Towards Trauma-Informed Legal Practice: a Review
Colin James
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Summary

Lawyers can develop PTSD-like symptoms from repeated exposure to clients’ trauma, yet legal culture often dismisses it as weakness. It calls for trauma-informed workplaces, supervision and self-care in the profession.

2020

Towards Trauma-Informed Legal Practice: a Review

Keywords burnout; indirect trauma; post-traumatic stress disorder; secondary trauma; self-care; stigma; supervision; trauma-informed; vicarious trauma; well-being

Abstract

Vicarious or secondary trauma experience has always been part of legal practice although many do not acknowledge the risk it can have on the mental health, well-being and performance of legal professionals. The listening to, observing and then detailing of traumatic events for the purposes of legal process in some cases may harm lawyers who need to work closely with clients, victims and witnesses. This article reviews the research on trauma in many areas of professional human services that could inform and improve our understanding of legal practice. It examines the discursive history of trauma and recent studies on lawyer well-being, before discussing the controversies about recognising vicarious trauma and the stigma against mental health concerns in the legal profession. The article concludes by reviewing options to assist law firms in considering trauma-informed policy, practices and supervision strategies and to help individual lawyers recognise the value of self-care.

Introduction

Many lawyers are exposed to trauma in their day-to-day work, and there is little recognition in the legal profession of the effect that exposure may have on their well-being and effectiveness. Lawyers may need to engage with clients and others who have been directly injured and traumatised, listen to graphic descriptions of violence, engage at length with traumatised people and analyse details of abuse and injuries for legal purposes. Every lawyer who works with traumatised clients is affected at some level in different ways, although often it may not be damaging or career limiting. In other cases, exposure to clients’ trauma can lead to significant harm and life-changing effects.

A growing body of research confirms that professionals exposed to descriptions, images or recordings of their client’s trauma can develop harmful secondary or indirect effects, in some cases producing symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Research has identified ways for individuals, systems and organisations to become ‘trauma-informed’ so they can more safely and effectively work with cases involving trauma. A trauma-informed approach may provide lawyers with better opportunities to ‘survive and thrive’ by overcoming stigma, maximising protective strategies, normalising the effects of indirect exposure, ensuring the workplace is informed and has supportive systems and developing individual resilience to clients’ trauma as part of regular, day-to-day legal practice (Evans & Coccoma, 2014).

This article draws on studies from a range of human services including legal practice to help identify risks of indirect trauma, including its possible causes and effects, and describe protective measures and effective responses. A conventional approach to trauma in the legal profession is to deny the problem and assert that lawyers should get used to it, be resilient, toughen up or ‘grow a thick skin’. Law schools typically don’t inform students of the risks of exposure to trauma in legal practice; many law firms under neoliberal management seem to not care about employees’ exposure to clients’ trauma since their measure of performance is often focused on billing targets; and most law societies and associations have not yet incorporated trauma-informed training into continuing professional development programmes. Consequently, lawyers have little opportunity for education on the possible effects of trauma or professional training on learning how to manage their exposure to clients’ trauma in daily practice.

We accept that stress is unavoidable in many areas of legal practice, and in most cases it is adaptive. Stress or even distress in professional work is not always traumatic or harmful. We do not seek to introduce new pathologies or mental health diagnoses in legal practice; however, we understand types of mental illness as constructions not ‘facts’, and they vary with historical and social shifts (Freshwater, 2006). The concern arises because some lawyers may be impacted by exposure to work-related trauma that is not adequately recognised. In particular, lawyers who work in criminal law, coronial law, family law, domestic violence, child abuse, immigration and refugee law and personal injury cases may be at risk from indirect trauma exposure since they often need to work with traumatised clients and to particularise violent events (Albert, 2013). They may need to discuss in detail the experiences and injuries of clients, victims or witnesses, including actions, events and consequences that many people would find gruesome, traumatic or upsetting. Lawyers often need to draft affidavits, analyse reports and closely examine forensic evidence including photos, recordings and physical items. In addition, they may need to work closely over time with traumatised clients or witnesses who are displaying PTSD symptoms from their direct trauma.

Trauma is defined by the American Psychological Association as an ‘emotional response to a terrible event like an accident, rape or natural disaster’, often followed immediately by shock and denial, with unpredictable events in the long term, including emotions, flashbacks, strained relationships and even physical symptoms such as headaches and nausea (APA, 2019a). In the American Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders–Fifth Edition (DSM–5) trauma is described briefly as ‘Exposure to actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence’ (APA, 2013) and in the European International Classification of Diseases–11th Revision (ICD–11) as ‘an extremely threatening or horrific event or series of events’ (WHO, 2019). A useful definition of trauma is provided in the United States by the Center for Treatment of Anxiety and Mood Disorders: ‘a psychological, emotional response to an event or an experience that is deeply distressing or disturbing’ (CTAMD, 2019). Randall and Haskell (2013) distinguish trauma from stress by saying a traumatic event is one which is ‘so overwhelming that it diminishes a person’s capacities to cope, as it elicits intense feelings of fear, terror, helplessness, hopelessness, and despair often subjectively experienced as a threat to the person’s survival’ (p. 507). They also say a traumatic event need not be violent, although it will always entail a violation of the person’s sense of self and security (citing Kammerer & Mazelis, 2006).

History

The science on trauma is a contested domain, and controversies over definitions of conditions, symptoms, causes and treatments continue in both professional and research literature. It helps therefore to understand how we have arrived at our current, although diverse, state of knowledge and how it is continuing to develop. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries doctors identified symptoms of trauma in soldiers exposed to battle and named the conditions variously as ‘nervous shock’, ‘psychic shock’, ‘shell shock’ and ‘war neurosis’ (Young, 1995; Herman, 1992). In 1942 The Lancet reported doctors ‘successfully’ treating patients in a London emergency hospital by telling them to stop exaggerating their fears that were shared by everyone, and to return to their normal duties (Wilson, 1942, p. 284). In 1965 the World Health Organisation updated the ICD–8 to include a stress-related condition: ‘transient situational disturbance’, which became ‘acute stress reaction’ or ‘adjustment reaction’ in the ICD–9 in 1975. After the Vietnam war ended in 1975, American therapists, assisting thousands of returned servicemen showing psychological injury from their war experiences, lobbied for a variation of the DSM, and consequently in 1980, the DSM–III included PTSD as a specific disorder. However, some therapists with ongoing and large case-loads of patients suffering PTSD began to show secondary signs of disturbed cognitive schemas and memory functions (Paivio, 1986).

The first theorists to clearly articulate indirect trauma in the human services were McCann and Pearlman in 1990 (McCann & Pearlman, 1990). Building on the work of Fromm (1955) and Rogers (1959), they found that therapists working with traumatised clients over time may experience PTSD symptoms, including intrusive thoughts or images and painful emotional reactions associated with their patients’ memories. However, just as PTSD was viewed as a normal reaction to an abnormal event, they urged that indirect traumatisation should not be pathologised, since it was a normal reaction to stressful work with victims. By 1995, two related conditions had emerged in the discourse, ‘secondary trauma stress’ and ‘compassion fatigue’, although to date neither have been accepted as distinct diagnoses by the DSM (Figley, 1995, 2015). Two more studies in the same year were influential in confirming the American discourse on indirect trauma: one that analysed the experience of sexual assault counsellors (Schauben & Frazier, 1995) and another on the experience of trauma therapists (Pearlman & Mac Ian, 1995).

Following the 2001 attack on the World Trade Center in New York, many counsellors working with survivors began to display symptoms of PTSD, apparently through ‘emotional contagion’ from their patients. However, similar to the Vietnam veterans’ counsellors, they did not fit the restricted diagnosis of PTSD because they had not directly experienced the traumatic event that had injured their clients (Seeley, 2008). Eventually in 2013, DSM–5 introduced an additional category of causation of PTSD by ‘repeated or extreme exposure to details of the event(s), i.e. vicarious trauma’ and ‘usually in the course of professional duties’ (Jones & Cureton, 2017).

‘Vicarious trauma’ has been distinguished by some researchers as the most serious condition from exposure to trauma as it involves a cognitive or schematic shift, sometimes leading to a change in world view (Newell & Macneil, 2010, p. 57; Hernandez, Engstrom, & Gangsei, 2007). However, the American discourse often refers to ‘secondary trauma stress’ as the range of symptoms associated with PTSD, including emotional numbing, avoidance, arousal and intrusive thoughts (Molnar et al., 2017, p. 130). These conditions are distinguished from countertransference, which refers to the feelings a therapist may develop towards their patient, although they can co-occur with it and reinforce one another (McCann & Pearlman, 1990). While the DSM–5 accepts that PTSD may develop from vicarious/secondary/indirect exposure to trauma, the discourse is hampered by inconsistency in definitions and overlap in symptoms. Neither vicarious trauma nor secondary trauma stress appear as distinct disorders in the DSM–5 or the European equivalent ICD–11; however, both appear increasingly in professional, management, coaching and supervision literature (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, SAMHSA, 2014a; Szymanska, 2009). The American Bar Association (ABA), for example, refers only to secondary trauma stress and not to vicarious trauma (ABA, 2017). To avoid confusing the constructs, which have different meanings in different countries, this review uses ‘indirect trauma’ to include the range of symptoms associated with trauma including vicarious trauma and secondary trauma stress.

An earlier review of the literature (Lerias & Byrne, 2003) identified several professions in their view at risk of indirect trauma without mentioning the legal profession. However, the reviewers found several predictor variables that would affect lawyers as much as other professionals: previous trauma history, psychological well-being, social support, age, gender, education and socio-economic status, and coping styles. Currently, most human services accept that professionals exposed to trauma in their work may in some cases experience PTSD symptoms, consistent with empirical research involving counsellors (Furlonger & Taylor, 2013), social workers (Pack, 2014), medical clinicians (Coughlin, 2017), mental health therapists (Robinson-Keilig, 2014), judges (Chamberlain & Miller, 2009), police (Turgoose, Glover, Barker, & Maddox, 2017) and lawyers (Levin & Greisberg, 2003; Maguire & Byrne, 2017; Silver, Portnoy, & Peters, 2004; Trabsky & Baron, 2016). While research is continuing on indirect trauma, especially in America, several agencies have designed ‘trauma-informed toolkits’ to help professionals in their work (Klinic, 2013; MHCC, 2018). In 2015 a meta-analysis concluded a ‘small but significant’ effect on therapists from working with traumatised clients (Hensel, Ruiz, Finney, & Dewa, 2015). Recently in Canada, without specifying vicarious or secondary trauma, the national government introduced a programme of ‘trauma and violence informed approaches’ into all aspects of policy and practice in the human services in order to ‘provide positive supports for all people’ (Government of Canada, 2018). Further, litigation is building, including a court in Australia that recently found The Age newspaper liable for failing to provide a journalist with a safe workplace, awarding $180,000 damages for PTSD acquired at work (ABC, 2019).

A related construct, ‘subthreshold PTSD’ refers to the experience of those who don’t fit the DSM–5 definitional categories of PTSD, yet still suffer symptoms that can be disabling (Bergman, Kline, Feeny, & Zoellner, 2015). There is no completed research with lawyers on subthreshold PTSD; however, anecdotal evidence suggests it is at least not an uncommon experience (Weston, 2019). Research with other professions indicates it is clinically significant and can produce enduring psychological and behavioural problems, despite lack of reporting and inconsistent terminology (Brancu et al., 2016).

Lawyer well-being and effectiveness

Significant research on the legal profession in the United States (Krieger & Sheldon, 2015; Reed & Bornstein, 2013; Seligman, Verkuil, & Kang, 2005) and Australia (Beaton, 2007; Chan, Poynton, & Bruce, 2014; Kelk, Luscombe, Medlow, & Hickie, 2009) has confirmed that lawyers suffer disproportionately from mental health vulnerabilities in ways that reduce their effectiveness. In the UK a 2019 survey of 1800 lawyers found that 48% reported a mental health problem in the past month, up from 38% in 2018 and 26% in 2017 (JLD, 2018, 2019). Common experiences in lawyers include high stress and anxiety, depression, substance abuse and suicide ideation, despite the robust profile lawyers often assert. Ironically, living up to that profile and appearing to be resilient in the face of difficult situations may aggravate existing mental health vulnerabilities among some lawyers who, as a professional group, already show high rates of pessimism (Armbruster, Pieper, Klotsche, & Hoyer, 2015), scepticism (Hu, 2015) and perfectionism (Trabsky & Baron, 2016), tend to be risk-averse and have low levels of trust (Levin & MacEwen, 2014). Other causes likely to contribute to lawyers’ mental health concerns include work conditions leading to compassion fatigue (Hourigan, 2015; Norton, Johnson, & Woods, 2016) and burnout (Bergin & Jimmieson, 2014; Bourg Carter, 2006).

Compassion fatigue refers to the build-up of emotional and physical exhaustion that affects many professionals and caregivers (Figley, 2002). It can result from ‘the chronic use of empathy’ when responding to clients or patients who are suffering in some way or have been injured (Newell & Macneil, 2010). Burnout is likely a more common experience in lawyers and has been associated with a loss of idealism for the profession and direct and indirect health consequences (Allman, 2019; Bianchi, Schonfeld, & Laurent, 2015; Newell & Macneil, 2010). Further, burnout may be increasing among contemporary younger lawyers as they compete to prove their value to employers since law firms are adopting more IT functions and more law graduates enter an already crowded market (Allman, 2019). A recent study of helping professionals in agencies across the United States found burnout to be a significant risk factor as it accounted for almost half of variance in participants diagnosed with indirect trauma (Cummings, Singer, Hisaka, & Benuto, 2018). Related to burnout is the experience of bullying, which has been identified in the legal profession by several studies that found PTSD symptoms related to bullying among lawyers (Le Mire, 2015; Omari & Paull, 2013; Yamada, 2018). Bullying tends to increase lawyers’ vulnerabilities, and while both compassion fatigue and burnout reduce lawyers’ effectiveness, it appears the broader legal profession has not yet accepted evidence confirming that exposure to bullying or to clients’ trauma can contribute to a lawyer developing these conditions.

Broader research on lawyer well-being has identified psychological risks for lawyers (Collier, 2016; Foley et al., 2016; Jaffee et al., 2017; Michalak, 2015) and diverse protective strategies, including mindfulness (Huang, 2017), increased focus on ethics (Baron, 2015), building resilience (Preston, Stewart & Moulding, 2014), transforming the justice system (Silver, 2017), therapeutic jurisprudence (Campbell, 2019), integrative law (Wright, 2016) and restorative justice (Foley, 2016). Most of the proposals involve systemic change in legal education and practice and may assist in protecting lawyers from indirect trauma; however, none have yet been adopted broadly or tested where they are partially applied.

Controversies

Controversies over trauma, PTSD and vicarious or secondary trauma continue among therapists and researchers on several issues. Since 1994 the DSM has claimed that trauma can lead to acute stress disorder (ASD), which has symptoms that arise immediately or within a month after a traumatic exposure (Bryant, Friedman, Spiegel, Ursano, & Strain, 2011). If ASD symptoms continue beyond a month, which seems to happen in about 50% of cases, the appropriate diagnosis should be PTSD (Elklit & Christiansen, 2010). In some cases, symptoms of ASD may worsen in the first month, often due to ongoing stressors or additional traumatic events (Medscape, 2016). However, in 2018 the ICD–11 revised ‘acute stress reaction’, reducing it from a disorder to a ‘transient’ symptom of exposure to trauma (WHO, 2018).

The ICD has not followed the DSM–5 in recognising indirect causation of PTSD symptoms in the course of professional duties, and research on ‘vicarious trauma’ remains contentious in the psychological and psychiatric literature (Frances, 2013; Pai, Suris, & North, 2017). The ICD–11 has restricted the definition of PTSD further by reducing the number of categories compared with the earlier ICD–10 (Barbano et al., 2019). As stated above, neither the DSM–5 nor the ICD–11 acknowledges ‘vicarious trauma’ as a distinct condition; however, the British Medical Association (BMA) recognises vicarious trauma at some level, defining it as ‘a process of change resulting from empathetic engagement with trauma survivors’ (BMA, 2018).

