Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T20:30:59.693Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Community Resiliency Model, an interoceptive awareness tool to support population mental wellness

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 July 2023

Linda Grabbe*
Affiliation:
Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA
Ingrid M. Duva
Affiliation:
Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA
William C. Nicholson
Affiliation:
Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA
*
Corresponding author: Linda Grabbe; Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The objective of this article is to describe the Community Resiliency Model (CRM)®, a sensory-focused, self-care modality for mental well-being in diverse communities, and CRM’s emerging evidence base and neurobiological underpinnings as a task-sharing intervention. Frieden’s Health Impact Pyramid (HIP) is used as a lens for mental healthcare interventions and their public health impact, with CRM examples. CRM, a sensory awareness model for self-care and mental well-being in acute and chronic stress states, is supported by neurobiological theory and a growing evidence base. CRM can address mental wellness needs at multiple levels of the HIP and matches the task-sharing concept to increase access to mental health resources globally. CRM has the potential for making a significant population mental health impact as an easily disseminated, mental health, self-care modality; it may be taught by trained professionals, lay persons, and community members. CRM carries task-sharing to a new level: scalable and sustainable, those who learn CRM can share the wellness skills informally with persons in their social networks. CRM may alleviate mental distress and reduce stigma, as well as serve a preventive function for populations facing environmental, political, and social threats.

Type
Perspective
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

Impact statement

Somatic mental wellness techniques to bolster resiliency are simple to teach and can be used immediately. The Community Resiliency Model (CRM)®, a unique self-care set of skills derived from somatic psychotherapy, is a tool to promote mental health globally and can be adapted for diverse populations. Learners gain a compassionate understanding of their own responses to stress and trauma, and learn fundamental skills to better withstand stress, using the body itself as a resource for strength. Lay workers and community members may become certified to formally teach CRM and those they teach can informally teach CRM to others, with a multiplicative effect, and taking task-sharing to a new level. We report here on CRM’s burgeoning research base supporting significant improvement in mental well-being measures for populations across varying contexts. This is an effort to draw global attention to CRM among persons who work in the service of others. CRM has utility both as a self-care modality to reduce burnout potential and as an efficient wellness intervention with the potential for widespread community dissemination in low-resource areas.

The global need for simple, accessible, evidence-based mental health interventions existed prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, with only a small fraction of those needing help ever receiving care (Campion, Reference Campion2018). The pandemic exacerbated the crisis, engendering stress, anxiety, depression, insomnia, denial, anger, and fear (Torales et al., Reference Torales, O’Higgins, Castaldelli-Maia and Ventriglio2020), exposing defects in already fragile and inadequate systems of care (Auerbach and Miller, Reference Auerbach and Miller2020; Gribble et al., Reference Gribble, Durham and Roy2022). Large-scale disasters, social turmoil, political conflict, climate change, population displacement, community violence, and structural racism all place population mental health at risk and underscore the need for mental health interventions that are effective, low-dose, transferrable, and sustainable (WHO, 2022). Task-sharing interventions that incorporate laypersons in mental healthcare delivery are of particular interest as scalable strategies that can greatly increase access to care.

Task-sharing is a pragmatic approach to increasing health service capacity by redistributing work tasks among healthcare providers and community members (Orkin et al., Reference Orkin, Rao, Venugopal, Kithulegoda, Wegier, Ritchie, VanderBurgh, Martiniuk, Salamanca-Buentello and Upshur2021). Task-sharing interventions must be scalable, that is, they must have sustained cost-effectiveness and impact when they are fully implemented or broadly delivered. Healthcare providers delegate or share responsibilities with community members or healthcare workers who have less training or lower skill levels, but are trained to provide specific services. This creates capacity and resources in settings where there are unmet needs or large treatment gaps. Healey et al. (Reference Healey, Verhey, Mosweu, Boadu, Chibanda, Chitiyo, Wagenaar, Senra, Chiriseri, Mboweni and Araya2022) conducted an economic evaluation of a scaled-up, evidence-based, task-sharing mental health intervention called the Friendship Bench in Zimbabwe. Their analysis found this task-sharing intervention to be a cost-effective way to treat depression and other common mental disorders in low- and middle-income countries (Healey et al., Reference Healey, Verhey, Mosweu, Boadu, Chibanda, Chitiyo, Wagenaar, Senra, Chiriseri, Mboweni and Araya2022). The burden of common mental disorders is also great in high-income countries like the United States where there are healthcare inequities and where a large treatment gap exists for the medically underserved and rural populations. Task-sharing is a promising solution, if interventions are evidence-based and scalable.

The Community Resiliency Model (CRM)® is a preventive and trauma-sensitive mental wellness self-care intervention. While existing task-sharing mental health interventions appear to focus on cognitive or psychological approaches to trauma (Ryan et al., Reference Ryan, Bauer, Endale, Qureshi, Doukani, Cerga-Pashoja, Brar, Eaton and Bass2021), these approaches often miss the biological underpinnings of human resiliency and wellness. With its roots in trauma psychotherapy, CRM is a non-cognitive, “bottom-up,” wellness program – a significant departure from “top-down” cognitive models (Grabbe and Miller-Karas, Reference Grabbe and Miller-Karas2018). Developed at the Trauma Resource Institute by Elaine Miller-Karas, CRM may be valuable as a widely acceptable, lay-delivered modality for community mental health prevention that can also be deployed in emergency situations. The purpose of this article is to explain the CRM, a quickly taught set of emotion regulation skills based on simple sensory awareness. Thomas Frieden’s Health Impact Pyramid (HIP) (Frieden, Reference Frieden2010), a public health framework for categorizing healthcare interventions, serves to illustrate the impact of mental health interventions and where CRM can fit in the schema to support global mental health needs.

