Critical Incident Stress Services
A debriefing is a group meeting or discussion about a
distressing critical incident. Based upon the core principles of education and crisis
intervention, the critical incident stress debriefing is designed to mitigate the impact
of a psychologically traumatic event (a critical incident) and to assist personnel in
recovering as quickly as possible from the stress associated with the event. The formal
critical incident stress debriefing is a structured group meeting using a seven-stage
intervention process.
A debriefing is provided by the Nebraska Critical Incident Stress Management Program
through a specially trained team of volunteers that includes a mental health professional
and peer support personnel form the emergency services. The peer support is from a similar
service (such as law enforcement, fire service, emergency medical services) that didn't
participate in the actual event.
Defusing is a shortened version of the debriefing. Defusings
take place immediately or relatively soon after the critical incident is finished and
typically last less than one hour. The leader of a defusing may be a peer support person
or one of the mental health support people on the critical incident stress management
team. Defusings are designed to either eliminate the need to provide a formal debriefing
or to enhance the debriefing if it is still necessary to provide one.
Critical Incident Stress Management Program
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