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New York City social workers after 9/11: their attachment, resiliency, and compassion fatigue.
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2010
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Social IsolationSecure AttachmentEmpathySocial WorkersSocial Work PolicySocial Work PracticeMental HealthSocial WorkSocial SciencesPsychologyHealth SciencesCoping BehaviorSocial PolicyPsychiatryApplied Social PsychologyCompassion FatiguePsychological ResilienceSocial StressPsychosocial IssuePsychosocial ResearchNursingSociologySocial Work ResearchCrisis ManagementSocial JusticePost-traumatic Stress Disorder
This study examines the relationship between attachment classification, resiliency, and compassion fatigue in New York social workers following 9/11. We used single occasion, quasi-random sampling, surveying 481 social workers living in Manhattan. Hierarchical regression analyses revealed that secure attachment is predictive of the ability to cope with secondary traumatic stress as well as capacity for resilience, explaining approximately 7% of the variance in both compassion fatigue and resiliency. These findings suggest that secure attachment may serve as a source of resilience for social workers, immunizing them from significant compassion fatigue. Such findings have significant implications for clinicians working with traumatized populations.