Brief overview of the Community Resiliency Model and its emerging evidence

CRM is a variant of present-moment awareness (mindfulness), emphasizing attunement to one’s own internal (interceptive) and external (exteroceptive) cues for regulation of autonomic responses to stress and trauma (Miller-Karas, Reference Miller-Karas2015, Reference Miller-Karas2023). CRM did not emerge from mindfulness practices; rather, it originated as a simple self-care modality based on a rich body-focused psychotherapy tradition (Levine, Reference Levine2010; Miller-Karas, Reference Miller-Karas2015; Ogden, Reference Ogden2015). Body-based psychotherapists use “bottom-up” (somatic) rather than a “top-down” (cognitive) techniques for clients to learn to self-regulate using their own body prior to trauma processing. Self-regulation capacity is developed by teaching the client to attend to body sensations and to differentiate between sensations of distress and those of well-being, strength, and resilience, before and if any trauma is recounted. Body-based approaches in psychotherapy are of particular value to trauma survivors (Van der Kolk, Reference Van der Kolk2015).

CRM is part of a paradigm shift occurring in healthcare, education, and social service realms toward strengths-based, trauma-informed, and resiliency-focused wellness practices (Advocates for Trauma-Informed Policies, n.d.). Antecedents to CRM occurred in natural and man-made disaster settings in the 2000s; under emergency conditions with no time for psychotherapy, responders schooled in Peter Levine’s Somatic Experiencing psychotherapy model (Levine, Reference Levine1997) taught disaster survivors how to access internal psychophysiological resources for emotion regulation. After these disasters, those victims experienced lower than expected rates of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD); further, emergency responders themselves were able to use the skills as prevention against the impact of secondary stress (Parker et al., Reference Parker, Doctor and Selvam2008; Leitch et al., Reference Leitch, Vanslyke and Allen2009; Leitch and Miller-Karas, 2009). CRM grew out of these expert-driven solutions and natural experiments and has since been developed and used as an emergency intervention (e.g., Florida Pulse Nightclub Shooting; Las Vegas Shooting at Route 91 Harvest Music Festival; Paradise, California Wildfire) (Trauma Resource Institute, n.d.).

CRM’s cornerstone concept, the “Resilient Zone” (RZ) (Figure 1a), normalizes and de-stigmatizes human responses to stress and trauma. When we are in the RZ (our bandwidth for stress tolerance), we function adequately and have the emotional balance that affords clear, intentional, goal-directed action and thoughts, even in the presence of mild stress perturbations (Miller-Karas, Reference Miller-Karas2015, Reference Miller-Karas2023). When we are overwhelmed by threat or negative emotion, we are pushed into a hyper-aroused state (too much sympathetic discharge in the autonomic nervous system) or into a hypo-aroused state (too much parasympathetic) (Figure 1b). It feels uncomfortable to be outside of the RZ, and our attempts to feel better account for the many unhealthy behaviors we engage in (e.g., substance use and aggression) to deal with emotional tension.

Figure 1. The resilient zone: (a) regulation and (b) dysregulation.

The goals of CRM are 1) to widen the RZ over time and 2) to use skills to return to the RZ when knocked out by threat or strong emotion. Stress responses are explained in biological terms, and CRM’s self-regulation skills are themselves biological tools: somatic awareness of interoceptive (inside the body) and exteroceptive (via the five senses) sensations (Miller-Karas, Reference Miller-Karas2015, Reference Miller-Karas2023). CRM skills are described elsewhere (Grabbe et al., Reference Grabbe, Higgins, Baird and Pfeiffer2021), but the “tracking” skill, awareness of sensation (interoception or exteroception), is fundamental to all CRM skills. Healthcare workers who have learned CRM’s interoceptive and exteroceptive techniques (e.g., touching their skin or clothing and noting body sensations) report using them to maintain their composure during tense, chaotic, and crisis situations (Grabbe et al., Reference Grabbe, Higgins, Jordan, Gibson and Murphy2020; Grabbe et al., Reference Grabbe, Higgins, Baird and Pfeiffer2021). The intentional use of CRM reduces or interrupts attention to unpleasant sensations, thoughts, or behavioral responses by reorienting focus to other less salient or neutral sensations, thus altering our stress responses.

CRM’s burgeoning research base includes its use for the long-term, chronic stress of marginalized groups in the United States (Grabbe et al., Reference Grabbe, Higgins, Jordan, Gibson and Murphy2020; Freeman et al., Reference Freeman, Baek, Ngo, Kelley, Karas, Citron and Montgomery2021), and globally, in post-Ebola Sierra Leone communities (Aréchiga et al., Reference Aréchiga, Freeman, Tan, Lou, Lister, Buckles and Montgomery2023) and with Rwandan genocide survivors (Habimana et al., Reference Habimana, Biracyaza, Habumugisha, Museka, Mutabaruka and Montgomery2021). Research including two randomized controlled trials of single 1- or 3-h trainings (virtual or in-person) has demonstrated significantly improved mental well-being and reduced stress symptoms in persons in high-stress occupations (Leitch et al., Reference Leitch, Vanslyke and Allen2009; Grabbe et al., Reference Grabbe, Higgins, Baird, Craven and San Fratello2020, Reference Grabbe, Higgins, Baird and Pfeiffer2021; Duva et al., Reference Duva, Higgins, Baird, Lawson, Murphy and Grabbe2022). Other variables that demonstrated significant improvements over time included somatic symptoms, depression, anxiety, and PTSD.