According to DSM-5, the symptoms of PTSD are diverse and can include intrusive thoughts, nightmares, flashbacks, negative affect, irritability, hypervigilance and aggression, emotional stress or physical reactivity following exposure to traumatic reminders (APA, 2013; US Department of Veteran Affairs, USDVA, 2018). The ICD–11 uses a different definition, saying PTSD can result from either a ‘single incident’ or ongoing ‘complex’ trauma, which is a term used elsewhere for cumulative or underlying exposures that are usually interpersonal events such as systemic abuse in a relationship or child abuse from which the person cannot escape (Knefel, Garvert, Cloitre, & Lueger-Schuster, 2015; Knefel & Lueger-Schuster, 2013; Van der Kolk, 2003). The construct of complex trauma is not mentioned in the DSM although it is consistent with attachment theory, which is broadly accepted (Rosenfield et al., 2018; West, 2015).

Emerging conditions, medical conventions and new constructs create a risk of ‘false positives’ in diagnoses, which some say happened with PTSD when it was first accepted as a disorder by the DSM–III (Sadler, 2005, p. 169). A related controversy was the ‘debriefing’ practice as an immediate treatment for people suffering exposure to trauma. Research shows mixed results and little support for debriefing after traumatic experience, with either adults or children (Pfefferbaum, Jacobs, Nitiéma, & Everly, 2015). Current models of psychological first aid specifically caution against ‘critical incident stress debriefing’ and suggest it is only helpful if the person wants to discuss what happened, and only with care to avoid pushing them to disclose more than they want (APS, 2013; Bisson, Roberts, Andrew, Cooper, & Lewis, 2013).

Both the ICD–11 and the DSM–5 accept that many PTSD symptoms are shared with other conditions, such as anxiety and depression, which could be comorbid with PTSD (Westen, Novotny, & Thompson-Brenner, 2004). However, contrary to the ICD, which is moving to restrict definitions and numbers of disorders, the DSM has extended the categories while cautioning against ‘absolute boundaries’ between related conditions, suggesting that ‘single-disorder presentations’ are the exception rather than the rule (Seeley, 2008, p. 132; Wakefield, 2016). Consequently, the American discourse, more aligned with the DSM, has been open to identifying and developing concepts related to secondary trauma in the human services, while the European perspective, more aligned with the ICD, has sought to constrain categories and resist ‘new’ conditions.

Indirect trauma in legal practice

Most empirical studies on indirect trauma involve the experiences of diverse professions in human services although there is a growing discourse on the legal profession. Some earlier studies avoided trauma terminology, such as a Canadian project in 1995, which found that so many prosecutors suffered from the effects of what researchers labelled ‘role overload’ it affected the administration of justice (Gomme & Hall, 1995). However, in 2003 Jaffe and colleagues found that a majority of judges had been exposed to trauma, with a possible cumulative effect from more experience on the bench (Jaffe, Crooks, Dunford-Jackson, & Town, 2003). Also in 2003 Levin and Greisberg cited earlier American studies on lawyers’ well-being and published their own results showing that lawyers suffered ‘significantly higher rates of secondary trauma stress and burnout’ compared with mental health providers and social service workers. In the same year Silver and colleagues published a qualitative discussion drawing on the research to date in the context of their personal experiences in legal practice with traumatised clients (Silver et al., 2004). In a small study published in 2008, Vrklevski and Franklin measured 100 lawyers using the newly developed Vicarious Trauma Scale and confirmed that multiple trauma exposure in lawyers was associated with higher scores of symptomatic distress (Vrklevski & Franklin, 2008). Levin and colleagues revisited the problem in 2011 and found significantly higher rates of PTSD symptoms in American attorneys than in their administrative staff (Levin et al., 2011). In a follow-up study, Levin’s team found that lawyers continually exposed to indirect trauma tended to withdraw, reducing their effectiveness and their hours of work over time (Levin, Besser, Albert, Smith, & Neria, 2012). In 2015 Katz and Haldar drew on their clinical legal experience to argue for a model of trauma-informed lawyering in family law practice (Katz & Haldar, 2015). In a subsequent study, Katz and Haldar (2016) advocated for lawyers to provide more effective representation of their clients by borrowing trauma-informed techniques developed ‘in the therapeutic context’ (p. 363).

In Canada, a study surveying 478 practising attorneys found significant increases in PTSD symptoms associated with increased work-related trauma (Leclerc, Wemmers, & Brunet, 2019). Further, the Canadian Bar Association recently presented an indirect trauma session at its annual conference (Mathieu, 2018, 2019), and the American Bar Association encouraged the adoption of trauma-informed legal practice, updating its tips for lawyers who may be at risk of indirect trauma:

Trauma-informed legal practice can strengthen legal advocacy, improve attorney-client relationships, and ensure appropriate screening, in-depth assessment, and evidence-based treatment. In addition, awareness of secondary traumatic stress can improve prevention, identification, and self-care among legal professionals. (ABA & NCTSN, 2017)

In Australia in 2016, Trabsky and Baron examined the experiences of lawyers working in the coronial jurisdiction and found they were ‘likely to suffer distress by virtue of being members of the legal profession’ and thus were expected to ‘steel themselves’ against distress they will experience ‘as a product of what has been identified as “secondary traumatization” in certain professions’ (Trabsky & Baron, 2016, p. 594). Based on their results they critiqued existing guidelines and handbooks that asserted that lawyers needed only to show ‘resilience, impartiality and dissociation’ in order to cope with the grief and trauma of coronial work (p. 584). Their recommendations aligned with those for police made earlier by Perez and colleagues (Perez, Jones, Englert, & Sachau, 2010), that lawyers working with trauma should be supported with additional and specific training to develop coping skills and to maintain supportive connections.

The Australian Blue Knot Foundation produced a background paper in 2016, which reviewed the research and growing awareness of trauma effects on lawyers and argued for the introduction of trauma-informed legal systems: ‘The provision of law and delivery of justice comprise critical terrain to which trauma informed principles should be applied’ (Kezelman & Stavropoulos, 2016, p. 20). The following year, a small study by Maguire and Byrne confirmed earlier results by Levin and Greisberg (2003) finding that lawyers showed more symptoms of indirect trauma than mental health professionals (Maguire & Byrne, 2017). Participating lawyers also showed more symptoms of depression, anxiety and stress, and the researchers called for future studies to clarify causation – that is, whether indirect trauma influences those experiences, or if the psychopathology influences indirect trauma.

Consistent with emerging research, Australian professional journals are publishing articles to help lawyers cope with indirect trauma in their work (Nomchong, 2017). A Queensland judge (Smith, 2018) recently urged lawyers to become aware of the risk of indirect trauma and inter alia to consider adopting the Minds Count Workplace Well-Being Guidelines for the Legal Profession in their organisation (Minds Count Foundation, MCF, 2019). In the UK, discussion of indirect trauma by the legal profession appears relatively discreet. In 2019, as discussed above, the UK Law Society’s survey reported on ‘stress’ and ‘mental ill-health’ in lawyers without enquiring on indirect trauma or associated experiences (JLD, 2019). On the other hand, the UK Bar Council (UKBC) has published an information pack on ‘vicarious trauma’, designed for ‘Safeguarding your working practice’ (UKBC, 2019).

Most empirical research so far reports on the experience of lawyers in private practice, prosecutors and judges, and there appears to be nothing published to date on the experience of indirect trauma by lawyers in legal aid or community legal services. Their experience may be different for several reasons: while in many cases they don’t bill clients and so are not oppressed by billing targets, their employer organisation may be under-funded for the caseload, causing high work-loads including trauma-affected cases and increased risk of work-stress for some lawyers. In addition, the nature of community legal services often involves working with impoverished communities, refugees and clients affected by long-term unemployment, crime rates, disability, drug and alcohol abuse, and high rates of domestic violence and child abuse. On the other hand, it is possible that community lawyering attracts lawyers who have a more compassionate disposition than does private practice, and some research suggests that compassion is a protective quality in trauma exposure (Gilbert, 2005).

Overall, despite significant research gaps, the legal profession in several countries is beginning to recognise the risks for lawyers exposed to indirect trauma and attempting to keep practitioners informed. Given the significant and increasing research on lawyer well-being there is a growing need for qualitative studies to help understand the role that indirect trauma has on lawyer vulnerabilities and quantitative projects to investigate the extent of exposure and its effects. Further, longitudinal studies are needed to help distinguish and explain the effects of trauma in different types of lawyering against variable exposures, workplaces and personalities, and the effects of trauma-informed legal education, training and system changes.

Stigma

In a review of studies by Molnar and colleagues designed to identify effective workplace responses to indirect trauma in a range of professions, the reviewers found a common reluctance to disclose based on what seemed to be a stigma (Molnar et al., 2017, p. 130). Their analysis found stigma as a significant impediment to professionals who unduly individualise their experience, not wanting to reveal to colleagues, employers or clients that they are suffering from burnout or other secondary trauma effects. Stigma against mental health issues may contribute to the silencing of indirect trauma as a risk in legal practice. For individual lawyers, conscious of their reputation and professional identity, it can reflect ignorance of the potential harm of indirect trauma and perpetuate a sense of shame about mental health concerns generally in the legal profession (Ersoy, Born, Derous, & van der Molen, 2011; Pals, 2006; Royle, Keenan, & Farrell, 2009; Stuart, 2008). Due to the stigma in a legal workplace milieu many lawyers may think it is counter-intuitive to disclose symptoms and reveal what they think will be seen as a professional weakness. Suppressing symptoms not only avoids opportunities for organisational responses but risks aggravating the effects lawyers may suffer.

Several studies describe how stigma generates a ‘psychological dishonesty’, which may combine with the stress of complex cases and high workloads, and eventually worsen lawyers’ mental well-being, efficacy and their physical health (Slepian, Chun, & Mason, 2017; Williamson, Stevelink, & Greenberg, 2018). Other studies show how workplace systems can aggravate professional’s experience of stress by imposing unreasonably high workloads, which is common in the legal profession (Baron, 2015; C. James, 2017; LSG, 1998; Michalak, 2015). Relevant to the long hours often worked by lawyers, a study of 259 therapists found that the primary predictor of trauma symptoms was not the intensity of trauma exposure but hours-per-week spent working with traumatised clients (Bober & Regehr, 2006).

Another review of studies on organisational responses to burnout and indirect trauma found that simply acknowledging to employees that their work is stressful can help overcome stigma against disclosure and may enable lawyers to feel more supported at work and to seek personal solutions and self-care (Bell, Kulkarni, & Dalton, 2003). Law firm managers, adhering to their business model, might assume simplistically that lawyers should not be affected by their client’s trauma because they do not have a ‘therapeutic relationship’ with their clients. Conventionally, many law firms motivate the productivity of employed lawyers by obliging them to meet billing targets with supervision focused on time-management strategies (Baron, 2014; C. James, 2017). Overcoming the stigma against mental health issues and introducing trauma-informed policy in legal practice may involve additional costs that law firms have so far avoided. Both organisations and supervisors have a duty of care for employees and may need to recognise how they can help protect lawyers from the effects of indirect trauma. Trauma-informed policies would benefit individual lawyers not only by helping to negate stigma generally, but also through enhancing their well-being and satisfaction and improving the effectiveness of their work.

Trauma-informed practice could be supported at both supervisory and management level in law firms and workplaces so that employed lawyers know they have organisational support (Bassuk, Unick, Paquette, & Richard, 2017; Conover, Sharp, & Salerno, 2015). Instituting trauma-informed policies and practices will help to normalise indirect trauma effects in legal practice, moderate the stigma that hinders discussion and disclosure, and help to support lawyers who may endure symptoms of trauma exposure that cause personal suffering and diminished efficacy.

Managers could discuss lawyers’ trauma exposure in meetings as a standard agenda item, acknowledging and accepting the risk as genuine, distributing information on how lawyers may experience the effects of client-related trauma, sharing strategies for protection and reassuring lawyers that systems are in place for responding to their issues and minimising the risk. If lawyers understand that their workplace, including their supervisor and colleagues, accept that indirect trauma is a normal response to exposure to clients’ trauma they will be more inclined to disclose symptoms and take appropriate action including self-care and protective steps instead of denying it by presenting a veneer of resilience. Studies of other professions dealing with similar traumatic exposures indicate that workplaces that are unsupportive are likely to increase the risk of compassion fatigue and lower their ability to cope with clients’ trauma (Dombo & Blome, 2016; Turgoose et al., 2017). Effective mitigation of lawyers’ indirect trauma risk may require both the employer organisation and individual lawyers to become trauma-informed, and it may require structural and systemic workplace change.

Organisational support

The legal profession may be the last of the human services to acknowledge that its members face risks of indirect trauma. Until recently, there have been no conventions or protocols in legal practice about self-care as there are in the medical, allied health and counselling fields. Competition in the legal profession and the adversarial nature of legal practice may have fuelled the denial of the risk of indirect trauma to lawyers and hindered recognition of their vulnerability. Further, contemporary neoliberal models of workplace systems and technological innovations have led to reduced staffing in some areas, and as competition for employment increases lawyers may fear showing weakness in any form, reflecting the stigma discussed above (Stuart, 2008; Thornton, 2016).

Adopting trauma-informed policies involving gradual transitions in workplace practices may improve both the safety and efficacy of employed lawyers exposed to trauma (Kezelman & Stavropoulos, 2016). Graduating examples proposed by researchers in health systems could be adapted for legal workplaces and begin with a ‘trauma-aware’ workplace, which is at an early stage where staff have received effective training so they understand trauma, its effects and how people often adapt to it. ‘Trauma-sensitive’ describes a firm that puts into operation some concepts of a trauma-informed practice. ‘Trauma responsive’ is the next stage where a firm encourages changes in lawyer behaviour to strengthen their resilience and protective factors (Jennings, 2004). A firm that is ‘trauma-informed’ would have ensured that all personnel, including professional, management and support staff, are aware of trauma and its adaptations, and that all practices in the system are responsive to trauma, including its direct and indirect effects (Nomchong, 2017; Quadara, 2015).

Legal practice managers might fear opening a ‘Pandora’s Box’ of uncontrollable issues by raising indirect trauma with lawyers and introducing new policies. However, some research confirms that lawyers who feel a sense of ‘psychological safety’ may work more effectively and conscientiously (Edmondson, 2019). Indirect trauma in legal practice is likely to be common; however, it is not inevitable, and the risk can be reduced by ensuring there are good protocols and giving lawyers appropriate information, training, preparation, and support (Steckler & Light, 2017). The risk may be affected by a lawyer’s background, culture, personal history and personality (Lerias & Byrne 2003). It can build incrementally from repeated exposures, and it can be aggravated by stress from other workplace conditions. Indirect trauma experiences can be alleviated by both self-care and workplace and supervision changes, and if not responsive can be treated effectively by a range of therapies (Shapiro, 2010). Trauma-informed policies should aim to inform and empower individuals, who are then in the best position to decide what they need. Ideally, managers will be familiar with work conditions of employed lawyers so they can identify risks that may aggravate or sensitise a lawyer to indirect trauma. Sadly, these conditions include aspects often inherent in legal workplace culture such as high workload and billing targets, a competitive environment, adversarial practices and the stress of making an error that could cause a client’s loss (Verney, 2018).

Trauma-informed training as part of professional development may help lawyers not only to protect themselves, but to improve their client skills and effectiveness through better understanding of the responses and decisions of clients who may have suffered childhood abuse or other complex trauma (Knight, 2009). Several studies provide guidance for professionals communicating with traumatised clients safely and helping them obtain therapeutic care if appropriate (K. James, 1999; Knight, 2013). If lawyers are supported by appropriate workplace protocols and practise good self-care strategies, they can protect themselves and improve their competency, effectiveness and resilience as they work directly with traumatised clients.

