Brief Crisis Intervention after a Disaster : Client and Counsellor Experiences and Perceptions of Change following the February 22nd Christchurch Earthquakes

This thesis set out to explore the experiences of clients and counsellors in immediate crisis intervention shortly after a major earthquake. It explored the experiences and perceptions of change during counselling for both clients and counsellor, all of which were exposed to the disaster. This study...

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Main Author: Richards, Alexandra Ngarepa Jane
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Psychology 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/8736
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-87362015-03-30T15:31:27ZBrief Crisis Intervention after a Disaster : Client and Counsellor Experiences and Perceptions of Change following the February 22nd Christchurch EarthquakesRichards, Alexandra Ngarepa JanecrisisinterventiondisastercounsellingperceptionsThis thesis set out to explore the experiences of clients and counsellors in immediate crisis intervention shortly after a major earthquake. It explored the experiences and perceptions of change during counselling for both clients and counsellor, all of which were exposed to the disaster. This study supported the idea of counsellors needing to adapt to the context of post-disaster counselling and addressing client’s immediate needs. Having both been through the same disaster meant counsellors were often going through similar experiences and emotions as their clients during this time. This led counsellors to develop a greater sense of connection and understanding of their client, as well as showing more emotional responsivity and self-disclosure. This was experienced as different to their normal therapy engagement. The implications of these counsellor responses were seen to be helpful, but at times had the potential to be hindering for counselling. Clients valued their counsellor’s techniques and personal qualities but often failed to identify what contribution they, themselves, made to change processes. The differing nature of counselling in post-disaster areas, as gauged by this study may help inform expectations and experiences regarding provision of post-disaster acute interventions.University of Canterbury. Psychology2013-12-11T02:21:58Z2013-12-11T02:21:58Z2013Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/8736enNZCUCopyright Alexandra Ngarepa Jane RICHARDShttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic crisis
intervention
disaster
counselling
perceptions
spellingShingle crisis
intervention
disaster
counselling
perceptions
Richards, Alexandra Ngarepa Jane
Brief Crisis Intervention after a Disaster : Client and Counsellor Experiences and Perceptions of Change following the February 22nd Christchurch Earthquakes
description This thesis set out to explore the experiences of clients and counsellors in immediate crisis intervention shortly after a major earthquake. It explored the experiences and perceptions of change during counselling for both clients and counsellor, all of which were exposed to the disaster. This study supported the idea of counsellors needing to adapt to the context of post-disaster counselling and addressing client’s immediate needs. Having both been through the same disaster meant counsellors were often going through similar experiences and emotions as their clients during this time. This led counsellors to develop a greater sense of connection and understanding of their client, as well as showing more emotional responsivity and self-disclosure. This was experienced as different to their normal therapy engagement. The implications of these counsellor responses were seen to be helpful, but at times had the potential to be hindering for counselling. Clients valued their counsellor’s techniques and personal qualities but often failed to identify what contribution they, themselves, made to change processes. The differing nature of counselling in post-disaster areas, as gauged by this study may help inform expectations and experiences regarding provision of post-disaster acute interventions.
author Richards, Alexandra Ngarepa Jane
author_facet Richards, Alexandra Ngarepa Jane
author_sort Richards, Alexandra Ngarepa Jane
title Brief Crisis Intervention after a Disaster : Client and Counsellor Experiences and Perceptions of Change following the February 22nd Christchurch Earthquakes
title_short Brief Crisis Intervention after a Disaster : Client and Counsellor Experiences and Perceptions of Change following the February 22nd Christchurch Earthquakes
title_full Brief Crisis Intervention after a Disaster : Client and Counsellor Experiences and Perceptions of Change following the February 22nd Christchurch Earthquakes
title_fullStr Brief Crisis Intervention after a Disaster : Client and Counsellor Experiences and Perceptions of Change following the February 22nd Christchurch Earthquakes
title_full_unstemmed Brief Crisis Intervention after a Disaster : Client and Counsellor Experiences and Perceptions of Change following the February 22nd Christchurch Earthquakes
title_sort brief crisis intervention after a disaster : client and counsellor experiences and perceptions of change following the february 22nd christchurch earthquakes
publisher University of Canterbury. Psychology
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/8736
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