Possible neurobiological mechanisms underlying the effectiveness of CRM

A central feature of CRM skills is physiological awareness or interoception. Interoception involves sensing, integrating, interpreting, and regulating body signals, and is central to body homeostasis and to the regulation and control of emotions (Chen et al., Reference Chen, Schloesser, Arensdorf, Simmons, Cui, Valentino, Gnadt, Nielsen, Hillaire-Clarke, Spruance, Horowitz, Vallejo and Langevin2021). These sensory processes are on-going in the body, providing internal status updates within and outside of our awareness and allowing us to identify and adjust for discomforts such as temperature, hunger, fatigue, or pain. Most sources of stress originate from the self, others, and environmental threat. Any single one or combination of these three elements augment the stress burden (Ottaviani, Reference Ottaviani2018). The more difficult or psychologically complex the cause of the stress, the more overwhelmed we become, and the more we are likely to leave the RZ or get “stuck” outside the RZ in a dysregulated state. Ultimately, if this dysregulated physiological stress cycle persists, there is an increased risk of chronic physical and mental disorders (Anda et al., Reference Anda, Felitti, Bremner, Walker, Whitfield, Perry, Dube and Giles2006).

When we are in the RZ, we have executive brain resources to override emotionally driven, impulsive behaviors; however, under stress (if we are knocked out of the RZ), this override is blunted or lost. Under acute stress conditions, the brain attempts to 1) identify the source of stress, 2) respond to the stressor (e.g., fight/flight), 3) neutralize its effect on the body, and 4) learn from the experience (identifying cause or context). In acute stress, higher-level executive brain functions are sacrificed in favor of more immediately responsive, emotionally driven responses; top-down control is reduced so that metabolic energy can be shunted to the stress response to protect us via bottom-up control (Gagnon and Wagner, Reference Gagnon and Wagner2016). Under acute conditions of unpredictable stress exposure, this redirection of metabolic resources away from executive domains is a protective mechanism that allows for optimization of threat neutralization.

Although the default loss of executive override is protective in acute stress, it can also be deleterious, and even to think clearly, we may need to counteract this protective response. To do so, even momentary physiologic awareness may interrupt our default protective mechanisms. Interventions that counteract the loss of executive override in severe stress reactions can be of supreme value to maintaining mental balance and well-being. CRM’s intentional body awareness seems to provide access to self-regulation via bottom-up pathways, even under trauma conditions; this affords immediate integration of bottom-up and top-down activity at the time of stress (Weng et al., Reference Weng, Feldman, Leggio, Napadow, Park and Price2021). Under intense stress, cognitive interventions that rely solely on intact executive pathways to help regulate stress may not be as useful as bottom-up modalities like CRM that focus on sensing changes in physiology.

Focusing on body sensations involves sensory activation and coordination between autonomic, interoceptive, exteroceptive, and proprioceptive pathways (Rohe and Zeise, Reference Rohe and Zeisen.d.). Integration of these sensory pathways modulates segments of the limbic system where information-processing and body regulation occur. Internal representations about self are processed and co-coordinated in these regions (Carvalho and Damasio, Reference Carvalho and Damasio2021; Chen et al., Reference Chen, Schloesser, Arensdorf, Simmons, Cui, Valentino, Gnadt, Nielsen, Hillaire-Clarke, Spruance, Horowitz, Vallejo and Langevin2021). This coordination appears to produce many aspects of resiliency: self-control, attachment, social engagement, sense of self, well-being, empathy, and cooperation (Gogolla, Reference Gogolla2017; Koban et al., Reference Koban, Gianaros, Kober and Wager2021). In effect, CRM may rely on changes in the insular pathways dedicated to processing body state and self-representation, to influence attention mediated by higher-ordered cognitive centers.

CRM appears to provide immediate access to psychological rebalancing by directing attention away from inherently self-centered, stress-based thoughts, toward greater coherence with the way that we perceive our relationship in the “self-other-environment” system (Feldman, Reference Feldman2020). In light of CRM’s growing research base, its potential to support population mental wellness can be further clarified via a population health conceptual framework.

Conceptual framework: The Health Impact Pyramid

Frieden’s five-tiered HIP was created to classify health interventions into five levels according to their impact on the health of a society (Frieden, Reference Frieden2010). Figure 2a illustrates the levels of interventions required to keep a society healthy. At the base of the pyramid are interventions that have the greatest possible public health impact, and at the top of the pyramid are interventions that require 1:1 encounters that have a strong individual effect, but negligible population impact. Frieden contends that the maximum possible sustained public benefit regarding a given health problem entails interventions implemented at multiple levels. We use the framework here to classify mental health interventions, providing examples of practical CRM applications (Figure 2b).

Figure 2. A public health perspective: a) health interventions and b) mental health interventions.

Mental healthcare through a HIP lens

Tier 1 interventions tackle the social determinants of mental health. These efforts include population-level primary prevention to promote mental well-being in the population and reduce the risk factors for mental illness, addiction, violence, and illness. Such change would include the availability of mental health resources to all citizens, and the prevention and treatment of critical upstream factors of population mental health, for example, adverse childhood experiences, which affect the majority of populations (Felitti et al., Reference Felitti, Anda, Nordenberg, Williamson, Spitz, Edwards, Koss and Marks1998; Sederer, Reference Sederer2016; Teicher and Samson, Reference Teicher and Samson2016).