The legal profession includes high diversity in systems so until conventions are established and tested, individual workplaces can develop their own trauma-informed policies that reflects the experience of their staff. Fortunately, researchers have proposed several models based on the experience of other professions and the recommendations of empirical research. Drawing on a meta-analysis, Knight found an emerging consensus among researchers around five principles for trauma-informed practice: safety, trust, collaboration, choice and empowerment (Goodman et al., 2016; Knight & Borders, 2018). Other researchers have included ‘culture’ as an important principle, since it incorporates gender and historical issues relevant to the organisation and the lawyer (SAMHSA, 2014b). Culture may be particularly important to address in law firms to help counter the stigma against mental health issues and the historical absence of an ethic-of-care for staff in many legal workplaces, compared with other human services.

The resulting six principles offer a viable foundation for designing trauma-informed policies for a legal workplace; however, the policies must be relevant to the work activities and understood by all staff as a process and a developmental resource, not a new set of rules or a condition of employment (Cook, Simiola, Ellis, & Thompson, 2017). Trauma-informed policy must be flexible, allowing for evolution as it adapts to other changes, including new systems, new staff, new clients, and new laws and systems, as well as improved understandings from new research on how to work safely with traumatised clients. It is important to discuss the policy at routine meetings to reduce stigma, to allow staff to share their experiences and to enable modifications in practice as the policy develops.

One model that could be adapted for legal practice is ‘trauma-informed care’ (TIC). It applies the above principles as an ‘organisational change process that is structured around the presumption that everyone in the agency (from clients through to management) may have been directly or indirectly exposed to trauma within their lifetime’ (Jankowski, Schifferdecker, Butcher, Foster-Johnson, & Barnett, 2019). Although not applied in legal practice yet, where TIC has been implemented in related areas both staff and clients report being more empowered and satisfied with services, including reduced evidence of indirect trauma (Bryson et al., 2017; Sullivan, Goodman, Virden, Strom, & Ramirez, 2017). Assessments of the TIC training so far show that it has significant effectiveness in a range of measures (Kenny, Vazquez, Long, & Thompson, 2017). Other studies show that where trauma-informed policies are not applied, staff experience higher rates of indirect trauma symptoms and reduced competency in their service to clients (Frey, Beesley, Abbott, & Kendrick, 2017).

The ‘Vicarious Trauma Toolkit’ (VTT) is an effective model produced by the US Department of Justice (DOJ), which includes a compendium of articles and other resources to assist organisations build their own programme to protect staff (DOJ, 2018b). The toolkit can be searched by discipline and includes resources for ‘Law Enforcement’ and ‘Victim Services’. One section in the VTT is the ‘Vicarious Trauma – Organizational Readiness Guide’, which may help law firms wanting to assess their current needs (DOJ, 2018a). The guide helps to identify gaps in knowledge and assists organisations to develop a more trauma-informed policy with an improved capacity to support professional staff.

A third model is Sandra Bloom’s ‘Sanctuary Toolkit’, based on experiences of organisational change in designing strategies to respond effectively to trauma (Bloom, 2017; Bloom & Sreedhar, 2008). The Sanctuary model includes seven ‘cultures’: non-violence, emotional intelligence, social learning, shared governance, open communication and social responsibility. As studies on indirect trauma evolve, more programmes are likely to emerge and improve the options for legal organisations to develop effective policies to improve protection from trauma effects for staff and clients. Research on the effectiveness of these models is continuing, and the results so far confirm earlier studies showing that even policies restricted to motivating self-care can help professionals cope with traumatic exposure and improve well-being and efficacy (Foreman, 2018; Pearlman & Mac Ian, 1995; Williams, Helm, & Clemens, 2012).

Trauma-informed supervision

Legal supervisors occupy a key position in trauma-informed practice as their support is essential for individual lawyers to work effectively and safely with traumatised clients. Legal supervisors can benefit from the experiences of supervisors in other professions who have learnt to help individuals adapt to indirect trauma not solely as an individual concern, but by understanding it in context of their organisation, their work and their role in the broader socio-legal system (Becker-Blease, 2017). Failure to validate the lawyer’s response to trauma in supervision can reinforce stigma and aggravate self-blaming and feelings of incompetence, which can increase symptoms and risks further injury from continued exposure.

An effective model of trauma-informed supervision provides lawyers with professional development aligned with a competent and compassionate legal service for clients in need. Experienced supervisors will understand that the topics lawyers most need to discuss in supervision are often those they avoid bringing up, especially while the stigma persists, such as mental health issues associated with indirect trauma (Best et al., 2014; Mehr, Ladany, & Caskie, 2015). Weak supervision that lacks trauma awareness and avoids difficult questions risks aggravating rumination and other symptoms of compassion fatigue or indirect trauma, potentially leading to serious problems or loss of the lawyer from the workplace and the profession. On the other hand, attempting therapeutic approaches, obliging a debrief or otherwise engaging ‘too deeply’ in issues could pathologise the lawyer’s response unnecessarily, which could be a boundary violation and undermine the lawyer’s self-efficacy (Bernard & Goodyear, 2014; Hernandez, Engstrom, & Gangsei, 2010).

Supervisors who are responsive to trauma theory will understand the benefits of being proactive with indirect trauma to help normalise reactions and enable lawyers to make informed decisions in their work and self-care. However, they will not force the lawyer to disclose or discuss an issue unless and until they are ready. Where possible in a supportive environment and with consent of the lawyer it might be helpful to discuss an issue with other staff in meetings to help normalise the experience and minimise stigma. Supervisors may draw from the firm’s policies or a tested model – for example, the six principles of trauma-informed practice stated above. One study of experienced supervisors in a range of professions emphasised the importance of two principles: safety and empowerment (Berger & Quiros, 2014). Safety in supervision includes the lawyer feeling safe, which may include enhancing structural, operational or administrative procedures in the firm, as well as establishing a trusting connection with the lawyer. Empowerment includes allowing the lawyer to participate actively in their own supervision, feeling enabled to share their own thoughts and emotions, for example about a client’s traumatic experience. Supervision requires not only listening carefully to the lawyer’s priorities but encouraging them to set parts of the agenda for supervision meetings and supporting their decisions where possible. An effective strategy is to help the lawyer understand not just how to manage difficult cases and their reactions to clients’ trauma, but also notice how they have developed and grown as a result of their practice so far. Using a ‘supervisory alliance’ the supervisor can foster professional growth by asking the lawyer to come to sessions prepared to talk about their successes with clients and other indicators of growth (Berger & Quiros, 2016; Killian, Hernandez-Wolfe, Engstrom, & Gangsei, 2017). As with professional coaching the supervisor needs to clarify workload expectation limits, not just billing or work-load targets, and ensure that lawyers are conscious of their personal habits and how their well-being and self-care are inseparably related to their professional performance.

A trauma-informed supervision process requires the supervisor to have good knowledge of the lawyers involved, and their character and background, as well as the nature of the work they do. Since responses to trauma are individual and depend on many personal and situational factors, supervisors need to anticipate uncertainty and diverse responses to clients’ trauma: no two lawyers will be the same (Adeola & Picou, 2014; Elliott & Urquiza, 2006). Knowing the lawyer’s background might help a supervisor understand their response to certain situations. However, having a personal history of trauma, such as child abuse, will not necessarily increase risk of subsequent indirect trauma symptoms (McCall-Hosenfeld, Mukherjee, & Lehman, 2014; Nelson-Gardell & Harris, 2003). Lawyers experiencing burnout, bullying and compassion fatigue are more likely than others to develop symptoms from indirect trauma, while the quality of connectedness and social support they experience in the workplace and their community are protective factors, can improve their effectiveness and should be promoted where possible (Carlson et al., 2016; Sattler, Boyd, & Kirsch, 2014; Sippel, Pietrzak, Charney, Mayes, & Southwick, 2015). Inexperience as a lawyer or being new to the job may increase vulnerability; however, having a lot of experience working with traumatised clients is not necessarily protective, since indirect trauma can be cumulative and without appropriate supervision, adequate breaks and self-care lawyers may develop emotional exhaustion, leading to compassion fatigue and indirect trauma symptoms (Molnar et al., 2017).

Key strategies in trauma-informed supervision are aligned with reducing stigma in the workplace. They validate the lawyer’s experience with compassionate understanding, acceptance and affirmation, and normalise reactions to exposure to trauma rather than to pathologise them as abnormal with diagnoses, sensitivities or medical responses. Symptoms of indirect trauma stress are ‘a normal and universal response to abnormal (violence induced) or unusual events (disasters)’ (Figley, 2015, p. 178). However, with trauma-informed policies that encourage appropriate self-care supervisors can help lawyers manage the symptoms and minimise the effects (Berger & Quiros, 2016; Yassen, 2013).

Self-care

Attentiveness to self-care is thus as much about OHS, risk management and liability as about the more standard reading of it as purely pertaining to `R and R’. (Kezelman & Stavropoulos, 2016, p. 17)

Individual lawyers have a duty of self-care, and taking effective action to protect themselves from indirect trauma is an important part of professional development and maintaining professional competence (Hensel et al., 2015; Layne, Stuber, Abramovitz, Ross, & Strand, 2011). A first step is for lawyers to get informed about trauma theory, which will help them understand the importance of self-awareness and improve their motivation toward building resilience and adaptive habits. Individual resilience is often restricted to the capacity to deal with adversity, but it is best understood as developmental and adaptive rather than a fixed strength or personality trait (Bradey, 2014; Foster, Cuzzillo, & Furness, 2018).

Trauma-informed lawyers understand that exposure to trauma has an impact, that the effect is normal and it can be managed. Similarly, lawyers who adopt a growth mindset, as opposed to a ‘fixed’ mindset, are more likely to learn from their experiences and find the ‘best fit’ for them in terms of an adaptive attitude and safe responses to their clients’ trauma (Burnette, O’Boyle, VanEpps, Pollack, & Finkel, 2013; Moser, Schroder, Heeter, Moran, & Lee, 2011). Martin Seligman has argued that sustaining a growth mindset in the long run enables a person not only to demonstrate resilience to trauma but to actually grow from the traumatic experience (Seligman, 2011; Yeager, Lee, & Jamieson, 2016).

Often a legal workplace culture and the stigma it perpetuates cause some lawyers to retain fixed beliefs that they need to present a robust persona and are unwilling to acknowledge their vulnerabilities in the competitive legal profession. Some lawyers are susceptible to false confidence, which lacks self-awareness and may increase their vulnerability to indirect trauma. Other lawyers may simply be resistant to or afraid of change. Both forms of inertia can be moderated through trauma-informed supervision, improving their awareness of trauma theory and focusing on the ‘culture’ principle discussed above as part of the transition towards a trauma-informed organisation. Once lawyers drop their façade of invulnerability there are many resources they can access to strengthen their professional resilience and the efficacy of their practice.

The American Psychological Association provides a system for introducing 10 practices that could help professionals in any field build resilience to work effectively with traumatised clients (APA, 2019b). Similarly, the British Medical Authority lists 14 practices of self-care designed to reduce the risk of indirect trauma for health professionals (BMA, 2018). While some of the measures are broad principles, which may seem facile to a cynical lawyer (e.g. ‘Take care of yourself’ and ‘Look after your physical and mental well-being’), the point is that lawyers generally do not take care of themselves, which is why some are vulnerable to indirect trauma. Many studies on lawyer well-being (discussed above) confirm their tendency to over-work and adopt bad habits to cope with work stress, including alcohol and drug abuse as well as poor diet, sleep and fitness regimes, and many lose contact with supportive friends and community due to the pressures of work (Jaffee et al., 2017; Krill, Johnson, & Albert, 2016; Seligman et al., 2005). Supervisors who are informed of the research on indirect trauma are likely to encourage and motivate lawyers towards self-care and to normalise discussion about basic self-care practices especially around personal habits and maintaining supportive connections.

A review of research on the efficacy of self-care practices for professionals in response to secondary trauma supported a four-step process involving enhanced self-awareness, committing to addressing the stress, making a personal plan of action and following through with action (Sansbury, Graves, & Scott, 2015). The core of this model is the adage Know Thyself, an ancient Delphic maxim often endorsed as the first step in best-practice self-care strategies. In trauma-informed practice, enhancing self-awareness enables us to recognise our thoughts and feelings about a client’s trauma as the start of normalising and validating those reactions internally. We discover what works for us, since a strategy that helps one lawyer may not work for another (Moore, Perry, Bledsoe, & Robinson, 2011; Rothschild & Rand, 2006).

Mindfulness is a core tenet of ‘knowing thyself’, and many studies demonstrate how self-awareness and self-compassion are enhanced through various mindfulness interventions that would improve lawyers’ resilience to trauma, as well as their performance and overall well-being. Among these are Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (Kabat-Zinn, 2003), Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (Williams, Russell, & Russell, 2008) and Compassionate Mind Training (Gilbert, 2009). A basic mindfulness practice is the regular habit of secular meditation, which might involve simply sitting quietly for a dedicated 15 minutes each day (Larson, Steffen, & Primosch, 2013). There are many other practices that enhance mindfulness to improve resilience to trauma, including yoga, tai chi, and walking (Grodin, Piwowarczyk, Fulker, Bazazi, & Saper, 2008; Harle, 2017; Teut et al., 2013).

The self-awareness enabled through mindfulness practice can help to integrate and resolve ideas, memories and images (cognitive) and somatic (body-related) and affective (emotional) aspects of anxiety-related trauma. It also helps improve self-compassion (Iacono, 2017; Neff, 2003) and other adaptive outcomes such as ‘post-traumatic growth’, enabling a forward-thinking optimism and a greater appreciation of life and meaning at work (Blackie et al., 2017; Tedeschi & Calhoun, 2004). Post-traumatic growth is an ‘antifragile’ effect, beyond mere resilience, evidenced by the fact that some people become stronger after traumatic exposure (Taleb, 2014). As Taleb explains: ‘Antifragility is beyond resilience or robustness. The resilient resists shocks and stays the same; the antifragile gets better’ (p. 3). In 2013, a metasynthesis of qualitative studies found that post-traumatic growth can result from trauma exposure, providing subjects follow personal and organisational coping strategies (Cohen & Collens, 2013).

Improved self-awareness may include discovering one’s psychological or character strengths, which can be used more effectively than compensating for domains where one is less gifted (Schutte & Malouff, 2019). One effective strengths model is based on the applied positive psychology theories of Martin Seligman, Christopher Peterson and colleagues, which have been tested in several domains (Butler & Kern, 2016), including coaching, education, and professional development (Dixon, Lee, & Ghaye, 2016; Kern, Waters, Adler, & White, 2015; Linley & Joseph, 2004). Another method is based on the ‘Broaden and Build’ theory of using gratitude and positivity in an intentional practice, which has a growing body of research confirming the benefits for enhancing and creating psychological resources (Fredrickson, 2013; Van Cappellen, Rice, Catalino, & Fredrickson, 2018). A simpler practice verified with different professions is positive self-talk, focusing on affirmations and motivational comments (Baker, 2018; Hatzigeorgiadis, Zourbanos, Galanis, & Theodorakis, 2011). Studies suggest that the self-talk practice can enhance resilience, reduce rumination and improve mood and is best introduced through supervision to overcome resistance from stigma. It involves addressing oneself as if advising a good friend: ‘Let it go until tomorrow’; ‘That’s your work talking, that’s not accurate’ (Knight, 2013; Moser et al., 2011). Therapists advocate supportive self-talk using ‘non-first-person’ language to enable psychic distancing from the traumatic memories and feelings that can arise at irregular times (Foster et al., 2018; Kross et al., 2014).

As a lawyer’s self-awareness grows with trauma-informed supervision and self-care practices, it is likely they will also become more compassionate towards themselves and be less judgmental about their goals and performance, including their successes and failures. Self-compassion helps lawyers to understand how their own well-being is fundamental to providing best practice for their clients and important for coping with indirect trauma (Neff, 2011; Scoglio et al., 2015). Self-compassion arising with improved self-awareness helps lawyers to manage a client’s trauma in a balanced awareness of self and other, rather than over-identifying with their client, their feelings or their situation.

