Crisis counselling online : building rapport with suicidal youth

Despite a documented increase in the use of online counselling services by youth, little research has been conducted on how counsellors establish rapport in the absence of voice tone and conventional spoken language. As a result, no empirically validated guidelines exist for crisis counselling wit...

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Main Author: Timm, Maria
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33792
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-337922014-03-26T03:37:48Z Crisis counselling online : building rapport with suicidal youth Timm, Maria Despite a documented increase in the use of online counselling services by youth, little research has been conducted on how counsellors establish rapport in the absence of voice tone and conventional spoken language. As a result, no empirically validated guidelines exist for crisis counselling with youth online. Research shows that youth who access online services are often in extreme distress or suicidal. Youth’s increasing affinity for online communication, coupled with a lack of research in this area, necessitate an examination of how rapport is built online. The current study was a qualitative exploration of client-counsellor interactions in online crisis counselling sessions with suicidal youth. Data sources consisted of transcripts obtained from an online crisis chat service for youth. A collective case study was conducted, using content analysis of client-counsellor interactions followed by an examination of patterns across cases. It was found that tentative language, open-ended questions, and figurative language were used most in the Initial Contact phase and that interventions tended to be connection-building in nature. In the Risk Assessment phase, providing a context for questions, showing acceptance of coping methods, and statements of care were the most frequent interventions, and interventions tended to be connection-building in nature. In the Termination phase, summaries, questions about coping, expressions of care, and emoticons were used; connection-building and action-oriented types of interventions were both used. Overall, it was found that the counsellor tended to mirror the language patterns of the youth and that threats to rapport were handled with genuineness, often using informal language. 2011-04-19T16:30:00Z 2011-04-19T16:30:00Z 2011 2011-04-19T16:30:00Z 2011-05 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33792 eng University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Despite a documented increase in the use of online counselling services by youth, little research has been conducted on how counsellors establish rapport in the absence of voice tone and conventional spoken language. As a result, no empirically validated guidelines exist for crisis counselling with youth online. Research shows that youth who access online services are often in extreme distress or suicidal. Youth’s increasing affinity for online communication, coupled with a lack of research in this area, necessitate an examination of how rapport is built online. The current study was a qualitative exploration of client-counsellor interactions in online crisis counselling sessions with suicidal youth. Data sources consisted of transcripts obtained from an online crisis chat service for youth. A collective case study was conducted, using content analysis of client-counsellor interactions followed by an examination of patterns across cases. It was found that tentative language, open-ended questions, and figurative language were used most in the Initial Contact phase and that interventions tended to be connection-building in nature. In the Risk Assessment phase, providing a context for questions, showing acceptance of coping methods, and statements of care were the most frequent interventions, and interventions tended to be connection-building in nature. In the Termination phase, summaries, questions about coping, expressions of care, and emoticons were used; connection-building and action-oriented types of interventions were both used. Overall, it was found that the counsellor tended to mirror the language patterns of the youth and that threats to rapport were handled with genuineness, often using informal language.
author Timm, Maria
spellingShingle Timm, Maria
Crisis counselling online : building rapport with suicidal youth
author_facet Timm, Maria
author_sort Timm, Maria
title Crisis counselling online : building rapport with suicidal youth
title_short Crisis counselling online : building rapport with suicidal youth
title_full Crisis counselling online : building rapport with suicidal youth
title_fullStr Crisis counselling online : building rapport with suicidal youth
title_full_unstemmed Crisis counselling online : building rapport with suicidal youth
title_sort crisis counselling online : building rapport with suicidal youth
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33792
work_keys_str_mv AT timmmaria crisiscounsellingonlinebuildingrapportwithsuicidalyouth
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