|
My Training at the Victims of Violence
Programme - Cambridge Hospital, Harvard Medical School
Maria Minkova
I have been working as a psychologist
at "Animus Association" Foundation since 1997.
After gaining some practical experience I felt the need
of specialised knowledge on helping the recovery process
in survivors of violence. This made me look for possibilities
to specialize abroad. My need of further training coincided
with the overall effort of the whole team to raise the
level of professionalism of our work.
Between September 1999 and August 2000 I was a trainee
at the Victims of Violence Programme (VOV) at the Psychiatric
Department of Cambridge Hospital affiliated with Harvard
Medical School (Cambridge, Massachusets). This is one
of the first specialised Programmes providing psychotherapeutic
services and implementing researches on psychological
trauma. In the 70-ies many grass-roots organisations
defending women's rights were established. The informal
self-support groups of Vietnam veterans emerged at the
same time. After this the professionals from the helping
professions themselves also come to terms with the need
of specialised centers for helping people suffering
the consequences of psychological trauma. Answering
this need the Vicitms of Violence Programme was established
16 years ago.
The VOV approach in the work with survivors
of violence is based on the ecological view on the psychological
trauma (developed by Mary Harvey, PhD) and the three-
stage model of recovery (developed by Judith Herman,
MD). It promotes the idea that there are distinguishable
phases in the process of recovery and different therapeutic
interventions are appropriate at each of them. The psychological
trauma is viewed in the context of individual development
and social situation of the individual. The key role
of the supportive environment for a successful recovery
from the consequences of traumatic experience is proved.
Each year psychologists, psychiatrists and social workers
specialize at the porgramme. The training consists of
conducting individual psychotherapy under supervision,
conducting group psychotherapy under supervision and
participation in clinical discussions and attending
seminars.
I think of my training at the VOV as
a rare opportunity. I had the chance to work with patients
from a different culture in a different language. My
meetings with them made me realize the universal character
of the consequences of psychological trauma but it also
made me think of the diversity of their manifestation.
I became interested in the influence of the social attitudes
and the cultural environment on the recovery process.
As e result I have developed a theoretical course "Consequences
of Violent Experience: Clinical Manifestation of Psychological
Trauma" which became part of the MA Programmeme
in Clinical Social Work at the New Bulgarian University,
Sofia, Bulgaria.
My training at the VOV contributes
to the overall raising of the professional level of
the whole service. Through my experience within the
well-organised team of the VOV Programme I have learned
a lot about the professional standards in our field.
This knowledge was introduced in Animus through elaborating
the procedures for in-take and assessment of clients,
documenting and data gathering. Another direct result
of my training introduced in our current work would
be the group therapy sessions for survivors of violence,
orientated towards overcoming the post-traumatic consequences.
After this one year I feel more involved in the issue
of psychological trauma. I have learned more about psychtherapeutic
help, my research interest was awakened. As a result
I feel more motivated to work with survivors of violence.
My one-year absence from Animus Association gave me
the distance needed to be able to assess the development
of the service in comparison with other similar centers
abroad. That is why I feel more confidence in the approach
undertaken by our team now. I see the work of my organisation
and my personal contribution as a part of an international
movement defending the women's right of nonviolence
and this gives me e a sense of meaning.
|