Conclusion

The relative paucity of studies so far with lawyers directly exposed to indirect trauma is attenuated by studies with related professions such as judges, child welfare officers, police and prosecutors. Academic debates over diagnoses are not relevant for lawyers working with traumatised clients since there is enough evidence to understand the causes of symptoms and to adopt protective practices. Recognising the specific risks of lawyers’ exposure to clients’ trauma is not ‘buying-in’ to one side of a controversy but accepting responsibility to act. Lawyers need training, supportive supervision updated systems and conditions that enable them to provide the best legal assistance for their clients, which includes managing their own exposure to trauma. Acknowledging the need for change is essential for the profession to take the next step and facilitate policies and practices to better protect lawyers working with trauma.

Legal systems oriented towards restorative justice including therapeutic jurisprudence, as opposed to retributive models, will be open to trauma-informed theories and practice (Campbell, 2019). Restorative justice has been articulated mostly within criminal law, which is also one of the areas most affected by trauma and its consequences (Foley, 2016). Related areas including coronial law, family law, domestic violence, child abuse and personal injury law also involve trauma and may benefit from social justice and client-focused practices that prioritise redemption and – where possible – the repair of relationships. While the individual experience of direct and indirect trauma is important to recognise, a restorative justice approach to trauma-informed legal practice would avoid the limitations described by Randall and Haskell, where:

mainstream and traditional psychiatric and psychological approaches to the study of trauma often tend to ignore or minimize the relevant and broader social contexts and social relationships in which people’s experiences are produced, shaped and lived. (Randall & Haskell, 2013, p. 501)

Law firms and legal workplaces are obliged to ensure their systems are safe. That may require employers to ensure that trauma-informed policies apply to both the organisation’s workplace and systems and all individuals, who in turn are encouraged to adopt self-care practices. Employed lawyers and sole practitioners need to recognise that self-care habits will not only enhance their well-being and help protect them for work-related trauma but also improve their productivity and efficacy at work. The science on trauma-informed practice is relatively new, yet it has been adopted effectively in other professions and provides the legal profession with an opportunity to catch up, to protect its members and to assert its role as a responsible and compassionate human service.

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Abstract

Vicarious or secondary trauma experience has always been part of legal practice although many do not acknowledge the risk it can have on the mental health, well-being and performance of legal professionals. The listening to, observing and then detailing of traumatic events for the purposes of legal process in some cases may harm lawyers who need to work closely with clients, victims and witnesses. This article reviews the research on trauma in many areas of professional human services that could inform and improve our understanding of legal practice. It examines the discursive history of trauma and recent studies on lawyer well-being, before discussing the controversies about recognising vicarious trauma and the stigma against mental health concerns in the legal profession. The article concludes by reviewing options to assist law firms in considering trauma-informed policy, practices and supervision strategies and to help individual lawyers recognise the value of self-care.

Introduction

Lawyers frequently encounter trauma in their daily work, yet the legal profession often overlooks how this exposure affects their well-being and effectiveness. Lawyers may interact with individuals who have been directly injured and traumatized, hear graphic descriptions of violence, engage extensively with traumatized individuals, and analyze details of abuse and injuries for legal purposes. Every lawyer working with traumatized clients is impacted in some way, though often not in a damaging or career-limiting manner. However, in other instances, exposure to client trauma can lead to significant harm and life-altering consequences.

Growing research indicates that professionals exposed to clients' trauma through descriptions, images, or recordings can develop harmful secondary or indirect effects, sometimes leading to symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Research has identified strategies for individuals, systems, and organizations to become "trauma-informed," enabling safer and more effective work with trauma cases. A trauma-informed approach can help lawyers "survive and thrive" by reducing stigma, using protective strategies, normalizing the effects of indirect exposure, ensuring supportive workplace systems, and building individual resilience to client trauma as a routine part of legal practice.

This article uses studies from various human services, including legal practice, to identify the risks of indirect trauma, its possible causes and effects, and to describe protective measures and effective responses. The conventional view in the legal profession is to deny the problem, asserting that lawyers should adapt, be resilient, toughen up, or "grow a thick skin." Law schools typically do not inform students about the risks of trauma exposure in legal practice. Many law firms, under modern management focused on billing targets, often disregard employees' exposure to client trauma. Most law societies and associations have not yet incorporated trauma-informed training into continuing professional development programs. Consequently, lawyers have few opportunities to learn about the potential effects of trauma or to receive professional training on managing trauma exposure in daily practice.

Stress is an unavoidable part of many legal practices and is usually manageable. Stress or distress in professional work is not always traumatic or harmful. This discussion does not aim to introduce new mental health conditions in legal practice; rather, it recognizes mental illnesses as societal constructs that change over time. The concern arises because some lawyers may be affected by work-related trauma that is not adequately acknowledged. Specifically, lawyers in criminal law, coronial law, family law, domestic violence, child abuse, immigration and refugee law, and personal injury cases may be at risk from indirect trauma exposure. These lawyers often work with traumatized clients and must detail violent events. They may need to discuss in depth the experiences and injuries of clients, victims, or witnesses, including actions, events, and consequences many would find gruesome, traumatic, or upsetting. Lawyers frequently draft affidavits, analyze reports, and closely examine forensic evidence such as photos, recordings, and physical items. Additionally, they may work closely over extended periods with traumatized clients or witnesses exhibiting PTSD symptoms from their direct trauma.

Trauma is defined as an emotional response to a terrible event, such as an accident, rape, or natural disaster, often followed by shock and denial. Long-term effects can include unpredictable emotions, flashbacks, strained relationships, and physical symptoms like headaches and nausea. In diagnostic manuals, trauma is briefly described as "Exposure to actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence" or "an extremely threatening or horrific event or series of events." A helpful definition of trauma is a psychological, emotional response to a deeply distressing or disturbing event or experience. Trauma differs from stress in that a traumatic event is so overwhelming it reduces a person's ability to cope, causing intense feelings of fear, terror, helplessness, hopelessness, and despair, often perceived as a threat to survival. A traumatic event does not have to be violent but always involves a violation of a person's sense of self and security.

History

The understanding of trauma is a debated area, with ongoing disagreements about definitions, symptoms, causes, and treatments in both professional and research literature. Understanding its development helps explain current knowledge. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, doctors identified trauma symptoms in soldiers exposed to combat, naming these conditions "nervous shock," "psychic shock," "shell shock," and "war neurosis." In 1942, one medical journal reported doctors "successfully" treating patients in a London emergency hospital by telling them to stop exaggerating fears and return to duties. In 1965, the World Health Organization updated its classification to include "transient situational disturbance," later called "acute stress reaction" or "adjustment reaction." After the Vietnam War ended in 1975, American therapists assisting thousands of psychologically injured servicemen advocated for a change to diagnostic criteria, leading to PTSD being included as a specific disorder in 1980. However, some therapists with large caseloads of PTSD patients began to show secondary signs of disturbed thinking and memory functions.

McCann and Pearlman were the first theorists to clearly describe indirect trauma in human services in 1990. They observed that therapists working with traumatized clients over time could experience PTSD symptoms, including intrusive thoughts or images and painful emotional reactions linked to their patients' memories. They argued that indirect trauma should not be seen as a pathology, but rather as a normal reaction to the stressful work of helping victims, similar to how PTSD was viewed as a normal reaction to an abnormal event. By 1995, two related conditions, "secondary trauma stress" and "compassion fatigue," emerged in the discussion, though neither has been officially recognized as distinct diagnoses. Two additional studies that year, one on sexual assault counselors and another on trauma therapists, helped confirm the American understanding of indirect trauma.

Following the 2001 attack on the World Trade Center, many counselors working with survivors began to show PTSD symptoms, seemingly through "emotional contagion" from their patients. However, like the Vietnam veterans' counselors, their experiences did not fit the narrow PTSD diagnosis because they had not directly experienced the traumatic event themselves. Eventually, in 2013, a revised diagnostic manual introduced an additional category for PTSD causation: "repeated or extreme exposure to details of the event(s), i.e. vicarious trauma" and "usually in the course of professional duties."

Some researchers have distinguished "vicarious trauma" as the most severe condition resulting from trauma exposure, as it involves a significant shift in thinking or worldview. However, American discourse often refers to "secondary trauma stress" as the range of symptoms associated with PTSD, including emotional numbness, avoidance, arousal, and intrusive thoughts. These conditions are different from countertransference, which describes a therapist's feelings towards a patient, though they can occur together and strengthen each other. While diagnostic manuals acknowledge that PTSD can develop from vicarious, secondary, or indirect trauma exposure, the discussion is hindered by inconsistent definitions and overlapping symptoms. Neither vicarious trauma nor secondary trauma stress are listed as distinct disorders in major diagnostic manuals; however, both appear increasingly in professional, management, coaching, and supervision literature. For example, one legal association refers only to secondary trauma stress. To avoid confusion due to varying meanings in different countries, this review uses "indirect trauma" to encompass the range of symptoms associated with trauma, including vicarious trauma and secondary trauma stress.

An earlier review of literature identified several professions at risk of indirect trauma, but did not mention the legal profession. However, the reviewers found several factors that would affect lawyers as much as other professionals: previous trauma history, psychological well-being, social support, age, gender, education, socioeconomic status, and coping styles. Currently, most human services acknowledge that professionals exposed to trauma in their work may, in some cases, experience PTSD symptoms. This is supported by research involving counselors, social workers, medical clinicians, mental health therapists, judges, police, and lawyers. While research on indirect trauma continues, especially in America, several agencies have created "trauma-informed toolkits" to assist professionals. A 2015 analysis concluded that working with traumatized clients had a "small but significant" effect on therapists. More recently, a national government introduced "trauma and violence informed approaches" into all aspects of policy and practice in human services to "provide positive supports for all people." Furthermore, legal cases are emerging, including one where a court found a newspaper liable for failing to provide a journalist with a safe workplace, awarding damages for PTSD acquired at work.

A related concept, "subthreshold PTSD," refers to individuals whose symptoms do not meet the full diagnostic criteria for PTSD but still experience disabling symptoms. No completed research exists on subthreshold PTSD in lawyers; however, informal observations suggest it is not uncommon. Research with other professions indicates it is clinically significant and can lead to lasting psychological and behavioral problems, despite underreporting and inconsistent terminology.

Lawyer Well-being and Effectiveness

Extensive research in various countries confirms that lawyers disproportionately experience mental health vulnerabilities, which reduce their effectiveness. A 2019 survey of lawyers in the UK found that nearly half reported a mental health problem in the previous month, a significant increase from prior years. Common issues among lawyers include high stress, anxiety, depression, substance use, and suicidal thoughts, despite their often robust public image. Paradoxically, striving to maintain this image and appear resilient in challenging situations may worsen existing mental health vulnerabilities in some lawyers. As a professional group, lawyers already exhibit high rates of pessimism, skepticism, and perfectionism, tend to be risk-averse, and have low levels of trust. Other factors likely contributing to lawyers' mental health concerns include work conditions leading to compassion fatigue and burnout.

Compassion fatigue describes the gradual build-up of emotional and physical exhaustion affecting many professionals and caregivers. It can result from the continuous use of empathy when responding to clients or patients who are suffering or have been injured. Burnout is likely a more common experience for lawyers and has been linked to a loss of professional idealism and both direct and indirect health consequences. Furthermore, burnout may be increasing among younger lawyers as they compete to prove their worth to employers, especially as law firms adopt more technology and more law graduates enter a crowded market. A recent study of helping professionals found burnout to be a significant risk factor, accounting for almost half of the variation in participants diagnosed with indirect trauma. Related to burnout is the experience of bullying, which studies have identified in the legal profession, linking PTSD symptoms to bullying among lawyers. Bullying tends to increase lawyers' vulnerabilities. While both compassion fatigue and burnout reduce lawyers' effectiveness, the broader legal profession has not yet fully accepted evidence that exposure to bullying or client trauma can contribute to these conditions in lawyers.

Broader research on lawyer well-being has identified psychological risks for lawyers and diverse protective strategies. These include mindfulness, an increased focus on ethics, building resilience, transforming the justice system, therapeutic jurisprudence, integrative law, and restorative justice. Most of these proposals involve systemic changes in legal education and practice and could help protect lawyers from indirect trauma. However, none have been widely adopted or thoroughly tested where partially applied.

Controversies

Disagreements about trauma, PTSD, and vicarious or secondary trauma continue among therapists and researchers on several points. Since 1994, diagnostic criteria have suggested that trauma can lead to acute stress disorder (ASD), with symptoms appearing immediately or within a month after traumatic exposure. If ASD symptoms persist beyond a month, which occurs in about half of cases, the diagnosis typically shifts to PTSD. In some instances, ASD symptoms may worsen in the first month, often due to ongoing stressors or additional traumatic events. However, in 2018, one international classification revised "acute stress reaction," downgrading it from a disorder to a "transient" symptom of trauma exposure.

An international diagnostic system has not followed the American system in recognizing indirect causation of PTSD symptoms resulting from professional duties. Research on "vicarious trauma" remains debated in psychological and psychiatric literature. The international system has further narrowed the definition of PTSD by reducing the number of categories compared to its previous version. As noted, neither major diagnostic system acknowledges "vicarious trauma" as a distinct condition. However, one medical association recognizes vicarious trauma to some extent, defining it as "a process of change resulting from empathetic engagement with trauma survivors."

According to the American diagnostic system, PTSD symptoms are diverse and can include intrusive thoughts, nightmares, flashbacks, negative mood, irritability, hypervigilance, aggression, emotional stress, or physical reactions following exposure to traumatic reminders. The international system uses a different definition, stating that PTSD can result from either a "single incident" or ongoing "complex" trauma. Complex trauma is a term used for cumulative or underlying exposures, typically interpersonal events like systemic abuse in a relationship or child abuse from which a person cannot escape. The concept of complex trauma is not mentioned in the American diagnostic system, although it aligns with attachment theory, which is widely accepted.

Emerging conditions, medical conventions, and new concepts create a risk of "false positives" in diagnoses, which some argue happened with PTSD when it was first accepted as a disorder. A related controversy involved the practice of "debriefing" as an immediate treatment for people exposed to trauma. Research shows mixed results and little support for debriefing after traumatic experiences in either adults or children. Current models of psychological first aid specifically caution against "critical incident stress debriefing" and suggest it is only helpful if the person wishes to discuss what happened, and only with care to avoid pressuring them to disclose more than they want.

Both major diagnostic systems acknowledge that many PTSD symptoms are shared with other conditions, such as anxiety and depression, which can occur alongside PTSD. However, contrary to the international system, which aims to restrict definitions and numbers of disorders, the American system has expanded categories while advising against "absolute boundaries" between related conditions, suggesting that "single-disorder presentations" are the exception rather than the rule. Consequently, American discourse, more aligned with its diagnostic system, has been open to identifying and developing concepts related to secondary trauma in human services. In contrast, the European perspective, more aligned with its diagnostic system, has sought to limit categories and resist "new" conditions.

Indirect Trauma in Legal Practice

Most studies on indirect trauma involve the experiences of various human service professions, though there is a growing discussion within the legal profession. Some earlier studies avoided trauma terminology, such as a 1995 Canadian project that found many prosecutors suffered from what researchers called "role overload," affecting the administration of justice. However, in 2003, researchers found that a majority of judges had been exposed to trauma, with a possible cumulative effect from more experience on the bench. Also in 2003, other researchers cited earlier studies on lawyers' well-being and published their own results showing that lawyers experienced "significantly higher rates of secondary trauma stress and burnout" compared with mental health providers and social service workers. In the same year, a qualitative discussion drew on existing research in the context of personal experiences in legal practice with traumatized clients. A small 2008 study measured 100 lawyers using a newly developed scale and confirmed that multiple trauma exposure in lawyers was linked to higher scores of symptomatic distress. Researchers revisited the problem in 2011 and found significantly higher rates of PTSD symptoms in American attorneys than in their administrative staff. In a follow-up study, the team found that lawyers continually exposed to indirect trauma tended to withdraw, reducing their effectiveness and work hours over time. In 2015, clinical legal experience was used to argue for a model of trauma-informed lawyering in family law practice. A subsequent study advocated for lawyers to provide more effective client representation by adopting trauma-informed techniques developed "in the therapeutic context."