Tier 2 interventions require structural or systemic changes such that healthy choices are the default course of action. Efforts to develop the social and emotional health of children in schools, and community interventions to increase trauma- and resiliency-informed programs across public and private sectors are current moves in the right direction (Advocates for Trauma-Informed Policies, n.d.; Building a Collaborative Georgia, n.d.). Tiers 1 and 2 require considerable economic and political effort, and for mental health, this drive must be culturally and contextually relevant to counteract stigma and the many variables that lead to adverse mental health outcomes. Interventions that incorporate local knowledge and culture, use existing resources, and ensure equitable distribution of mental health resources are ideal (Gil-Rivas et al., Reference Gil-Rivas, Handrup, Tanner and Walker2019).

Tier 3 interventions include brief or one-time interventions that confer long-range protective benefits without further clinical follow-up. Although Frieden describes Tier 3 interventions as individually focused (Frieden, Reference Frieden2010), preventative interventions for depression, suicide, or substance use can reach large numbers of people simultaneously via virtual or in-person programs via classes, hotlines, podcasts, and apps that raise awareness and prompt individual or community action. Although Frieden does not mention task-sharing, this model for dissemination of preventative programs fits naturally here. Health and mental well-being can be promoted when content is taught by both behavioral health providers and members of local communities who are trained to teach the material. Further, it is local experts who are best able to adapt a given program to the needs of their own communities.

Tier 4 interventions are individually focused clinical encounters to manage mental health problems and prescribe medications, in primary care and psychiatric settings. Tier 5 interventions are 1:1 counseling, psychotherapy, and psychoeducational encounters. Tier 4 and 5 encounters may have potential for the greatest impact on individuals, but their population effect is low. Access at these tiers is limited by inadequate insurance coverage for mental healthcare, and sparse resources, especially in rural and underserved areas, and in low- and middle-income countries. Outcomes of these intervention are further affected by client adherence to treatment and willingness to make behavioral changes. These are the costliest interventions and are time- and labor-intensive for patients and providers alike. The majority of U.S. health spending occurs at the top two layers of the pyramid (McCullough et al., Reference McCullough, Leider, Resnick and Bishai2020), highlighting the failure to address mental health needs of the U.S. population.

CRM through the HIP lens

CRM has applications at multiple HIP tiers. At Tiers 1 and 2, a global movement and free curriculum for Social, Emotional and Ethical (SEE) Learning that incorporates CRM for school children has been launched in dozens of countries by Emory University (SEE Learning, n.d.). SEE Learning was being put into place in all Ukrainian schools prior to the Russian invasion. Since then, CRM training has been available to all Ukrainians online in a humanitarian effort by the Trauma Resource Institute, where CRM was developed (Trauma Resource Institute, n.d.). CRM may be taught at an institutional level, as it is for all students in Wake County, North CarolinaFootnote 1 and as it is for sexual assault police interview training in the State of Washington.Footnote 2

At Tier 3, CRM is a long-term, preventative intervention because certified teachers can train large numbers of persons simultaneously in person or virtually and those learners can practice the skills as they wish to with no clinical intervention for the rest of their days (Trauma Resource Institute, n.d.; Duva et al., Reference Duva, Murphy and Grabbe2022). In addition, because CRM is a task-sharing modality, local community members can be trained as certified teachers, reaching far greater numbers of people, and adapting the model to suit local needs (Miller-Karas, Reference Miller-Karas2015, Reference Miller-Karas2023). It is also important to consider an even greater potential social impact: any person who grasps CRM concepts and skills can share them with persons in their own social networks in a one-to-one fashion (as a “CRM Guide”), creating an exponential mental wellness effect in our populations, at no cost whatsoever. The free iChill app can be used if desired for reinforcement and will promote confidence in sharing the wellness skills.

At Tiers 4 and 5, CRM can be easily integrated into primary care, psychiatric, or social service visits. Care providers who learn CRM concepts and skills can teach them one-to-one as a CRM Guide, and do not need formal training to do so. In any healthcare encounter, providers can integrate strength-focused conversational CRM questions (accompanied by active listening), such as “What is helping you get through this right now?” to bolster clients’ resilience. CRM is explained in a free smartphone app (“iChill”) or at http://www.ichillapp.com/ for reinforcement and to share with others. The concepts and skills may be blended with many psychotherapy models. A sister to CRM and a trauma processing tool for mental health professionals, the Trauma Resiliency Model, was also developed by Miller-Karas (Reference Miller-Karas2015, Reference Miller-Karas2023).

Discussion

Population mental health includes the promotion of mental well-being and the prevention and treatment of mental and substance use disorders. To manage mental health distress and work toward well-being for themselves and their communities, people need skills that will reduce their suffering and cultivate their resilience. The HIP underscores the need for equitable, multi-faceted mental health interventions to reach the greatest numbers of people. Task-sharing mental health interventions fit into the lower tiers of the HIP, assuring the greatest possible impact.

