe how the ProQOL conceptualises and measures these constructs. It is not a standardised psychological test.

Potential uses and limitations: Useful for organisations wanting to introduce ProQOL as a baseline measure to inform a broader organisational response. Note that the ProQOL does not measure Vicarious Trauma as a discreet construct, it measures Compassion Satisfaction and Compassion Fatigue (in two sub-scales: Burnout and Work Related Traumatic Stress).

Note that ProQOL, and this material, is mostly focussed on individual level factors.

Where it comes from© Beth Hudnall Stamm, 2009. See slide 1 for conditions of use in training and professional development.