In Canada, a study of 478 practicing attorneys found significant increases in PTSD symptoms associated with increased work-related trauma. Furthermore, the Canadian Bar Association recently held a session on indirect trauma at its annual conference, and the American Bar Association encouraged the adoption of trauma-informed legal practice, updating its advice for lawyers at risk of indirect trauma. It stated that trauma-informed legal practice can improve advocacy, attorney-client relationships, and ensure proper screening, assessment, and treatment. Additionally, awareness of secondary traumatic stress can enhance prevention, identification, and self-care among legal professionals.

In Australia in 2016, researchers examined the experiences of lawyers working in the coronial jurisdiction and found they were "likely to suffer distress by virtue of being members of the legal profession" and were thus expected to "steel themselves" against distress they would experience "as a product of what has been identified as 'secondary traumatization' in certain professions." Based on their findings, they criticized existing guidelines and handbooks that claimed lawyers only needed to show "resilience, impartiality and dissociation" to cope with the grief and trauma of coronial work. Their recommendations aligned with those made for police, suggesting that lawyers working with trauma should receive additional, specific training to develop coping skills and maintain supportive connections.

An Australian foundation produced a paper in 2016 that reviewed research and growing awareness of trauma's effects on lawyers. It argued for implementing trauma-informed legal systems, stating that "The provision of law and delivery of justice comprise critical terrain to which trauma informed principles should be applied." The following year, a small study confirmed earlier results, finding that lawyers showed more symptoms of indirect trauma than mental health professionals. Participating lawyers also showed more symptoms of depression, anxiety, and stress. The researchers called for future studies to clarify the cause—whether indirect trauma influences these experiences, or if mental health issues influence indirect trauma.

Consistent with emerging research, Australian professional journals are publishing articles to help lawyers cope with indirect trauma in their work. A Queensland judge recently urged lawyers to become aware of the risk of indirect trauma and to consider adopting workplace well-being guidelines for the legal profession. In the UK, discussion of indirect trauma within the legal profession appears relatively limited. In 2019, a survey reported on "stress" and "mental ill-health" in lawyers without inquiring about indirect trauma or related experiences. On the other hand, a UK bar council has published an information pack on "vicarious trauma," designed for "Safeguarding your working practice."

Most empirical research to date reports on the experiences of lawyers in private practice, prosecutors, and judges. There appears to be little published on the experience of indirect trauma by lawyers in legal aid or community legal services. Their experiences may differ for several reasons: while they often do not bill clients and are not pressured by billing targets, their employer organizations may be underfunded for the caseload, leading to high workloads, including trauma-affected cases, and increased risk of work-related stress for some lawyers. Additionally, community legal services often involve working with impoverished communities, refugees, and clients affected by long-term unemployment, crime, disability, substance use, and high rates of domestic violence and child abuse. Conversely, it is possible that community lawyering attracts lawyers with a more compassionate disposition than private practice, and some research suggests that compassion is a protective quality in trauma exposure.

Overall, despite significant research gaps, the legal profession in several countries is beginning to acknowledge the risks of indirect trauma for lawyers and is trying to keep practitioners informed. Given the substantial and increasing research on lawyer well-being, there is a growing need for qualitative studies to understand how indirect trauma affects lawyer vulnerabilities, and for quantitative projects to investigate the extent of exposure and its effects. Furthermore, longitudinal studies are needed to distinguish and explain the effects of trauma in different types of lawyering, considering varying exposures, workplaces, and personalities, as well as the impact of trauma-informed legal education, training, and systemic changes.

Stigma

In a review of studies aimed at identifying effective workplace responses to indirect trauma across various professions, researchers found a common reluctance to disclose, seemingly due to stigma. Their analysis identified stigma as a significant barrier for professionals who overly personalize their experiences, not wanting to reveal to colleagues, employers, or clients that they are suffering from burnout or other secondary trauma effects. Stigma against mental health issues can contribute to the silence surrounding indirect trauma as a risk in legal practice. For individual lawyers, conscious of their reputation and professional identity, this can reflect a lack of awareness about the potential harm of indirect trauma and perpetuate a sense of shame about mental health concerns generally within the legal profession. Due to this stigma in legal workplaces, many lawyers may think it is counterproductive to disclose symptoms, fearing it will be seen as a professional weakness. Suppressing symptoms not only prevents opportunities for organizational responses but also risks worsening the effects lawyers may experience.

Several studies describe how stigma creates "psychological dishonesty," which can combine with the stress of complex cases and high workloads, eventually harming lawyers' mental well-being, effectiveness, and physical health. Other studies show how workplace systems can exacerbate professionals' stress by imposing unreasonably high workloads, a common issue in the legal profession. Regarding the long hours lawyers often work, one study of therapists found that the primary predictor of trauma symptoms was not the intensity of trauma exposure, but the number of hours per week spent working with traumatized clients.

Another review of studies on organizational responses to burnout and indirect trauma found that simply acknowledging to employees that their work is stressful can help overcome the stigma against disclosure. This may enable lawyers to feel more supported at work and to seek personal solutions and self-care. Law firm managers, adhering to their business model, might mistakenly assume that lawyers should not be affected by their client's trauma because they do not have a "therapeutic relationship" with clients. Traditionally, many law firms motivate lawyers' productivity by requiring them to meet billing targets, with supervision focused on time-management strategies. Overcoming the stigma against mental health issues and introducing trauma-informed policies in legal practice may involve additional costs that law firms have so far avoided. Both organizations and supervisors have a duty of care for employees and may need to recognize how they can help protect lawyers from the effects of indirect trauma. Trauma-informed policies would benefit individual lawyers not only by helping to reduce stigma generally but also by enhancing their well-being and satisfaction and improving the effectiveness of their work.

Trauma-informed practice could be supported at both supervisory and management levels in law firms and workplaces, ensuring employed lawyers feel organizational support. Implementing trauma-informed policies and practices will help to normalize indirect trauma effects in legal practice, reduce the stigma that hinders discussion and disclosure, and support lawyers who may experience trauma exposure symptoms that cause personal suffering and reduced effectiveness.

Managers could discuss lawyers' trauma exposure in meetings as a standard agenda item. This would acknowledge and accept the risk as genuine, distribute information on how lawyers may experience client-related trauma, share protection strategies, and reassure lawyers that systems are in place to address their issues and minimize risk. If lawyers understand that their workplace, including supervisors and colleagues, accepts that indirect trauma is a normal response to exposure to client trauma, they will be more likely to disclose symptoms and take appropriate action, including self-care and protective steps, instead of denying it by presenting an image of resilience. Studies of other professions dealing with similar traumatic exposures indicate that unsupportive workplaces are likely to increase the risk of compassion fatigue and lower the ability to cope with client trauma. Effective mitigation of lawyers' indirect trauma risk may require both the employer organization and individual lawyers to become trauma-informed, and it may necessitate structural and systemic workplace changes.

Organizational Support

The legal profession may be the last of the human services to acknowledge that its members face risks of indirect trauma. Until recently, legal practice lacked conventions or protocols for self-care, unlike the medical, allied health, and counseling fields. Competition within the legal profession and its adversarial nature may have fueled the denial of indirect trauma risk to lawyers and hindered recognition of their vulnerability. Furthermore, modern management models and technological innovations have led to reduced staffing in some areas. As competition for employment increases, lawyers may fear showing weakness, reflecting the stigma discussed earlier.

Adopting trauma-informed policies that involve gradual transitions in workplace practices can improve both the safety and effectiveness of lawyers exposed to trauma. Examples from health systems can be adapted for legal workplaces, starting with a "trauma-aware" workplace where staff receive training to understand trauma, its effects, and how people adapt. "Trauma-sensitive" describes a firm that implements some trauma-informed practices. "Trauma responsive" is the next stage, where a firm encourages changes in lawyer behavior to strengthen resilience and protective factors. A "trauma-informed" firm would ensure all personnel, including professional, management, and support staff, are aware of trauma and its adaptations, and that all system practices respond to trauma, including its direct and indirect effects.

Legal practice managers might worry about opening a "Pandora's Box" of uncontrollable issues by raising indirect trauma with lawyers and introducing new policies. However, some research confirms that lawyers who feel a sense of "psychological safety" may work more effectively and conscientiously. Indirect trauma in legal practice is likely common but not inevitable, and the risk can be reduced by ensuring good protocols and providing lawyers with appropriate information, training, preparation, and support. The risk can be influenced by a lawyer's background, culture, personal history, and personality. It can build gradually from repeated exposures and be worsened by stress from other workplace conditions. Indirect trauma experiences can be lessened by both self-care and changes in the workplace and supervision, and if not responsive, can be effectively treated by various therapies. Trauma-informed policies should aim to inform and empower individuals, who are then best placed to decide what they need. Ideally, managers will be familiar with employed lawyers' work conditions to identify risks that may worsen or sensitize a lawyer to indirect trauma. Sadly, these conditions often include aspects inherent in legal workplace culture, such as high workloads and billing targets, a competitive environment, adversarial practices, and the stress of making an error that could cause a client's loss.

Trauma-informed training as part of professional development can help lawyers not only protect themselves but also improve their client skills and effectiveness through a better understanding of clients' responses and decisions, especially those who may have suffered childhood abuse or other complex trauma. Several studies offer guidance for professionals communicating safely with traumatized clients and helping them obtain therapeutic care if appropriate. If lawyers are supported by appropriate workplace protocols and practice good self-care strategies, they can protect themselves and enhance their competence, effectiveness, and resilience when working directly with traumatized clients.

The legal profession includes diverse systems, so until conventions are established and tested, individual workplaces can develop their own trauma-informed policies that reflect their staff's experiences. Fortunately, researchers have proposed several models based on the experiences of other professions and the recommendations of empirical research. Drawing on a meta-analysis, researchers found an emerging consensus around five principles for trauma-informed practice: safety, trust, collaboration, choice, and empowerment. Other researchers have included "culture" as an important principle, as it incorporates gender and historical issues relevant to the organization and the lawyer. Culture may be particularly important to address in law firms to counter the stigma against mental health issues and the historical absence of a caring ethic for staff in many legal workplaces, compared with other human services.

The resulting six principles offer a viable foundation for designing trauma-informed policies for a legal workplace. However, policies must be relevant to work activities and understood by all staff as a process and a developmental resource, not a new set of rules or a condition of employment. Trauma-informed policy must be flexible, allowing for evolution as it adapts to other changes, including new systems, new staff, new clients, new laws, and improved understandings from new research on how to work safely with traumatized clients. Discussing the policy in routine meetings is important to reduce stigma, allow staff to share experiences, and enable practice modifications as the policy develops.

One model adaptable for legal practice is "trauma-informed care" (TIC). It applies the principles as an "organizational change process structured around the presumption that everyone in the agency (from clients through to management) may have been directly or indirectly exposed to trauma within their lifetime." Although not yet applied in legal practice, where TIC has been implemented in related areas, both staff and clients report increased empowerment and satisfaction with services, including reduced evidence of indirect trauma. Assessments of TIC training show significant effectiveness across various measures. Other studies indicate that where trauma-informed policies are not applied, staff experience higher rates of indirect trauma symptoms and reduced competency in client service.

The "Vicarious Trauma Toolkit" (VTT) is an effective model produced by a government department. It includes a collection of articles and other resources to help organizations build their own program to protect staff. The toolkit can be searched by discipline and includes resources for "Law Enforcement" and "Victim Services." One section, the "Vicarious Trauma – Organizational Readiness Guide," can help law firms assess their current needs. The guide helps identify knowledge gaps and assists organizations in developing a more trauma-informed policy with improved capacity to support professional staff.

A third model is Sandra Bloom’s "Sanctuary Toolkit," based on experiences of organizational change in designing strategies to respond effectively to trauma. The Sanctuary model includes seven "cultures": non-violence, emotional intelligence, social learning, shared governance, open communication, and social responsibility. As studies on indirect trauma evolve, more programs will likely emerge, improving options for legal organizations to develop effective policies to better protect staff and clients from trauma effects. Research on the effectiveness of these models is ongoing, and results so far confirm earlier studies showing that even policies focused on encouraging self-care can help professionals cope with traumatic exposure and improve well-being and effectiveness.

Trauma-informed Supervision

Legal supervisors hold a key position in trauma-informed practice, as their support is essential for individual lawyers to work effectively and safely with traumatized clients. Legal supervisors can learn from the experiences of supervisors in other professions who have helped individuals adapt to indirect trauma, understanding it not solely as an individual concern, but within the context of their organization, work, and role in the broader socio-legal system. Failure to validate a lawyer's response to trauma in supervision can reinforce stigma and intensify self-blame and feelings of incompetence, which can increase symptoms and risk further harm from continued exposure.

An effective model of trauma-informed supervision provides lawyers with professional development that aligns with competent and compassionate legal service for clients in need. Experienced supervisors will understand that the topics lawyers most need to discuss in supervision are often those they avoid raising, especially while stigma persists, such as mental health issues associated with indirect trauma. Weak supervision that lacks trauma awareness and avoids difficult questions risks worsening rumination and other symptoms of compassion fatigue or indirect trauma, potentially leading to serious problems or the loss of the lawyer from the workplace and the profession. Conversely, attempting therapeutic approaches, mandating debriefing, or otherwise engaging "too deeply" in issues could unnecessarily pathologize the lawyer's response, which could be a boundary violation and undermine the lawyer's self-efficacy.

Supervisors who are responsive to trauma theory will understand the benefits of being proactive with indirect trauma to help normalize reactions and enable lawyers to make informed decisions regarding their work and self-care. However, they will not force the lawyer to disclose or discuss an issue unless and until they are ready. Where possible, in a supportive environment and with the lawyer's consent, discussing an issue with other staff in meetings might help normalize the experience and minimize stigma. Supervisors may draw from the firm's policies or a tested model, such as the six principles of trauma-informed practice. One study of experienced supervisors in various professions emphasized the importance of two principles: safety and empowerment. Safety in supervision includes the lawyer feeling safe, which may involve enhancing structural, operational, or administrative procedures in the firm, as well as establishing a trusting connection with the lawyer. Empowerment includes allowing the lawyer to actively participate in their own supervision, feeling able to share their thoughts and emotions, for example, about a client's traumatic experience. Supervision requires not only carefully listening to the lawyer's priorities but also encouraging them to set parts of the agenda for supervision meetings and supporting their decisions where possible. An effective strategy is to help the lawyer understand not just how to manage difficult cases and their reactions to clients' trauma, but also to notice how they have developed and grown as a result of their practice so far. Using a "supervisory alliance," the supervisor can foster professional growth by asking the lawyer to come to sessions prepared to talk about their successes with clients and other indicators of growth. As with professional coaching, the supervisor needs to clarify workload expectation limits, not just billing or workload targets, and ensure that lawyers are conscious of their personal habits and how their well-being and self-care are inseparably related to their professional performance.

A trauma-informed supervision process requires the supervisor to have good knowledge of the lawyers involved, their character and background, as well as the nature of the work they do. Since responses to trauma are individual and depend on many personal and situational factors, supervisors need to anticipate uncertainty and diverse responses to clients' trauma: no two lawyers will be the same. Knowing a lawyer's background might help a supervisor understand their response to certain situations. However, having a personal history of trauma, such as child abuse, will not necessarily increase the risk of subsequent indirect trauma symptoms. Lawyers experiencing burnout, bullying, and compassion fatigue are more likely than others to develop symptoms from indirect trauma. The quality of connectedness and social support they experience in the workplace and their community are protective factors, can improve their effectiveness, and should be promoted where possible. Inexperience as a lawyer or being new to the job may increase vulnerability. However, having extensive experience working with traumatized clients is not necessarily protective, as indirect trauma can be cumulative. Without appropriate supervision, adequate breaks, and self-care, lawyers may develop emotional exhaustion, leading to compassion fatigue and indirect trauma symptoms.