Task-sharing interventions are used globally in an attempt to address the treatment gap in mental healthcare, and while evaluations support their scalability, other results have been mixed. HIV-positive patients with depression in Zimbabwe received lay-counselor-delivered sessions of a problem-solving therapy and had promising improvement on depression scores (Abas et al., Reference Abas, Nyamayaro, Bere, Saruchera, Mothobi, Simms, Mangezi, Macpherson, Croome, Magidson, Makadzange, Safren, Chibanda and O’Cleirigh2018), but an intervention with lay workers conducting counseling sessions for women with perinatal depression in South Africa demonstrated no impact (Lund et al., Reference Lund, Schneider, Garman, Davies, Munodawafa, Honikman, Bhana, Bass, Bolton, Dewey, Joska, Kagee, Myer, Petersen, Prince, Stein, Tabana, Thornicroft, Tomlinson and Susser2020). Both of these interventions involved cognitive content/strategies. A complementary skills-based interoception component might have altered the response to these interventions. Standard mental health interventions generally use cognitive approaches, but a mix of cognitive and body-based programs are ideal for trauma-related mental health problems (Corrigan and Hull, Reference Corrigan and Hull2015; Van der Kolk, Reference Van der Kolk2015).

Mental health first aid (MHFA) is a globally disseminated task-sharing training for members of the public to act as the first responders for mental health issues in their communities, but a recent literature review of MHFA found no effects on the helpfulness of trainees’ actions or on recipient mental health (Forthal et al., Reference Forthal, Sadowska, Pike, Balachander, Jacobsson and Hermosilla2022). MHFA includes assessing, listening, and offering support; a skill-building addition of CRM would teach biologically based coping skills on the spot. For some, the skills might be sufficient to alleviate symptoms; for others, CRM might serve as a bridge until professional behavioral healthcare can be accessed. In the U.S. State of Georgia, CRM is being initiated as a “Bridge to Therapy” approach for children with behavioral problems as they await assessment and treatment that may be months away.Footnote 3 Because common responses to stress and trauma are seen as biological in nature, rather than as moral or character weakness, CRM removes some of the stigma of having a mental health challenge and receiving formal behavioral healthcare.

To put a CRM task-sharing intervention into practice, program planners may use an implementation science framework. The Barriers and Facilitators in Implementation of Task-Sharing Mental Health Interventions (Le et al., Reference Le, Eschliman, Grivel, Tang, Cho, Yang, Tay, Li, Bass and Yang2022) focuses on low-income countries, but high-income countries where rural and underserved urban populations experience extreme healthcare inequities, are essentially in this category. We hope this introduction to CRM will elicit further investigation of the intervention as a scalable task-sharing modality to tackle the mental health treatment gap in low-resource settings. To expand CRM’s evidence base, further research is warranted in 1) emotion regulation biomarkers (cortisol levels, electroencephalography, and heart rate variability); 2) impact on specific mental health problems (anxiety and depression) or behaviors (substance use, violence, and incarceration); 3) positive outcome parameters (well-being, emotion regulation, resiliency, and pro-social elements such as teamwork, empathy, self- and other-compassion, and communication); and 4) community or public health outcomes, real-world scalability, and resolution of treatment gaps.

Conclusion

The World Health Organization’s call for low-dose, transferrable, and sustainable mental health interventions to deal with the burgeoning global mental health crisis highlights the need for models of mental healthcare which can 1) reduce vulnerability to mental health problems (primary prevention), 2) decrease the sequelae of these problems (secondary prevention), and 3) promote healing (tertiary prevention). CRM is part of shift toward a strengths-based, biologically focused resiliency perspective for population mental health, and a front-end self-care wellness strategy to help people experiencing mental distress. The HIP illustrates that the greatest impact on population health requires interventions at the lower tiers of the pyramid. CRM is a strategy that incorporates task-sharing at two levels: non-behavioral healthcare providers can become certified to deliver CRM concepts and skills to their communities and organizations; in addition, persons they teach can informally share the model with persons in their own networks, augmenting the impact on global mental well-being.

Open peer review

To view the open peer review materials for this article, please visit http://doi.org/10.1017/gmh.2023.27.

Author contribution

L.G. and I.M.D. conceived the study and determined the methodology. All authors contributed to the writing and organization of the manuscript and reviewed the final manuscript before submitting for publication.

Financial support

No funding was received for this work.

Competing interest

None of the authors has any competing interest to declare. L.G. and I.M.D. receive speaking fees for presentations at conferences on the topic of this manuscript.

Free CRM recordings

1. Emory Nursing Experience (with continuing education credit): https://ce.emorynursingexperience.com/courses/cultivating-our-best-selves-in-response-to-covid-19.

