- Home
- Guide to This Website
- Take Action for Human Rights
- Disabled
- GHB - Xyrem
- Human Rights
- Human Persons vs Corporations
- Law Enforcement
- Legal
- Mental Health Rights
- Medical Fraud
- PTSD
- Psychiatric Rights
- Residental Treatment Abuse
- Sexual Assault
- Whistleblowers
- Native American
- Women's Rights
- Aertoxic Syndrome
- Food & Drug Administration - Off Label
- The Emperor's New Clothes
- NAFTA Foreign Investor Privileges
- MWAN UN Reports
- Supreme Court Decision - Citizens United
- Do You Know What a Dragon Looks Like?
- Mass Murder and Psychiatric Drugs
- Patients not Consumers
- La Experimentación no Consensual Spanish
- Medical Deferred Action Immigration Cases
- Voting Rights for Residents of the District of Columbia
- Benefits Trafficking
“All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.”
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Article 1
Visitors
2666265
What is Vicarious Trauma?
Vicarious trauma is the emotional cost of witnessing other people's suffering and need. Vicarious trauma is essentially the cost of empathy - the ability to identify with another person, to understand and feel another person’s pain and joy. While it is true that many human rights advocates, whistleblowers and humanitarian workers are changed positively by their experiences, there can also be negative changes caused by caring for and caring about others who have been hurt. When you care about other people and you are committed and feel responsible to help them, there can be changes in yourself – changes in your psychological, physical and spiritual well-being. This process of change happens over time so it is a cumulative effect of one's contact with the survivors of human rights abuses, violence, crime or disaster. It is the effect on the person who is trying to help others. It is the emotional cost of attempting to help those are struggling and the on-going stress of dealing daily with continuing human rights violations and civil rights violations. Watching others who have experienced neglect of essential needs, abuse, loss and sometimes outright cruelty, is a heavy burden to bear for one committed to help. Everyone has their own experience and although it is impossible to actually live in someone else's shoes, it is possible to care deeply and be affected by the trauma and tragedy of their lives. Empathy is when you care about and identify with the pain of people. When you have listened compassionately to those who have endured terrible things, you bring their grief, fear, anger, and despair into your own awareness and experience their suffering vicariously. Those who work with whistleblowers, whether they are legal advocates, attorneys, social workers, religious leaders, human rights advocates, mandated reporters, law enforcement officers, US attorneys and prosecutors, are often dealing with persons who may have experienced terrifying violence and profound losses. Many of these people are desperate and some have lost hope. Thus in the act of trying to defend the human rights and civil rights of others, human rights defenders and advocates assume a heavy responsibility by rising to the challenge to confront the wrong and conveying the message, “I’m here to help. There is hope.” The more compassionate, caring and committed one feels, the more likely one is to feel vicarious trauma when hearing or seeing the suffering of others. Thus feeling deeply committed and responsible can contribute to the process of vicarious trauma.
Spiritual Well-being
Witnessing other's great personal suffering and tragedy and attempting to help them through the challenges of an unresponsive governmental system and an uncomprimising and unaccepting community can lead to changes in one's spiritual perceptions and even one's deepest held beliefs that give a sense of meaning and purpose to ones' life. Being able to bring hope to other's in the midst of their despair can give a human rights defender or advocate a feeling of great purpose, hope and expand their spiritual faith.
Courageously facing opposition over and over, almost requires a deep spiritual perspective and by engaging with other survivors/victims of trauma or abuse, one learns to better able to understand and empathize with others. When moral and ethical requests to those in power to affect change, lead to little or no forward movement to correct problems, it is hard to keep hope. But when over and over again, one is confronted with an unresponsive community and governing entities, and when time and time again one's pleas for human rights and civil rights protections are unheeded, it is hard not to get cynical and to possibly loose one's spiritual faith or at least question it's boundaries and deeply held beliefs. This spiritual quest for meaning is central to finding hope in the midst of despair. It is about a deep spiritual journey to re-examine the basic tenets of life and how one is connected to the universe, and to redefine the nature of one's existence and nature of meaning and hope. So essentially, one is forced to either change positively or negatively about one's own religious belief system. This is why spiritual support is so important to whistleblowers and human rights advocates/defenders when they are actively trying to change the system, and to tell truth to power.
The Road to Daybreak: A Spiritual Journey
What are the changes in beliefs that can occur with Vicarious Trauma?
Questioning who one is, who is important in one's life, what gives one's life meaning and purpose, one's relationship to one's professional career and community.
Questions about safety and security, how to protect one's self and those one is advocating for, how much to trust outsiders and those in the community, how to protect the vulnerable survivors/victims from harm, whether one can attain intimacy and safety with another, who to trust with one's safety, how to protect oneself and those who you feel responsible for.
What are the symptoms of Vicarious Trauma?
Anxiety and Fear
Anger, Depression
Flashbacks /Unwanted, Intrusive & Distressing Memories of Retaliation Events
Disorientation
Difficulty Concentrating
Self-blame, Guilt
Shame
Avoidance
Social Isolation
Shutting down or Emotional numbing
Physical health symptoms
Vicarious Trauma can lead to difficulties such as:
Difficulty managing your emotions;
Difficulty accepting or feeling okay about yourself;
Difficulty making good decisions;
Problems managing the boundaries between yourself and others (e.g., taking on too much responsibility, having difficulty leaving work at the end of the day, trying to step in and control other’s lives);
Problems in relationships;
Physical problems such as aches & pains, illnesses, accidents;
Difficulty feeling connected to what’s going on around and within you;
Loss of meaning and hope.
Medical Whistleblower Advocacy Network
MEDICAL WHISTLEBLOWER ADVOCACY NETWORK
P.O. 42700
Washington, DC 20015
MedicalWhistleblowers (at) gmail.com
CONTACT
Educational Materials from Medical Whistleblower
Medical Whistleblower Canary Brochures
Advice to Medical Whistleblowers
Advice to Whistleblower Supporters
The Spiritual Side of Whistleblowing
Your Problem Solving Personality
PTSD - Emotional and Psychological Symptoms
Effects of Whistleblower Retaliation
Behind the Blue Line - Law Enforcement Whistleblowers
Medical Whistleblower Canary Notes
Bridging the Gap - Communicating Across Disciplines
Martin Luther King Jr. , Title 42 and 1983
White Collar Crime and Criminal Intelligence
United Nations Declaration of Human Rights
"Never impose on others what you would not choose for yourself." Confucius
"It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat."
Theodore
Roosevelt- Excerpt from the speech "Citizenship In A Republic",
delivered at the Sorbonne, in Paris, France on 23 April, 1910