Key strategies in trauma-informed supervision align with reducing stigma in the workplace. They validate the lawyer's experience with compassionate understanding, acceptance, and affirmation, and normalize reactions to trauma exposure rather than pathologizing them as abnormal with diagnoses, sensitivities, or medical responses. Symptoms of indirect trauma stress are "a normal and universal response to abnormal (violence induced) or unusual events (disasters)." However, with trauma-informed policies that encourage appropriate self-care, supervisors can help lawyers manage the symptoms and minimize the effects.

Self-Care

Self-care is a duty for individual lawyers, and taking effective action to protect against indirect trauma is crucial for professional development and maintaining competence. A first step is for lawyers to learn about trauma theory, which will help them understand the importance of self-awareness and motivate them to build resilience and adaptive habits. Individual resilience is often narrowly defined as the ability to cope with adversity, but it is better understood as a developmental and adaptive capacity rather than a fixed strength or personality trait.

Trauma-informed lawyers understand that trauma exposure has an impact, that this effect is normal, and that it can be managed. Similarly, lawyers who adopt a growth mindset, as opposed to a "fixed" mindset, are more likely to learn from their experiences and find what works best for them in terms of an adaptive attitude and safe responses to their clients' trauma. Sustaining a growth mindset over time can enable a person not only to show resilience to trauma but also to grow from the traumatic experience.

Often, legal workplace culture and the stigma it perpetuates cause some lawyers to hold fixed beliefs that they must present a robust persona and are unwilling to acknowledge vulnerabilities in the competitive legal profession. Some lawyers are susceptible to false confidence, which lacks self-awareness and may increase their vulnerability to indirect trauma. Other lawyers may simply resist or fear change. Both forms of inaction can be lessened through trauma-informed supervision, improving their awareness of trauma theory and focusing on the "culture" principle as part of the transition towards a trauma-informed organization. Once lawyers drop their facade of invulnerability, many resources become available to strengthen their professional resilience and the effectiveness of their practice.

One psychological association provides a system of 10 practices that can help professionals in any field build resilience to work effectively with traumatized clients. Similarly, a medical authority lists 14 self-care practices designed to reduce the risk of indirect trauma for health professionals. While some measures are broad principles that might seem overly simple to a cynical lawyer (e.g., "Take care of yourself" and "Look after your physical and mental well-being"), the point is that lawyers generally do not take care of themselves, which is why some are vulnerable to indirect trauma. Many studies on lawyer well-being confirm their tendency to overwork and adopt unhealthy coping habits for work stress, including alcohol and drug abuse, as well as poor diet, sleep, and fitness routines. Many lose contact with supportive friends and community due to work pressures. Supervisors informed about indirect trauma research are likely to encourage and motivate lawyers towards self-care and to normalize discussions about basic self-care practices, especially concerning personal habits and maintaining supportive connections.

A review of research on the effectiveness of self-care practices for professionals in response to secondary trauma supported a four-step process: enhanced self-awareness, committing to addressing the stress, making a personal plan of action, and following through with action. The core of this model is "Know Thyself," an ancient maxim often endorsed as the first step in best-practice self-care strategies. In trauma-informed practice, enhancing self-awareness allows individuals to recognize their thoughts and feelings about a client's trauma as the beginning of normalizing and validating those reactions internally. Individuals discover what works for them, as a strategy that helps one lawyer may not work for another.

Mindfulness is a core principle of "knowing thyself," and many studies demonstrate how self-awareness and self-compassion are enhanced through various mindfulness interventions. These interventions can improve lawyers' resilience to trauma, as well as their performance and overall well-being. Examples include Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy, and Compassionate Mind Training. A basic mindfulness practice is the regular habit of secular meditation, which might involve simply sitting quietly for 15 minutes each day. Many other practices enhance mindfulness to improve resilience to trauma, including yoga, tai chi, and walking.

The self-awareness gained through mindfulness practice can help integrate and resolve cognitive (ideas, memories, images), somatic (body-related), and affective (emotional) aspects of anxiety-related trauma. It also helps improve self-compassion and other adaptive outcomes such as "post-traumatic growth," fostering forward-thinking optimism and a greater appreciation of life and meaning at work. Post-traumatic growth is an "antifragile" effect, going beyond mere resilience, evidenced by the fact that some people become stronger after traumatic exposure. It suggests that individuals can improve after traumatic experiences. In 2013, a synthesis of qualitative studies found that post-traumatic growth can result from trauma exposure, provided individuals follow personal and organizational coping strategies.

Improved self-awareness may include discovering one's psychological or character strengths, which can be used more effectively than compensating for areas where one is less naturally skilled. One effective strengths model is based on applied positive psychology theories, which have been tested in several domains, including coaching, education, and professional development. Another method is based on the "Broaden and Build" theory, which uses gratitude and positivity in intentional practice. Research increasingly confirms the benefits of this for enhancing and creating psychological resources. A simpler practice, verified with different professions, is positive self-talk, focusing on affirmations and motivational comments. Studies suggest that self-talk practice can enhance resilience, reduce rumination, and improve mood. It is best introduced through supervision to overcome resistance from stigma. It involves addressing oneself as if advising a good friend: "Let it go until tomorrow"; "That's your work talking, that's not accurate." Therapists advocate supportive self-talk using "non-first-person" language to enable psychological distance from traumatic memories and feelings that can arise at irregular times.

As a lawyer's self-awareness grows through trauma-informed supervision and self-care practices, they will likely also become more compassionate towards themselves and less judgmental about their goals and performance, including successes and failures. Self-compassion helps lawyers understand how their own well-being is fundamental to providing the best practice for their clients and is important for coping with indirect trauma. Self-compassion, arising with improved self-awareness, helps lawyers manage a client's trauma with a balanced awareness of self and others, rather than over-identifying with their client, their feelings, or their situation.

Conclusion

The relatively limited number of studies specifically on lawyers directly exposed to indirect trauma is supplemented by research on related professions such as judges, child welfare officers, police, and prosecutors. Academic debates over diagnoses are not relevant for lawyers working with traumatized clients, as sufficient evidence exists to understand the causes of symptoms and to adopt protective practices. Recognizing the specific risks of lawyers' exposure to client trauma is not about "buying into" a controversy but accepting responsibility to act. Lawyers need training, supportive supervision, updated systems, and conditions that enable them to provide the best legal assistance for their clients, which includes managing their own exposure to trauma. Acknowledging the need for change is essential for the profession to take the next step and implement policies and practices to better protect lawyers working with trauma.

Legal systems focused on restorative justice, including therapeutic jurisprudence, as opposed to punitive models, will be open to trauma-informed theories and practice. Restorative justice has primarily been articulated within criminal law, which is also one of the areas most affected by trauma and its consequences. Related areas, including coronial law, family law, domestic violence, child abuse, and personal injury law, also involve trauma and may benefit from social justice and client-focused practices that prioritize healing and, where possible, the repair of relationships. While recognizing the individual experience of direct and indirect trauma is important, a restorative justice approach to trauma-informed legal practice would avoid the limitations where mainstream psychiatric and psychological approaches to trauma often ignore or minimize the broader social contexts and relationships in which people's experiences are produced, shaped, and lived.

Law firms and legal workplaces are obligated to ensure their systems are safe. This may require employers to ensure that trauma-informed policies apply to both the organization's workplace and systems, and to all individuals, who in turn are encouraged to adopt self-care practices. Employed lawyers and sole practitioners need to recognize that self-care habits will not only enhance their well-being and help protect them from work-related trauma but also improve their productivity and effectiveness at work. The science on trauma-informed practice is relatively new, yet it has been effectively adopted in other professions, providing the legal profession with an opportunity to catch up, protect its members, and assert its role as a responsible and compassionate human service.

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Abstract

Vicarious or secondary trauma experience has always been part of legal practice although many do not acknowledge the risk it can have on the mental health, well-being and performance of legal professionals. The listening to, observing and then detailing of traumatic events for the purposes of legal process in some cases may harm lawyers who need to work closely with clients, victims and witnesses. This article reviews the research on trauma in many areas of professional human services that could inform and improve our understanding of legal practice. It examines the discursive history of trauma and recent studies on lawyer well-being, before discussing the controversies about recognising vicarious trauma and the stigma against mental health concerns in the legal profession. The article concludes by reviewing options to assist law firms in considering trauma-informed policy, practices and supervision strategies and to help individual lawyers recognise the value of self-care.

Introduction

Many lawyers encounter traumatic situations regularly in their work. However, the legal field often does not acknowledge how this exposure can affect a lawyer's well-being and ability to perform. Lawyers may work with clients who have experienced injury or trauma, hear graphic details of violence, interact with traumatized individuals, and analyze abuse and injury details for legal cases. Every lawyer who works with traumatized clients is affected in some way, though not always negatively. In some instances, exposure to client trauma can lead to significant and lasting harm.

A growing body of research shows that professionals exposed to descriptions, images, or recordings of client trauma can develop harmful secondary effects, sometimes leading to symptoms similar to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Studies have identified ways for individuals, systems, and organizations to become "trauma-informed." This approach helps them work more safely and effectively with trauma cases. A trauma-informed approach can help lawyers cope better by reducing stigma, using protective strategies, normalizing the effects of indirect exposure, ensuring supportive workplaces, and building individual resilience to client trauma as a standard part of legal practice.

This article uses studies from various human services, including legal practice, to identify the risks, causes, and effects of indirect trauma. It also describes protective measures and effective responses. Traditionally, the legal profession has often ignored the problem of trauma, suggesting lawyers should just "toughen up." Law schools typically do not inform students about these risks. Many law firms, focused on billing targets, may not prioritize employee exposure to client trauma. Most legal societies and associations have not included trauma-informed training in their ongoing professional development programs. This leaves lawyers with limited education on trauma's possible effects or training on managing exposure to client trauma in their daily work.

It is understood that stress is common in many legal areas and is usually manageable. Stress or distress in professional work is not always traumatic or harmful. The aim is not to introduce new mental health diagnoses in legal practice. However, mental illnesses are understood as changing concepts, not fixed facts. The concern arises when some lawyers are affected by work-related trauma that is not properly recognized. Lawyers in criminal law, coronial law, family law, domestic violence, child abuse, immigration, refugee law, and personal injury cases may be at risk from indirect trauma exposure. They often work with traumatized clients and must detail violent events. This may involve discussing clients', victims', or witnesses' experiences and injuries in ways many people would find disturbing. Lawyers also often draft documents, analyze reports, and examine forensic evidence, including photos, recordings, and physical items. Additionally, they may work closely over time with traumatized clients or witnesses who show PTSD symptoms.

The American Psychological Association defines trauma as an "emotional response to a terrible event like an accident, rape or natural disaster." This often leads to immediate shock and denial, followed by long-term unpredictable effects like emotional changes, flashbacks, strained relationships, and physical symptoms. The American Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders–Fifth Edition (DSM–5) describes trauma as "Exposure to actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence." The European International Classification of Diseases–11th Revision (ICD–11) defines it as "an extremely threatening or horrific event or series of events." A helpful definition from the United States' Center for Treatment of Anxiety and Mood Disorders describes trauma as "a psychological, emotional response to an event or an experience that is deeply distressing or disturbing." Trauma is different from stress because it is an event "so overwhelming that it diminishes a person’s capacities to cope, as it elicits intense feelings of fear, terror, helplessness, hopelessness, and despair often subjectively experienced as a threat to the person’s survival." A traumatic event does not have to be violent, but it always involves a violation of a person's sense of self and security.

History

The understanding of trauma is a changing field, with ongoing debates about definitions, symptoms, causes, and treatments in professional and research literature. Understanding its development helps clarify current knowledge. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, doctors identified trauma symptoms in soldiers exposed to battle, calling these conditions "nervous shock," "psychic shock," "shell shock," and "war neurosis." In 1942, The Lancet reported that doctors "successfully" treated patients in a London emergency hospital by telling them to stop exaggerating their fears and return to duties. In 1965, the World Health Organization added "transient situational disturbance" to the ICD–8, which became "acute stress reaction" or "adjustment reaction" in the ICD–9 in 1975. After the Vietnam War ended in 1975, American therapists working with thousands of psychologically injured servicemen pushed for changes to the DSM. In 1980, the DSM–III included PTSD as a specific disorder. However, some therapists with many PTSD patients began to show secondary signs of disturbed thinking and memory.

The first researchers to clearly describe indirect trauma in human services were McCann and Pearlman in 1990. They found that therapists working with traumatized clients over time might experience PTSD symptoms, such as intrusive thoughts or images and painful emotional reactions related to their patients' memories. However, they argued that indirect trauma should not be seen as a disorder, but as a normal reaction to stressful work with victims, just as PTSD was viewed as a normal reaction to an abnormal event. By 1995, "secondary trauma stress" and "compassion fatigue" emerged as related concepts, though neither has been accepted as distinct diagnoses by the DSM. Two other studies that year further established the American understanding of indirect trauma: one analyzing the experiences of sexual assault counselors and another on trauma therapists.

After the 2001 World Trade Center attack, many counselors working with survivors began to show PTSD symptoms, seemingly through "emotional contagion" from their patients. However, like the Vietnam veterans' counselors, their experiences did not fit the narrow PTSD diagnosis because they had not directly experienced the traumatic event that injured their clients. Eventually, in 2013, the DSM–5 added a new cause for PTSD: "repeated or extreme exposure to details of the event(s), i.e. vicarious trauma," specifically "usually in the course of professional duties."

Some researchers distinguish "vicarious trauma" as the most severe condition resulting from trauma exposure. It involves a shift in one's thinking or worldview, sometimes leading to a change in how one sees the world. However, in American discussions, "secondary trauma stress" often refers to the range of PTSD-like symptoms, including emotional numbness, avoidance, arousal, and intrusive thoughts. These conditions are different from "countertransference," which describes the feelings a therapist might develop toward a patient, though they can occur together and reinforce each other. While the DSM–5 accepts that PTSD can develop from vicarious, secondary, or indirect trauma exposure, the discussion is complicated by inconsistent definitions and overlapping symptoms. Neither vicarious trauma nor secondary trauma stress are listed as distinct disorders in the DSM–5 or the European ICD–11. However, both terms are increasingly found in professional, management, coaching, and supervision literature. For example, the American Bar Association (ABA) refers only to secondary trauma stress, not vicarious trauma. To avoid confusion due to different meanings in different countries, this review uses "indirect trauma" to cover the range of trauma-related symptoms, including vicarious trauma and secondary trauma stress.

An earlier review of studies in 2003 identified several professions at risk of indirect trauma, but did not mention the legal profession. However, the reviewers found several factors that would affect lawyers as much as other professionals: a history of previous trauma, psychological well-being, social support, age, gender, education, socioeconomic status, and coping styles. Currently, most human services fields acknowledge that professionals exposed to trauma in their work may, in some cases, experience PTSD symptoms. This is supported by research involving counselors, social workers, medical clinicians, mental health therapists, judges, police, and lawyers. While research on indirect trauma continues, especially in America, several agencies have created "trauma-informed toolkits" to help professionals. A 2015 analysis concluded that working with traumatized clients has a "small but significant" effect on therapists. Recently in Canada, the national government introduced "trauma and violence informed approaches" into all human services policies and practices to "provide positive supports for all people," without specifically mentioning vicarious or secondary trauma. Additionally, lawsuits are occurring; for example, an Australian court recently found a newspaper liable for failing to provide a journalist with a safe workplace, awarding damages for work-related PTSD.

A related concept, "subthreshold PTSD," refers to people who experience disabling symptoms but do not fully meet the DSM–5 diagnostic criteria for PTSD. There is no completed research on subthreshold PTSD in lawyers, but informal evidence suggests it is not uncommon. Research in other professions indicates that it is clinically significant and can lead to lasting psychological and behavioral problems, despite being underreported and inconsistently named.