2. Trauma Resource Institute (Resources): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mX3KTqFUA-E.

References

Abas, M, Nyamayaro, P, Bere, T, Saruchera, E, Mothobi, N, Simms, V, Mangezi, W, Macpherson, K, Croome, N, Magidson, J, Makadzange, A, Safren, S, Chibanda, D and O’Cleirigh, C (2018) Feasibility and acceptability of a task-shifted intervention to enhance adherence to HIV medication and improve depression in people living with HIV in Zimbabwe, a low income country in sub-Saharan Africa. AIDS and Behavior 22(1), 86101. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-016-1659-4.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Advocates for Trauma-Informed Policies (n.d.) Campaign for Trauma Informed Policy and Practice. Available at https://www.ctipp.org/ (accessed 26 May 2022).Google Scholar
Anda, RF, Felitti, VJ, Bremner, JD, Walker, JD, Whitfield, C, Perry, BD, Dube, SR and Giles, WH (2006) The enduring effects of abuse and related adverse experiences in childhood: A convergence of evidence from neurobiology and epidemiology. European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience 256(3), 174186. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00406-005-0624-4.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Aréchiga, A, Freeman, K, Tan, A, Lou, J, Lister, Z, Buckles, B and Montgomery, S (2023) Building resilience and improving wellbeing in Sierra Leone using the Community Resiliency Model post Ebola. International Journal of Mental Health, 113. Published online: 12 January 2023. https://doi.org/10.1080/00207411.2023.2166312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Auerbach, J and Miller, BF (2020) COVID-19 exposes the cracks in our already fragile mental health system. American Journal of Public Health 110(7), 969970. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2020.305699.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Building a Collaborative Georgia (n.d.) Resilient Georgia. Available at https://www.resilientga.org (accessed 21 May 2022).Google Scholar
Campion, J (2018) Public mental health: Key challenges and opportunities. BJPsych International 15(3), 5154. https://doi.org/10.1192/bji.2017.11.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carvalho, GB and Damasio, A (2021) Interoception and the origin of feelings: A new synthesis. BioEssays 43(6), 2000261. https://doi.org/10.1002/bies.202000261.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chen, WG, Schloesser, D, Arensdorf, AM, Simmons, JM, Cui, C, Valentino, R, Gnadt, JW, Nielsen, L, Hillaire-Clarke, CS, Spruance, V, Horowitz, TS, Vallejo, YF and Langevin, HM (2021) The emerging science of Interoception: Sensing, integrating, interpreting, and regulating signals within the self. Trends in Neurosciences 44(1), 316. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tins.2020.10.007.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Corrigan, FM and Hull, AM (2015) Neglect of the complex: Why psychotherapy for post-traumatic clinical presentations is often ineffective. BJPsych Bulletin 39(2), 8689. https://doi.org/10.1192/pb.bp.114.046995.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Duva, IM, Higgins, MK, Baird, M, Lawson, D, Murphy, JR and Grabbe, L (2022) Practical resiliency training for healthcare workers during COVID-19: Results from a randomised controlled trial testing the Community Resiliency Model for well-being support. BMJ Open Quality 11(4), e002011. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjoq-2022-002011.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Duva, IM, Murphy, JR and Grabbe, L (2022) A nurse-led, well-being promotion using the Community Resiliency Model, Atlanta, 2020–2021. American Journal of Public Health 112(S3), S271S274. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2022.306821.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Feldman, R (2020) What is resilience: An affiliative neuroscience approach. World Psychiatry: Official Journal of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA) 19(2), 132150. https://doi.org/10.1002/wps.20729.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Felitti, VJ, Anda, RF, Nordenberg, D, Williamson, DF, Spitz, AM, Edwards, V, Koss, MP and Marks, JS (1998) Relationship of childhood abuse and household dysfunction to many of the leading causes of death in adults. The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 14(4), 245258.Google ScholarPubMed
Forthal, S, Sadowska, K, Pike, KM, Balachander, M, Jacobsson, K and Hermosilla, S (2022) Mental health first aid: A systematic review of trainee behavior and recipient mental health outcomes. Psychiatric Services (Washington, DC) 73(4), 439446. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.202100027.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Freeman, K, Baek, K, Ngo, M, Kelley, V, Karas, E, Citron, S and Montgomery, S (2021) Exploring the usability of a Community Resiliency Model approach in a high need/low resourced traumatized community. Community Mental Health Journal. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10597-021-00872-z.Google Scholar
Frieden, TR (2010) A framework for public health action: The health impact pyramid. American Journal of Public Health 100(4), 590595. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2009.185652.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gagnon, SA and Wagner, AD (2016) Acute stress and episodic memory retrieval: Neurobiological mechanisms and behavioral consequences. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1369(1), 5575. https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.12996.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gil-Rivas, V, Handrup, CT, Tanner, E and Walker, DK (2019) Global mental health: A call to action. The American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 89(4), 420425. https://doi.org/10.1037/ort0000373.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gogolla, N (2017) The insular cortex. Current Biology 27(12), R580R586. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2017.05.010.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grabbe, L, Higgins, MK, Baird, M, Craven, PA and San Fratello, S (2020) The Community Resiliency Model® to promote nurse well-being. Nursing Outlook 68(3), 324336. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.outlook.2019.11.002.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grabbe, L, Higgins, MK, Baird, M and Pfeiffer, KM (2021) Impact of a resiliency training to support the mental well-being of front-line workers. Medical Care 59(7), 616621. https://doi.org/10.1097/MLR.0000000000001535.Google ScholarPubMed
