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De-Escalation Skills

Law Enforcement Academy Asheville-Buncombe Technical Community College Asheville, North Carolina Crisis Intervention Team Training September 27 – October 1, 2010. De-Escalation Skills. Overview. 1 ½ days (12 hours) Lots of role-playing practice in small groups

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De-Escalation Skills

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  1. Law Enforcement AcademyAsheville-Buncombe Technical Community CollegeAsheville, North CarolinaCrisis Intervention Team TrainingSeptember 27 – October 1, 2010 De-Escalation Skills

  2. Overview • 1 ½ days (12 hours) • Lots of role-playing practice in small groups • Goal is for you to feel very confident in your ability to de-escalate • Model = E-LEAP • E = engage (wed. pm) • LEAP = listen, empathize, affirm, partner (thur. am) • Specific strategies for consumers who are disoriented, intoxicated, suicidal, etc. (thur. pm)

  3. Wednesday PM • What is de-escalation • Effective communication • Non-verbals • Behavioral crisis • Engagement

  4. What is verbal de-escalation? • Verbal de-escalation is used during potentially dangerous, or threatening, situation in an attempt to prevent persons from causing harm to us, themselves, or others

  5. Goals of Verbal De-escalation • Open up clear lines of communication • Build trust and validate the consumer’s situation • Get the consumer talking about his situation • Gathering the necessary information make a good resolution

  6. What is De-Escalation • De-escalation is less like a recipe or formula and more like a flexible set of options. • No single set of de-escalation skills: we have tried to put together a effective set of skills by borrowing from multiple approaches • De-escalation will not always work

  7. What is de-escalation • Both officer and consumer safety always remain paramount concerns in a crisis involving a person with mental illness. • Once officers become skilled in de-escalation, they do not simply abandon all the training and experience that came before it. • De-escalation is another tool that officers have at their disposal to be judiciously applied in controlling a potentially volatile situation, rather than serving as a substitute for sound judgment and attentiveness to safety.

  8. Effective Communication • 70% of communication misunderstood • Effective communication is defined as passing information between one person and another that is mutually understood

  9. Effective Communication • Communication becomes more difficult when the person’s ability to understand what you are saying and/or their ability to express their own thoughts or needs are compromised by their symptoms. • When they can’t express their needs, they become more angry and frustrated more quickly and more frequently • Your ability to engage a consumer in conversation and successfully resolve a conflict often depends as much on how you say the words you choose as much as the words themselves.

  10. Barriers to Effective Communication Barriers to communication are the things that keep the meaning of what is being said from being heard: • Pre-judging • Not listening • Criticizing • Name-calling • Engaging in power struggles • Ordering • Threatening • Minimizing • Arguing

  11. Effective Communication

  12. Non-Verbal • It is very important to be able to identify exactly what you are communicating to others non-verbally • You may be trying to de-escalate the situation by talking to the other person, but your body language may be saying something else. The consumer will react to want you are saying with your body language

  13. Personal Space • Persons with mental illness often develop and altered sense of personal space. They require more space than usual to feel comfortable and feel intensely threatened when other people close in on them with no warning. • Invasion or encroachment of personal space tends to heighten or escalate anxiety • Personal space in American culture is about 3 feet • Do not touch a hostile person – they might interpret that as an aggressive action • Announce intention: “I need some space, so I am going to back up.”

  14. Eyes • One eyebrow raised = sternness • Eyes wide open = surprise • A hard stare = threatening gesture • Closing eyes longer than normal = I am not listening

  15. Body Posture Challenging postures that tend to threaten another person and escalate the situation include: • Finger pointing may seem accusing or threatening • Shoulder shrugging may seem uncaring or unknowing • Rigid walking may seem unyielding or challenging • Use slow and deliberate movements—quick actions may surprise or scare the other person

  16. Voice • Tone - Usually unconscious • Volume - A raised voice could create fear or challenges • Rate of speech - Speak slowly – This is usually interpreted as soothing • Inflection of voice - I didn’t say you were stupid

  17. Face • Jaw set with clenched teeth shows that you are not open minded to listening to his or her side of the story • A natural smile is good. A fake smile can aggravate the situation

  18. What is a Behavioral Crisis? • A crisis is a perception of an event or situation as an intolerable difficulty that exceeds the resources and coping mechanisms of the person • Unless the person obtains relief, the crisis has the potential to cause severe behavioral malfunctioning.

  19. Behavioral Crisis? • Crisis intervention is emotional first aid which is designed to assist the person in crisis to return to normal functioning. • The focus of crisis intervention is what’s happening here and how!

  20. Behavioral Crisis 3 reasons that a consumer may be having a behavioral crisis: • Medical condition • Substance use • Psychiatric condition: 1) thought disorder; 2) mood disorder; 3) anxiety disorder; 4) personality disorder

  21. Behavioral Crisis • The majority of encounters that you will have with consumers are because the symptoms of their illness are not under control. Most commonly, this occurs at the initial onset of illness, during a relapse (that can result for a variety of reasons) and when the person s using substances. • The consumer’s behavior is usually a result of his or her illness, rather than being criminally motivated

  22. Consumers typically will have one of 3 feelings • Anger • Fear • Sadness/depression

  23. What you may be seeing . . .

  24. Behavioral Crisis • Given the low likelihood that emotional people in crisis can succeed in rationalizing alternatives, law enforcement responses to emotional people in volatile situations cannot rely on convincing people by making a rational proposal to think differently. Rather, responders need to create a stable and respectful environment within which emotional individuals can take comfort and relief.