Lawyer Well-Being and Effectiveness

Significant research in the United States and Australia has confirmed that lawyers suffer disproportionately from mental health issues, which can reduce their effectiveness. A 2019 survey of 1800 lawyers in the UK found that 48% reported a mental health problem in the past month, a notable increase from previous years. Common issues among lawyers include high stress, anxiety, depression, substance use, and suicidal thoughts, despite their often strong public image. Ironically, trying to maintain this image and appear resilient in difficult situations can worsen existing mental health problems for some lawyers. As a group, lawyers already tend to be pessimistic, skeptical, and perfectionistic, often risk-averse, and have low levels of trust. Other factors likely contributing to lawyers' mental health concerns include work conditions that lead to compassion fatigue and burnout.

Compassion fatigue is the emotional and physical exhaustion that affects many professionals and caregivers. It can result from "the chronic use of empathy" when helping clients or patients who are suffering or injured. Burnout is likely a more common experience for lawyers and has been linked to losing idealism for the profession and having direct and indirect health problems. Furthermore, burnout may be increasing among younger lawyers due to competition to prove their value to employers, as law firms adopt more technology and more law graduates enter a competitive market. A recent study of helping professionals found burnout to be a major risk factor, explaining almost half of the variation in participants diagnosed with indirect trauma. Related to burnout is the experience of bullying, which studies in the legal profession have linked to PTSD symptoms among lawyers. Bullying increases lawyers' vulnerabilities. While both compassion fatigue and burnout reduce lawyers' effectiveness, the broader legal profession has not yet fully accepted evidence that exposure to bullying or client trauma can contribute to these conditions in lawyers.

Broader research on lawyer well-being has identified psychological risks for lawyers and various protective strategies. These include practicing mindfulness, focusing more on ethics, building resilience, transforming the justice system, using therapeutic jurisprudence, adopting integrative law, and implementing restorative justice. Most of these suggestions involve making systemic changes in legal education and practice and could help protect lawyers from indirect trauma. However, none have been widely adopted or fully tested where partially applied.

Controversies

Debates continue among therapists and researchers regarding trauma, PTSD, and vicarious or secondary trauma. Since 1994, the DSM has stated that trauma can lead to acute stress disorder (ASD), with symptoms appearing immediately or within a month after traumatic exposure. If ASD symptoms last longer than a month, which occurs in about 50% of cases, the diagnosis should be PTSD. In some cases, ASD symptoms may worsen in the first month, often due to ongoing stressors or additional traumatic events. However, in 2018, the ICD–11 revised "acute stress reaction," changing it from a disorder to a "transient" symptom of trauma exposure.

The ICD has not adopted the DSM–5's recognition of indirect causes for PTSD symptoms in professional duties. Research on "vicarious trauma" remains debated in psychology and psychiatry. The ICD–11 has further narrowed the definition of PTSD by reducing the number of symptom categories compared to its previous version. As mentioned, neither the DSM–5 nor the ICD–11 recognizes "vicarious trauma" as a distinct condition. However, the British Medical Association (BMA) acknowledges vicarious trauma, defining it as "a process of change resulting from empathetic engagement with trauma survivors."

According to the DSM-5, PTSD symptoms are varied and can include intrusive thoughts, nightmares, flashbacks, negative mood, irritability, hypervigilance, aggression, and emotional or physical reactions to traumatic reminders. The ICD–11 uses a different definition, stating that PTSD can result from either a "single incident" or ongoing "complex" trauma. Complex trauma is a term used elsewhere for repeated or underlying exposures, often interpersonal events like systematic abuse in a relationship or child abuse from which a person cannot escape. The concept of complex trauma is not mentioned in the DSM, although it aligns with attachment theory, which is widely accepted.

Emerging conditions, medical agreements, and new concepts create a risk of "false positives" in diagnoses. Some suggest this occurred with PTSD when it was first accepted as a disorder by the DSM–III. A related debate involved "debriefing" as an immediate treatment for people exposed to trauma. Research shows mixed results and little support for debriefing after traumatic experiences in either adults or children. Current psychological first aid guidelines specifically caution against "critical incident stress debriefing." They suggest it is only helpful if the person wants to discuss what happened, and only with care to avoid pressuring them to disclose more than they wish.

Both the ICD–11 and the DSM–5 accept that many PTSD symptoms overlap with other conditions like anxiety and depression, which can occur alongside PTSD. However, unlike the ICD, which aims to limit definitions and numbers of disorders, the DSM has expanded categories while warning against "absolute boundaries" between related conditions, suggesting that "single-disorder presentations" are rare. As a result, American discussions, more aligned with the DSM, have been open to identifying and developing concepts related to secondary trauma in human services. In contrast, the European perspective, more aligned with the ICD, has sought to limit categories and resist "new" conditions.

Indirect Trauma in Legal Practice

Most studies on indirect trauma focus on the experiences of various human services professions, though there is growing discussion about the legal profession. Some earlier studies avoided trauma terms; for instance, a 1995 Canadian project found that many prosecutors suffered from "role overload," which affected the administration of justice. However, in 2003, Jaffe and colleagues found that most judges had been exposed to trauma, with a possible cumulative effect from more experience on the bench. Also in 2003, Levin and Greisberg published their findings that lawyers experienced "significantly higher rates of secondary trauma stress and burnout" compared to mental health providers and social service workers. That same year, Silver and colleagues published a qualitative discussion based on existing research and their personal experiences in legal practice with traumatized clients. A small study in 2008 by Vrklevski and Franklin measured 100 lawyers using a newly developed Vicarious Trauma Scale and confirmed that multiple trauma exposure in lawyers was linked to higher scores of symptomatic distress. Levin and colleagues revisited the issue in 2011 and found significantly higher rates of PTSD symptoms in American attorneys than in their administrative staff. In a follow-up study, Levin's team found that lawyers consistently exposed to indirect trauma tended to withdraw, which reduced their effectiveness and work hours over time. In 2015, Katz and Haldar used their clinical legal experience to propose a model of trauma-informed lawyering for family law. In a subsequent study, Katz and Haldar (2016) suggested that lawyers could provide more effective client representation by using trauma-informed techniques developed "in the therapeutic context."

In Canada, a study surveying 478 practicing attorneys found significant increases in PTSD symptoms linked to increased work-related trauma. Furthermore, the Canadian Bar Association recently held an indirect trauma session at its annual conference, and the American Bar Association encouraged the adoption of trauma-informed legal practice, updating its advice for lawyers at risk of indirect trauma. They stated that trauma-informed legal practice can improve legal advocacy, client relationships, and ensure proper screening, assessment, and treatment. Additionally, awareness of secondary traumatic stress can help legal professionals prevent and identify issues and practice self-care.

In Australia in 2016, Trabsky and Baron examined the experiences of lawyers working in coronial cases. They found that these lawyers were "likely to suffer distress by virtue of being members of the legal profession" and were expected to "steel themselves" against distress from "secondary traumatization" in certain professions. Based on their findings, they criticized existing guidelines and handbooks that suggested lawyers only needed to show "resilience, impartiality and dissociation" to cope with the grief and trauma of coronial work. Their recommendations aligned with those for police made earlier by Perez and colleagues, suggesting that lawyers working with trauma should receive additional, specific training to develop coping skills and maintain supportive connections.

The Australian Blue Knot Foundation produced a paper in 2016 reviewing research and growing awareness of trauma's effects on lawyers. They advocated for introducing trauma-informed legal systems, stating that "The provision of law and delivery of justice comprise critical terrain to which trauma informed principles should be applied." The following year, a small study by Maguire and Byrne confirmed earlier findings by Levin and Greisberg (2003) that lawyers showed more symptoms of indirect trauma than mental health professionals. Participating lawyers also showed more symptoms of depression, anxiety, and stress. The researchers called for future studies to clarify whether indirect trauma influences these experiences or if existing mental health issues influence indirect trauma.

In line with emerging research, Australian professional journals are publishing articles to help lawyers cope with indirect trauma in their work. A Queensland judge recently urged lawyers to become aware of the risk of indirect trauma and, among other things, consider adopting the Minds Count Workplace Well-Being Guidelines for the Legal Profession in their organizations. In the UK, discussion of indirect trauma in the legal profession appears relatively limited. In 2019, the UK Law Society's survey reported on "stress" and "mental ill-health" in lawyers without specifically asking about indirect trauma. On the other hand, the UK Bar Council (UKBC) has published an information pack on "vicarious trauma," designed for "Safeguarding your working practice."

Most empirical research so far reports on the experiences of lawyers in private practice, prosecutors, and judges. There appears to be no published research on indirect trauma experienced by lawyers in legal aid or community legal services. Their experiences might differ for several reasons: while they often do not bill clients and are not pressured by billing targets, their organizations may be underfunded for their caseloads, leading to heavy workloads including trauma-affected cases and an increased risk of work-stress for some lawyers. Additionally, community legal services often involve working with vulnerable communities, refugees, and clients affected by long-term unemployment, high crime rates, disability, drug and alcohol abuse, and high rates of domestic violence and child abuse. Conversely, it is possible that community lawyering attracts lawyers with a more compassionate nature than private practice, and some research suggests that compassion can be a protective quality against trauma exposure.

Overall, despite significant gaps in research, the legal profession in several countries is starting to recognize the risks for lawyers exposed to indirect trauma and attempting to keep practitioners informed. Given the substantial and increasing research on lawyer well-being, there is a growing need for qualitative studies to help understand how indirect trauma affects lawyer vulnerabilities. Quantitative projects are also needed to investigate the extent of exposure and its effects. Furthermore, longitudinal studies are necessary to help distinguish and explain the effects of trauma in different types of lawyering, considering varying exposures, workplaces, and personalities, as well as the impact of trauma-informed legal education, training, and systemic changes.

Stigma

In a review of studies aimed at identifying effective workplace responses to indirect trauma across various professions, researchers found a common reluctance to disclose due to what seemed to be stigma. Their analysis identified stigma as a significant barrier for professionals who overly personalize their experience, not wanting to reveal to colleagues, employers, or clients that they are suffering from burnout or other secondary trauma effects. Stigma against mental health issues may contribute to the lack of acknowledgment of indirect trauma as a risk in legal practice. For individual lawyers, conscious of their reputation and professional identity, this can reflect a lack of awareness of the potential harm of indirect trauma and perpetuate a sense of shame about mental health concerns within the legal profession. Due to this stigma in legal workplaces, many lawyers may believe it is counterproductive to disclose symptoms, fearing it will be seen as a professional weakness. Suppressing symptoms not only prevents organizational responses but also risks worsening the effects lawyers may experience.

Several studies describe how stigma creates "psychological dishonesty," which can combine with the stress of complex cases and heavy workloads, eventually worsening lawyers' mental well-being, effectiveness, and physical health. Other studies show how workplace systems can increase professionals' stress by imposing unreasonably high workloads, which is common in the legal profession. Regarding the long hours lawyers often work, a study of 259 therapists found that the main predictor of trauma symptoms was not the intensity of trauma exposure, but the number of hours per week spent working with traumatized clients.

Another review of studies on organizational responses to burnout and indirect trauma found that simply acknowledging to employees that their work is stressful can help overcome the stigma against disclosure. This may help lawyers feel more supported at work and encourage them to seek personal solutions and self-care. Law firm managers, following their business model, might mistakenly assume that lawyers should not be affected by client trauma because they do not have a "therapeutic relationship" with clients. Traditionally, many law firms motivate employed lawyers by requiring them to meet billing targets, with supervision focused on time-management strategies. Overcoming the stigma against mental health issues and implementing trauma-informed policies in legal practice may involve additional costs that law firms have so far avoided. Both organizations and supervisors have a duty to care for employees and may need to recognize how they can help protect lawyers from the effects of indirect trauma. Trauma-informed policies would benefit individual lawyers not only by helping to negate stigma generally, but also by enhancing their well-being and satisfaction, and improving the effectiveness of their work.

Trauma-informed practice could be supported at both supervisory and management levels in law firms and workplaces, ensuring employed lawyers feel organizational support. Establishing trauma-informed policies and practices will help normalize indirect trauma effects in legal practice, reduce the stigma that prevents discussion and disclosure, and support lawyers who may experience trauma symptoms that cause personal suffering and reduced effectiveness.

Managers could discuss lawyers' trauma exposure in meetings as a regular topic, acknowledging and accepting the risk as genuine. They could distribute information on how lawyers might experience the effects of client-related trauma, share protection strategies, and reassure lawyers that systems are in place to address their issues and minimize risk. If lawyers understand that their workplace, including supervisors and colleagues, accepts that indirect trauma is a normal response to client trauma exposure, they will be more likely to disclose symptoms and take appropriate action, including self-care and protective steps, instead of denying it by appearing resilient. Studies of other professions dealing with similar traumatic exposures suggest that unsupportive workplaces are likely to increase the risk of compassion fatigue and lower the ability to cope with client trauma. Effectively reducing lawyers' indirect trauma risk may require both the employer organization and individual lawyers to become trauma-informed, and it may require structural and systemic changes in the workplace.

Organizational Support

The legal profession may be one of the last human services fields to acknowledge that its members face risks of indirect trauma. Until recently, there have been no established guidelines or practices in legal practice for self-care, unlike in the medical, allied health, and counseling fields. Competition within the legal profession and the adversarial nature of legal practice may have contributed to denying the risk of indirect trauma to lawyers and hindered recognition of their vulnerability. Additionally, modern business models and technological innovations have led to reduced staffing in some areas. As job competition increases, lawyers may fear showing any weakness, reflecting the stigma discussed earlier.

Adopting trauma-informed policies that involve gradual changes in workplace practices may improve both the safety and effectiveness of lawyers exposed to trauma. Examples proposed by health systems researchers could be adapted for legal workplaces. This could start with a "trauma-aware" workplace, where staff receive effective training to understand trauma, its effects, and how people often adapt. A "trauma-sensitive" firm implements some concepts of trauma-informed practice. "Trauma responsive" is the next stage, where a firm encourages changes in lawyer behavior to strengthen their resilience and protective factors. A "trauma-informed" firm would ensure all personnel, including professional, management, and support staff, are aware of trauma and its adaptations. All practices within the system would be responsive to trauma, including its direct and indirect effects.

Legal practice managers might fear creating new, uncontrollable issues by raising indirect trauma with lawyers and introducing new policies. However, some research confirms that lawyers who feel "psychologically safe" may work more effectively and conscientiously. Indirect trauma in legal practice is likely common, but it is not inevitable. The risk can be reduced by ensuring good protocols and providing lawyers with appropriate information, training, preparation, and support. A lawyer's background, culture, personal history, and personality can influence their risk. It can accumulate from repeated exposures and be worsened by stress from other workplace conditions. Indirect trauma experiences can be relieved through both self-care and changes in the workplace and supervision. If these are not sufficient, a range of therapies can effectively treat it. Trauma-informed policies should aim to inform and empower individuals, who are then in the best position to decide what they need. Ideally, managers will be familiar with the work conditions of employed lawyers so they can identify risks that might worsen or make a lawyer susceptible to indirect trauma. Unfortunately, these conditions often include aspects inherent in legal workplace culture, such as heavy workloads and billing targets, a competitive environment, adversarial practices, and the stress of making an error that could harm a client.

Trauma-informed training as part of professional development can help lawyers not only protect themselves but also improve their client skills and effectiveness. This is achieved through a better understanding of the responses and decisions of clients who may have experienced childhood abuse or other complex trauma. Several studies offer guidance for professionals on how to communicate safely with traumatized clients and help them access therapeutic care when appropriate. If lawyers are supported by appropriate workplace protocols and practice good self-care strategies, they can protect themselves and enhance their competence, effectiveness, and resilience when working directly with traumatized clients.