Grabbe, L, Higgins, M, Jordan, D, Gibson, B and Murphy, J (2020) The Community Resiliency Model®: A pilot of an interoception intervention to increase the emotional self-regulation of women in addiction treatment. International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction 19, 793808. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11469-019-00189-9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grabbe, L and Miller-Karas, E (2018) The trauma resiliency model: A “bottom-up” intervention for trauma psychotherapy. Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association 24(1), 7684. https://doi.org/10.1177/1078390317745133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gribble, RSF, Durham, JR and Roy, SF (2022) Hidden within a pandemic: How is international funding supporting mental health during COVID-19? Global Mental Health (Cambridge, England) 9, 173180. https://doi.org/10.1017/gmh.2022.19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Habimana, S, Biracyaza, E, Habumugisha, E, Museka, E, Mutabaruka, J and Montgomery, SB (2021) Role of Community Resiliency Model skills trainings in trauma healing among 1994 Tutsi genocide survivors in Rwanda. Psychology Research and Behavior Management 14, 11391148. https://doi.org/10.2147/PRBM.S319057.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Healey, A, Verhey, R, Mosweu, I, Boadu, J, Chibanda, D, Chitiyo, C, Wagenaar, B, Senra, H, Chiriseri, E, Mboweni, S and Araya, R (2022) Economic threshold analysis of delivering a task-sharing treatment for common mental disorders at scale: The friendship bench, Zimbabwe. Evidence Based Mental Health 25(2), 4753. https://doi.org/10.1136/ebmental-2021-300317.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Koban, L, Gianaros, PJ, Kober, H and Wager, TD (2021) The self in context: Brain systems linking mental and physical health. Nature Reviews. Neuroscience 22(5), 309322. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41583-021-00446-8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Le, PD, Eschliman, EL, Grivel, MM, Tang, J, Cho, YG, Yang, X, Tay, C, Li, T, Bass, J and Yang, LH (2022) Barriers and facilitators to implementation of evidence-based task-sharing mental health interventions in low- and middle-income countries: A systematic review using implementation science frameworks. Implementation Science: IS 17(1), 4. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13012-021-01179-z.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Leitch & Miller-Karas (2009) A case for using biologically-based mental health intervention in post-earthquake China: Evaluation of training in the trauma resiliency model. International Journal of Emergency Mental Health 11(4), 221233.Google Scholar
Leitch, ML, Vanslyke, J and Allen, M (2009) Somatic experiencing treatment with social service workers following hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Social Work 54(1), 918.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Levine, PA (1997) Waking the Tiger: Healing Trauma: The Innate Capacity to Transform Overwhelming Experiences. Berkeley: North Atlantic Books.Google Scholar
Levine, PA (2010) In an Unspoken Voice: How the Body Releases Trauma and Restores Goodness. Berkeley: North Atlantic Books.Google Scholar
Lund, C, Schneider, M, Garman, EC, Davies, T, Munodawafa, M, Honikman, S, Bhana, A, Bass, J, Bolton, P, Dewey, M, Joska, J, Kagee, A, Myer, L, Petersen, I, Prince, M, Stein, DJ, Tabana, H, Thornicroft, G, Tomlinson, M, … Susser, E (2020) Task-sharing of psychological treatment for antenatal depression in Khayelitsha, South Africa: Effects on antenatal and postnatal outcomes in an individual randomised controlled trial. Behaviour Research and Therapy 130, 103466. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brat.2019.103466.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCullough, JM, Leider, JP, Resnick, B and Bishai, D (2020) Aligning U.S. spending priorities using the health impact pyramid lens. American Journal of Public Health 110(Suppl 2), S181S185. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2020.305645.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Miller-Karas, E (2015) Building Resilience to Trauma: The Trauma and Community Resiliency Models, 1st Edn. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller-Karas, E (2023) Building Resilience to Trauma: The Trauma and Community Resiliency Models, 2nd Edn. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ogden, P (2015) Sensorimotor Psychotherapy: Interventions for Trauma and Attachment, 2nd Edn. W. W. New York: Norton & Company.Google Scholar
Orkin, AM, Rao, S, Venugopal, J, Kithulegoda, N, Wegier, P, Ritchie, SD, VanderBurgh, D, Martiniuk, A, Salamanca-Buentello, F and Upshur, R (2021) Conceptual framework for task shifting and task sharing: An international Delphi study. Human Resources for Health 19(1), 61. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-021-00605-z.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ottaviani, C (2018) Brain–heart interaction in perseverative cognition. Psychophysiology 55(7), e13082. https://doi.org/10.1111/psyp.13082.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Parker, C, Doctor, RM and Selvam, R (2008) Somatic therapy treatment effects with tsunami survivors. Traumatology 14(3), 103109. https://doi.org/10.1177/1534765608319080.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rohe, T and Zeise, M (n.d.) Inputs, outputs, and multisensory processing. In Neuroscience for Psychologists. Hanover, Pennsylvania: Springer, pp. 153192.Google Scholar
Ryan, GK, Bauer, A, Endale, T, Qureshi, O, Doukani, A, Cerga-Pashoja, A, Brar, SK, Eaton, J and Bass, JK (2021) Lay-delivered talk therapies for adults affected by humanitarian crises in low- and middle-income countries. Conflict and Health 15(1), 30. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13031-021-00363-8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sederer, LI (2016) The social determinants of mental health. Psychiatric Services 67(2), 234235. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.201500232.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
SEE Learning (n.d.) SEE Learning. Available at https://seelearning.emory.edu/(accessed 1 August 2023).Google Scholar
Teicher, MH and Samson, JA (2016) Annual research review: Enduring neurobiological effects of childhood abuse and neglect. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, and Allied Disciplines 57(3), 241266. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.12507.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Torales, J, O’Higgins, M, Castaldelli-Maia, JM and Ventriglio, A (2020) The outbreak of COVID-19 coronavirus and its impact on global mental health. The International Journal of Social Psychiatry 66(4), 317320. https://doi.org/10.1177/0020764020915212.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Trauma Resource Institute (n.d.) Trauma Resource Institute. Available at https://www.traumaresourceinstitute.com (accessed 26 May 2022).Google Scholar
Van der Kolk, BA (2015) The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind and Body in the Healing of Trauma. New York: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Weng, HY, Feldman, JL, Leggio, L, Napadow, V, Park, J and Price, CJ (2021) Interventions and manipulations of Interoception. Trends in Neurosciences 44(1), 5262. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tins.2020.09.010.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
WHO (2022) World Mental Health Report: Transforming Mental Health for All. Geneva: WHO.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. The resilient zone: (a) regulation and (b) dysregulation.