  25. Engagement • Be aware of your setting; personal safety first • Move to a safe place if necessary • Allow plenty of space • Persons with mental illnesses often can be expected to process information slowly and to have difficulty remembering things. This includes understanding and remembering instructions given by a police officer.

  26. Engagement • Be aware that a uniform, gun, and handcuffs may frighten the person with mental illness so reassure consumer that no harm is intended. • Remain calm • You will likely have contact with the consumer again; how you treat him will be important for establishing trust

  27. Engagement • Know when to act: A person may be acting dangerously, but not directly threatening any other person or himself/herself. If possible, give the consumer time to calm down. This requires patience and continuous safety evaluation. • Allow partner to de-escalate others on the scene as necessary

  28. Engagement • “It is the wise officer who can, at times, conceal his or her combat-ready status.” -Lt. Michael Woody

  29. Avoid • Maintaining continuous eye contact • Crowding or “cornering” the consumer • Touching the consumer unless you ask first or it is essential for safety • Letting others interact simultaneously with the consumer • Negative thoughts (“God, this is another one of those homeless people.”)

  30. Avoid • Expressing anger, impatience or irritation • Inflammatory language (“You are acting crazy.”) • Feeling as though you have to rush or feeling like you are stuck if it takes time to get the consumer talking • Intervening too quickly or trying too hard to control the interaction by interrupting or talking over the consumer.

  31. Avoid • Saying “You need to calm down.” • Shouting or giving rapid commands • Arguing with the consumer • Taking the words or actions of the consumer personally (They are symptoms of mental illness.) • Lying, tricking, deceiving, threatening the consumer to get her to comply

  32. Avoid • Asking why questions. Why questions are logic-based. Persons in crisis are not logical. Typically, what ever has worked in the past is not working now. Why questions put the consumer on the defensive. Ask open-ended questions. • Forcing discussion

  33. Avoid • Minimizing the consumer’s situation as a way to elicit conversation (“Things can’t be that bad, can they?”) • Suggesting that things will get better; they may not • Making promises that you may not be able to keep

  34. Avoid • Commands such as “drop the knife,” or “Get down on the ground” might seem to be straightforward and easy to understand. When dealing with people who live with mental illness, however, officers need to take into account the types of barriers to effective communication that the brain disorder might create. • Telling the consumer “I know how you feel.”

  35. Avoid • Asking a lot of questions of the consumer in the beginning. This is a natural tendency, however, this is generally not a good idea, especially early in the interaction. In de-escalation, encouraging the consumer to continue talking is more effective than asking a lot of questions. It will help continue the dialogue and will provide the consumer with opportunities to give information that will help to resolve the crisis.

  36. DO • Speak in a calm, slow, clear voice • You may need to repeat; the consumer may be distracted • Be patient; give the situation time; time is on your side • Try to reduce background noise and distractions • Use “and” instead of “but” • Obtain relevant information from informants

  37. DO • Allow the consumer to ventilate (“Tell me some more about that.” • Use “please” and “thank you” often • Remain friendly but firm • Ask the consumer if she needs something • Offer a cigarette, nutrition bar, warm clothing • Forecast: Announce your actions and movements

  38. DO • Accept the consumer’s feelings, thoughts and behavioral; acceptance is not easy when a consumer is behaving in a bizarre or hostile manner • Respect the dignity of the consumer without regard to sex, race, age, sexual orientation

  39. Hot Buttons • Consumers will sometimes push a hot button • We all have them • Example: The consumer calls you a “pig” or swears at you. • This is NOT the time to demand respect

  40. Hot Buttons: Rationale Detachment • Staying in control of your emotions during a crisis situation • 3 steps

  41. 1. Develop a Plan • Decisions made ahead of time are more likely to be rationale • Identify your hot buttons • Strategic visualization – practice what you would do • Helps you gain confidence

  42. 2. Use Positive Self-Talk • You are not the target of the outburst • Never take anything personally • Remember that most of us have been irrational and said inappropriate things when we are under extreme stress

  43. 3. Recognize Your Limits • Let someone else take over if necessary • Set a limit with the person; use an “I” statement; “I really want to help you but I find it difficult because of your name-calling; could you help me and stop the cursing so that I can work on helping you. Thanks, I would appreciate it if you try.”

  44. The Logic of De-Escalation • If you take a LESS authoritative, LESS controlling, LESS confrontational approach, you actually will have MORE control. • You are trying to give the consumer a sense that he or she is in control. • Why? Because he or she is in a crisis, which by definition means the consumer is feeling out of control. The consumer’s normal coping measures are not working at this time.

  45. Introduce Yourself • An introduction promotes communication • Hi, my name is Doug (or Deputy Smith). I am a CIT officer with the Sheriff’s Department. • Can you tell me your name? • State what you see/know (“I can see you’re upset.”) • State or convey that you are there to help. • Be prepared to explain the reason you are there (e.g., a neighbor called to say someone is upset)

  46. Introduce Yourself • How many of you can have someone tell you her name, and within a few seconds you have already forgotten it • Make a point of immediately starting to use the consumer’s name; that will help you remember it • Use the consumer’s name often

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