What Is A
Competent Emergency And Crisis Intervention Professional?
Revised: May 25, 2013 Emergency and crisis intervention requires professionals who have specialized skills and experience dealing with crises. Unfortunately most professionals lack the training and broad experience necessary to conduct competent crisis interventions. The ability to assess and intervene during emergencies is not a routine skill. Most doctors, counselors and psychotherapists have good intentions but don't realize how unstable, critical and demanding a crisis can become. Incorrect assessment, missed opportunities, unskillful behavior and mistakes can prolong a crisis, create new problems, or turn an urgent problem into a dangerous emergency. In the entire field of mental health, crisis intervention has the highest incidence of negligence and malpractice that results in significant harm. Most of the negligence and malpractice in crisis intervention goes unrecognized by consumers and even professionals. Finding a competent and caring crisis intervention professional can be difficult. Very few practitioners identify themselves as a crisis intervention professional. The mere fact that a person provides crisis intervention services or is licensed in medicine, social work, counseling or psychology does not mean they are competent to deal with an emergency or an urgent problem. In addition, there is a growing practice in managed health care to employ people with lower qualifications and those professionals who earn the lowest pay. Many people working in crisis intervention have no formal crisis intervention training and may have only a bachelors or masters degree. Some are not qualified for licensure. The following are essential background and characteristics of competent crisis intervention professionals.
copyright 2002 to 2008, Michael G. Conner |