Figure 1

Figure 2. A public health perspective: a) health interventions and b) mental health interventions.

Author comment: The Community Resiliency Model, an interoceptive awareness tool to support population mental wellness — R0/PR1

Comments

Dear Drs. Chibanda, Bass, and Belkin,

Our manuscript “The Community Resiliency Model (CRM), an Interoceptive Awareness Tool to Support Population Mental Wellness” introduces an exciting response to ongoing mental health needs of individuals and the demands for emotional capacity in communities around the world. CRM can be a one-time, self-care, mental-wellness modality that lends itself naturally to task-sharing. CRM’s burgeoning research base and neurobiological underpinnings are explained in our article, and we use Frieden’s Health Impact Pyramid to illustrate how this intervention can fit at multiple tiers of health systems for mental health promotion, prevention, and treatment.

Mental health providers, healthcare organizations, and community leaders are looking for efficient, cost-effective ways to build resiliency, vibrancy and justice within their systems. CRM is a set of easily learned concepts and somatic awareness skills that use the body itself to cope with the stresses of everyday life, the cumulative trauma of strife/racism/oppression, and the immediate impact of natural and man-made disasters. Recent research, including randomized controlled trials, demonstrate that CRM’s self-regulation techniques can help learners reduce traumatic stress symptoms and increase sense of well-being. We present a brief summary of these findings, as well as CRM research with Tutsi genocide survivors and post-Ebola community members in Sierra Leone. CRM is a progressive solution to the need for a self-care, task-sharing mental health intervention. Please note that although the three authors are Certified CRM teachers, we have no conflicts of interest with the Trauma Resource Institute, where CRM was developed.

Sincerely,

Linda Grabbe, PhD, FNP-BC, PMHNP-BC, Professor Emeritus

Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing, Emory University

Review: The Community Resiliency Model, an interoceptive awareness tool to support population mental wellness — R0/PR2

Conflict of interest statement

I declare no competing interests in this manuscript

Comments

Thank you for providing me with this significant opportunity to review your manuscript. This is critical perspective research that will benefit the sciences.

I agree to publication with minor changes. There’s no need to return to me if you change these little suggestions.

1. Add reference on page.“3” in the second paragraph .." even in the presence of mild stress perturbations(??).

2. Put the number of the figure in parentheses: ex: Figure(2a) to avoid confusing readers.

3. Page(10): use footnotes on the youtube link "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7rlO3Rg2pw)." to avoid confusion

4. On page (7), there is a double point in the subtitle, but on page (8), there is not. Kindly adjust.

5. Last, adjust the words,“ ”discussion, “ ”conclusion, " or other subtitles either in justify, centered, or left alignment. Make your subtitles in similar alignment

Review: The Community Resiliency Model, an interoceptive awareness tool to support population mental wellness — R0/PR3

Conflict of interest statement

I know the primary author professionally as I also publish in this area. However, I believe that I am able to remain objective.

Comments

Thank you for the opportunity to review this article. The authors make a compelling argument for the need for interventions such as CRM and provide theoretical and research support for its effectiveness. However, there are a few areas for improvement that could strengthen the article:

1. Please provide a brief discussion of the term “scalable” as it relates to Healey’s work.

2. Please clearly state that CRM as a trauma-sensitive (TS) model in the first sentence of the second paragraph.

3. It would be helpful to connect the discussion of the TS model more clearly with the Health Impact Pyramid by highlighting why both are important for promoting health and well-being.

4. There is a missing paragraph indent on page 4 that needs to be corrected.

5. Please explain how techniques, used in CRM, such as touching one’s skin or clothing, are interoceptive and how this is helpful.

6. The intentional use of body awareness in CRM reduces attention to unpleasant sensations and alters the stress response. How so (moving aways form unpleasant sensations)?

7. Interventions that counteract the loss of executive override in severe stress reactions can be of supreme value to maintaining mental balance and well-being. Even during an actual trauma? When is the override needed and not needed?

8. To better integrate the discussion of CRM as a TS model with the Health Impact Pyramid, it would be helpful to mention the potential benefits of the TS model in the HIP section.

Recommendation: The Community Resiliency Model, an interoceptive awareness tool to support population mental wellness — R0/PR4

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Decision: The Community Resiliency Model, an interoceptive awareness tool to support population mental wellness — R0/PR5

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: The Community Resiliency Model, an interoceptive awareness tool to support population mental wellness — R1/PR6

Comments

Dear Dr. Chibanda

Thank you for this opportunity to submit the revision of our manuscript, “The Community Resiliency Model (CRM), a Task-Sharing Interoceptive Awareness Tool to Support Population Mental Wellness.” We hope we have adequately addressed the reviewer comments and will be glad to add any further details. We are including the edited MS and the edited MS with highlights where we made changes. Linda Grabbe

Review: The Community Resiliency Model, an interoceptive awareness tool to support population mental wellness — R1/PR7

Conflict of interest statement

We don’t have any conflict of interest in this study.

Comments

This paper is well described and has the potential to help the world community to know more about the intention they were expressing.

Recommendation: The Community Resiliency Model, an interoceptive awareness tool to support population mental wellness — R1/PR8

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Decision: The Community Resiliency Model, an interoceptive awareness tool to support population mental wellness — R1/PR9

Comments

No accompanying comment.