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PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION. PLANNING & IMPLEMENTATION. When do you start planning a PS response? . PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION. Preparations for psychosocial response. Training Staff Volunteers Community members Advocacy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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PLANNING & IMPLEMENTATIONPSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

When do you start planning a PS response?

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Preparations for psychosocial response

Training• Staff • Volunteers • Community members

Advocacy • Organizational (budget)• Public (Awareness, Sensitization)• National

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

When does planning a PS response start?

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Community participation

Why is participation of the affected community important for a psychosocial response?

The affected population know best

• How they have been affected

• Which people or groups are affected in different ways

• How they are coping with the impact of the event now

• What help they need to cope better

• Appropriate social and cultural behaviour

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Community participation

What can the community participate in? • Assessing needs

• Planning activities, inputs to drafting proposals

• Implementing activities

• Mobilizing others

• Monitoring and evaluation

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Community participation

Psychosocial benefits

• Socially and culturally appropriate

Response = relevant= realistic

• Increases community ‘togetherness’ and peer support

• Increases sense of empowerment and achievement

Affected population take responsibility for own recovery

• Participation in data collection and analysis• Training on psychosocial support• Provision of psychosocial support• Referral mechanism

Opportunities for capacity building

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Volunteers

• RCRC Movement is volunteer-based

• Volunteers = invaluable resource

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Volunteers

• May be directly affected by disaster

• Likely to be emotionally affected by working with psychosocial interventions

• Care and support for staff and volunteers = important program component

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Holistic and integrated approach

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Choosing activities

Realistic and meaningful activities

Balance between needs and resources; short term or long term impact; target groups

Community mobilizationInvolvement in assessments; Identifying vulnerable groups; Mobilizing others

Initial activitiesAssessments + Psychological First Aid

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Relevant activities change with time

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Examples of activities in a PS response

Preparations

• Disaster Preparedness

• Assessments• Coordination

(e.g. basic needs)

• Capacity building

Capacity building

• Initial training in PFA/Assessments

• PS specific training

• Program management tasks

Psychoeducation Advocacy

• Development / distribution of IEC materials

• Public performances (e.g. drama)

• Advocacy local / national

Program management

• Assessments• Community

mobilization / contact

• Coordination (internal and external)

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Examples of psychosocial activities

Emergency: 0-6 months• Psychological First Aid

• Support groups

• Burial ceremonies

• Grieving rituals

• Distribution of PS support items

• Family tracing

• Community restoration

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Examples of psychosocial activities

Recovery / development: 3 months to 1-3 yrs

• Children’s / youth clubs

• Formal/informal schooling

• Life skills activities

• Collective memorial

ceremonies

• Livelihood activities• Disaster preparedness training; Risk reduction

training; Building community resilience

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Examples of psychosocial activities

Conflict situations

• Peer support groups

• Reintegration of child soldiers

• Tailored workshops with children and adults

• Education and training in non-violent conflict resolution

• School-based activities

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Examples of psychosocial activities

Health emergencies

• Home-based care (HIV, OVC)

• Memory Work

• Hero Books

• Coping with losing loved ones

• Will writing

• School-based

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Examples of psychosocial activities

Individual and community recovery / resilience building

Group work: Make a list of the kinds of activities that will help

1. Individuals (all)2. Elderly3. Children4. People living with disabilities5. Whole communities

recover from a disaster event, and build resilience in the face of new disasters (cope better if it happens again)

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Examples of psychosocial activities

Individual and community recovery / resilience building

Community activities

Men

Disabilities

Children Boys Girls

Women

Elderly

Important considerations

• Gender and age

• Religious affiliation

• Child protection

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Protecting and working with children

• Increased risks of abuse and violence – especially if unaccompanied

• Should be empowered with knowledge to stop and/or report incidences of abuse

• Special attention on younger children and Early Childhood Development

• Follow all ethical guidelines on working with children

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Time for an energizer!!

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Part B: PS Program management

Goals/aims

Immediate objectives

ActivityInputs

Activity outputs

Activity outcomes

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS MONITORING AND EVALUATION

Logical framework approach Indicators

Overall Goal To reduce suffering and risk for development of severe trauma of Population A

Adults and children show healthy signs of coping with impact of crisis event

Activity 1 Training in PFAInput Resources to enable training Amount of money; personnel;

training manuals; materials

Output Training has taken place Number of people trained

Outcome Volunteers can provide PFA Skill level in PFA has increased

Activity 2: Workshops with childrenInput Resources for workshops Amount of money; personnel;

training manuals; materials

Output Workshops are held Number of workshops held; number of children attended; number of trainers

Outcome Children are coping better Increase in children’s playfulness, self-confidence, trusting of others

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Psychosocial program management

How is managing a psychosocial program different from managing any other kind of program?

Consider:

• Changing needs of population during implementation period

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Changing needs of population during implementation period

Bud

get

expe

nditu

re

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Flexibility

• Changing needs of population during implementation period (budget, human resources)

• Importance of community participation (budget, timing)

Anticipate fluctuations and adaptations to budgets and time-planning – avoid PROGRAM LOCKING!!!

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Human Resources

• Training needs – staff and volunteers

• Supervision

• Retention

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Partnerships and relationships

Psychosocial wellbeing

Political and social safety

Basic needs

Physical health

Education

PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION

Partnerships and relationships

Internal partners

External partners

Community

• Other sectors within National Society

• E.g. Food and nutrition, shelter

• Government – local / national• Other organizations

• Faith-based• Other NGO’s

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