The legal profession has a wide variety of systems. Until common practices are established and tested, individual workplaces can develop their own trauma-informed policies that reflect their staff's experiences. Fortunately, researchers have proposed several models based on the experiences of other professions and the recommendations of research. Based on a broad analysis, Knight found an emerging agreement among researchers on five principles for trauma-informed practice: safety, trust, collaboration, choice, and empowerment. Other researchers have included "culture" as an important principle, as it covers gender and historical issues relevant to the organization and the lawyer. Culture may be especially important to address in law firms to help counter the stigma against mental health issues and the historical lack of a care ethic for staff in many legal workplaces, compared to other human services.

The resulting six principles provide a solid foundation for designing trauma-informed policies for a legal workplace. However, these policies must be relevant to the work activities and understood by all staff as a process and a resource for development, not as a new set of rules or a condition of employment. Trauma-informed policy must be flexible, allowing for adjustments as other changes occur, including new systems, staff, clients, laws, and improved understandings from new research on safely working with traumatized clients. It is important to discuss the policy in regular meetings to reduce stigma, allow staff to share experiences, and enable modifications as the policy evolves.

One model that could be adapted for legal practice is "trauma-informed care" (TIC). It applies the principles mentioned above as an "organizational change process that is structured around the presumption that everyone in the agency (from clients through to management) may have been directly or indirectly exposed to trauma within their lifetime." Although not yet applied in legal practice, where TIC has been implemented in related areas, both staff and clients report feeling more empowered and satisfied with services, including reduced evidence of indirect trauma. Assessments of TIC training so far show its significant effectiveness across various measures. Other studies show that where trauma-informed policies are not applied, staff experience higher rates of indirect trauma symptoms and reduced ability to serve clients effectively.

The "Vicarious Trauma Toolkit" (VTT) is an effective model from the US Department of Justice (DOJ). It includes a collection of articles and other resources to help organizations create their own programs to protect staff. The toolkit can be searched by discipline and includes resources for "Law Enforcement" and "Victim Services." One section, the "Vicarious Trauma – Organizational Readiness Guide," can help law firms assess their current needs. The guide helps identify knowledge gaps and assists organizations in developing a more trauma-informed policy with improved capacity to support professional staff.

A third model is Sandra Bloom’s "Sanctuary Toolkit," based on experiences of organizational change in developing effective responses to trauma. The Sanctuary model includes seven "cultures": non-violence, emotional intelligence, social learning, shared governance, open communication, and social responsibility. As studies on indirect trauma evolve, more programs are likely to emerge, improving options for legal organizations to develop effective policies to better protect staff and clients from trauma's effects. Research on the effectiveness of these models is ongoing, and current results confirm earlier studies showing that even policies focused on encouraging self-care can help professionals cope with traumatic exposure and improve well-being and effectiveness.

Trauma-Informed Supervision

Legal supervisors play a crucial role in trauma-informed practice; their support is essential for individual lawyers to work effectively and safely with traumatized clients. Legal supervisors can learn from the experiences of supervisors in other professions who have helped individuals adapt to indirect trauma. This involves understanding it not just as an individual concern but within the context of their organization, work, and role in the broader socio-legal system. Failing to acknowledge a lawyer's response to trauma in supervision can reinforce stigma and worsen self-blame and feelings of incompetence. This can increase symptoms and further risk harm from ongoing exposure.

An effective model of trauma-informed supervision offers lawyers professional development that aligns with providing competent and compassionate legal services to clients in need. Experienced supervisors will understand that the topics lawyers most need to discuss in supervision are often those they avoid, especially while stigma persists, such as mental health issues related to indirect trauma. Weak supervision that lacks trauma awareness and avoids difficult questions risks worsening rumination and other symptoms of compassion fatigue or indirect trauma. This could potentially lead to serious problems or the loss of the lawyer from the workplace and the profession. On the other hand, attempting therapeutic approaches, forcing a debrief, or engaging "too deeply" in issues could unnecessarily label the lawyer's response as pathological. This could violate boundaries and undermine the lawyer's self-efficacy.

Supervisors who are knowledgeable about trauma theory will understand the benefits of being proactive with indirect trauma. This helps normalize reactions and enables lawyers to make informed decisions in their work and self-care. However, they will not force the lawyer to disclose or discuss an issue until ready. When possible in a supportive environment and with the lawyer's consent, it might be helpful to discuss an issue with other staff in meetings to help normalize the experience and minimize stigma. Supervisors can draw from the firm's policies or a tested model, such as the six principles of trauma-informed practice mentioned earlier. One study of experienced supervisors emphasized the importance of two principles: safety and empowerment. Safety in supervision includes the lawyer feeling safe, which may involve enhancing structural, operational, or administrative procedures in the firm, as well as establishing a trusting connection with the lawyer. Empowerment includes allowing the lawyer to actively participate in their own supervision, feeling able to share their thoughts and emotions, for example, about a client's traumatic experience. Supervision requires not only carefully listening to the lawyer's priorities but also encouraging them to help set the agenda for supervision meetings and supporting their decisions when possible. An effective strategy is to help the lawyer understand not just how to manage difficult cases and their reactions to client trauma, but also to notice how they have developed and grown from their practice so far. Using a "supervisory alliance," the supervisor can foster professional growth by asking the lawyer to prepare for sessions by talking about their successes with clients and other indicators of growth. As with professional coaching, the supervisor needs to clarify workload expectation limits, not just billing or workload targets. They also need to ensure lawyers are aware of their personal habits and how their well-being and self-care are directly linked to their professional performance.

A trauma-informed supervision process requires the supervisor to have good knowledge of the lawyers involved, their character, background, and the nature of their work. Since responses to trauma are individual and depend on many personal and situational factors, supervisors need to anticipate uncertainty and diverse responses to client trauma: no two lawyers will be the same. Knowing a lawyer's background might help a supervisor understand their response to certain situations. However, having a personal history of trauma, such as childhood abuse, will not necessarily increase the risk of subsequent indirect trauma symptoms. Lawyers experiencing burnout, bullying, and compassion fatigue are more likely to develop symptoms from indirect trauma. In contrast, the quality of connection and social support they experience in the workplace and their community are protective factors that can improve their effectiveness and should be promoted. Inexperience as a lawyer or being new to the job may increase vulnerability. However, extensive experience working with traumatized clients is not necessarily protective, as indirect trauma can be cumulative. Without appropriate supervision, adequate breaks, and self-care, lawyers may develop emotional exhaustion, leading to compassion fatigue and indirect trauma symptoms.

Key strategies in trauma-informed supervision align with reducing stigma in the workplace. They acknowledge the lawyer's experience with compassionate understanding, acceptance, and affirmation. They also normalize reactions to trauma exposure rather than treating them as abnormal with diagnoses, sensitivities, or medical responses. Symptoms of indirect trauma stress are "a normal and universal response to abnormal (violence induced) or unusual events (disasters)." However, with trauma-informed policies that encourage appropriate self-care, supervisors can help lawyers manage the symptoms and minimize the effects.

Self-Care

"Attentiveness to self-care is thus as much about occupational health and safety, risk management and liability as about the more standard reading of it as purely pertaining to 'rest and relaxation'."

Individual lawyers have a responsibility for self-care. Taking effective steps to protect oneself from indirect trauma is an important part of professional development and maintaining professional competence. A first step is for lawyers to learn about trauma theory. This will help them understand the importance of self-awareness and improve their motivation to build resilience and healthy habits. Individual resilience often refers to the ability to deal with adversity, but it is best understood as something that develops and adapts, rather than a fixed strength or personality trait.

Trauma-informed lawyers understand that exposure to trauma has an impact, that the effect is normal, and that it can be managed. Similarly, lawyers who adopt a "growth mindset," as opposed to a "fixed" mindset, are more likely to learn from their experiences and find what works best for them in terms of a positive attitude and safe responses to their clients' trauma. Martin Seligman has argued that maintaining a growth mindset long-term enables a person not only to show resilience to trauma but to actually grow stronger from the traumatic experience.

Often, a legal workplace culture and the stigma it perpetuates cause some lawyers to hold fixed beliefs that they must present a strong image. They may be unwilling to acknowledge their vulnerabilities in the competitive legal profession. Some lawyers are prone to false confidence, which lacks self-awareness and may increase their susceptibility to indirect trauma. Other lawyers may simply resist or fear change. Both forms of inaction can be lessened through trauma-informed supervision, improving their understanding of trauma theory and focusing on the "culture" principle discussed earlier as part of the shift towards a trauma-informed organization. Once lawyers drop their facade of invulnerability, many resources are available to strengthen their professional resilience and the effectiveness of their practice.

The American Psychological Association provides a system of 10 practices that can help professionals in any field build resilience to work effectively with traumatized clients. Similarly, the British Medical Authority lists 14 self-care practices designed to reduce the risk of indirect trauma for health professionals. While some measures are broad principles that might seem overly simple to a cynical lawyer (e.g., "Take care of yourself" and "Look after your physical and mental well-being"), the point is that lawyers generally do not take care of themselves, which makes some vulnerable to indirect trauma. Many studies on lawyer well-being confirm their tendency to overwork and adopt unhealthy habits to cope with work stress. These include alcohol and drug abuse, poor diet, insufficient sleep and fitness routines, and losing contact with supportive friends and community due to work pressures. Supervisors who are informed about indirect trauma research are likely to encourage and motivate lawyers towards self-care and to normalize discussions about basic self-care practices, especially regarding personal habits and maintaining supportive connections.

A review of research on the effectiveness of self-care practices for professionals dealing with secondary trauma supported a four-step process: increasing self-awareness, committing to addressing the stress, creating a personal action plan, and following through with action. The core of this model is the saying "Know Thyself," an ancient Greek maxim often endorsed as the first step in best-practice self-care strategies. In trauma-informed practice, enhancing self-awareness helps us recognize our thoughts and feelings about a client's trauma as the start of normalizing and validating those reactions internally. We discover what works for us, as a strategy that helps one lawyer may not work for another.

Mindfulness is a central tenet of "knowing thyself." Many studies show how self-awareness and self-compassion are improved through various mindfulness techniques that would enhance lawyers' resilience to trauma, as well as their performance and overall well-being. These include Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy, and Compassionate Mind Training. A basic mindfulness practice is the regular habit of secular meditation, which might involve simply sitting quietly for 15 minutes each day. Many other practices enhance mindfulness to improve trauma resilience, including yoga, tai chi, and walking.

The self-awareness gained through mindfulness practice can help to integrate and resolve thoughts, memories, and images (cognitive), as well as physical (somatic) and emotional (affective) aspects of anxiety-related trauma. It also helps improve self-compassion and other positive outcomes such as "post-traumatic growth." This enables a forward-thinking optimism and a greater appreciation of life and meaning at work. Post-traumatic growth is an "antifragile" effect, beyond mere resilience, meaning some people become stronger after traumatic exposure. As Taleb explains, "Antifragility is beyond resilience or robustness. The resilient resists shocks and stays the same; the antifragile gets better." In 2013, a review of qualitative studies found that post-traumatic growth can result from trauma exposure, provided individuals follow personal and organizational coping strategies.

Improved self-awareness may include discovering one's psychological or character strengths, which can be used more effectively than trying to compensate for weaker areas. One effective strengths model is based on the applied positive psychology theories of Martin Seligman, Christopher Peterson, and colleagues, which have been tested in several areas including coaching, education, and professional development. Another method is based on the "Broaden and Build" theory of using gratitude and positivity in an intentional practice. This has a growing body of research confirming the benefits for enhancing and creating psychological resources. A simpler practice verified with different professions is positive self-talk, focusing on affirmations and motivational comments. Studies suggest that self-talk can enhance resilience, reduce rumination, and improve mood. It is best introduced through supervision to overcome resistance from stigma. It involves talking to oneself as if advising a good friend: "Let it go until tomorrow"; "That's your work talking, that's not accurate." Therapists advocate supportive self-talk using "non-first-person" language to allow for mental distance from traumatic memories and feelings that can arise unpredictably.

As a lawyer's self-awareness grows with trauma-informed supervision and self-care practices, they are likely to become more compassionate towards themselves. They will also be less judgmental about their goals and performance, including their successes and failures. Self-compassion helps lawyers understand how their own well-being is essential for providing the best practice for their clients and important for coping with indirect trauma. Self-compassion, arising with improved self-awareness, helps lawyers manage a client's trauma with a balanced awareness of self and others, rather than excessively identifying with their client, their feelings, or their situation.

Conclusion

The limited number of studies specifically on lawyers directly exposed to indirect trauma is supplemented by studies on related professions such as judges, child welfare officers, police, and prosecutors. Academic debates over diagnoses are not relevant for lawyers working with traumatized clients, as there is enough evidence to understand the causes of symptoms and adopt protective practices. Recognizing the specific risks of lawyers' exposure to client trauma is not about "taking sides" in a controversy, but about accepting responsibility to act. Lawyers need training, supportive supervision, updated systems, and conditions that enable them to provide the best legal assistance for their clients, which includes managing their own exposure to trauma. Acknowledging the need for change is essential for the profession to take the next step and establish policies and practices to better protect lawyers working with trauma.

Legal systems focused on restorative justice, including therapeutic jurisprudence, rather than punishment-based models, will be open to trauma-informed theories and practice. Restorative justice has been mainly discussed within criminal law, which is also one of the areas most affected by trauma and its consequences. Related areas, including coronial law, family law, domestic violence, child abuse, and personal injury law, also involve trauma. These fields may benefit from social justice and client-focused practices that prioritize healing and, when possible, repairing relationships. While recognizing the individual experience of direct and indirect trauma is important, a restorative justice approach to trauma-informed legal practice would avoid the limitations where mainstream psychological approaches to trauma often tend to ignore or minimize the relevant and broader social contexts and social relationships in which people's experiences are produced, shaped and lived.

Law firms and legal workplaces are obligated to ensure their systems are safe. This may require employers to ensure that trauma-informed policies apply to both the organization's workplace and systems, and all individuals. Individuals, in turn, are encouraged to adopt self-care practices. Employed lawyers and sole practitioners need to recognize that self-care habits will not only enhance their well-being and help protect them from work-related trauma but also improve their productivity and effectiveness at work. The science on trauma-informed practice is relatively new, yet it has been effectively adopted in other professions. This provides the legal profession with an opportunity to catch up, protect its members, and assert its role as a responsible and compassionate human service.

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Abstract

Vicarious or secondary trauma experience has always been part of legal practice although many do not acknowledge the risk it can have on the mental health, well-being and performance of legal professionals. The listening to, observing and then detailing of traumatic events for the purposes of legal process in some cases may harm lawyers who need to work closely with clients, victims and witnesses. This article reviews the research on trauma in many areas of professional human services that could inform and improve our understanding of legal practice. It examines the discursive history of trauma and recent studies on lawyer well-being, before discussing the controversies about recognising vicarious trauma and the stigma against mental health concerns in the legal profession. The article concludes by reviewing options to assist law firms in considering trauma-informed policy, practices and supervision strategies and to help individual lawyers recognise the value of self-care.

Introduction

Lawyers frequently encounter trauma in their daily work, but the legal profession often fails to acknowledge how this exposure affects their well-being and performance. Lawyers may interact with clients who have been injured and traumatized, hear graphic accounts of violence, spend significant time with traumatized individuals, and analyze details of abuse and injuries for legal purposes. All lawyers who work with traumatized clients are affected in different ways and to varying degrees. While it may not always cause harm or limit their careers, in some cases, exposure to clients' trauma can lead to significant and life-altering effects.

Research shows that professionals exposed to descriptions, images, or recordings of their clients' trauma can develop harmful secondary or indirect effects. These can sometimes include symptoms similar to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Studies have identified ways for individuals, systems, and organizations to become "trauma-informed." This approach allows them to work more safely and effectively with trauma cases. A trauma-informed approach can help lawyers overcome the stigma associated with trauma, use protective strategies, see indirect trauma as a normal part of the job, ensure workplaces are supportive, and build personal resilience to clients' trauma as part of their regular legal practice.

This article uses studies from various human services, including legal practice, to identify the risks of indirect trauma, its possible causes and effects, and effective protective measures. Traditionally, the legal profession has often ignored the problem of trauma, suggesting lawyers should simply get used to it or "toughen up." Law schools typically do not inform students about these risks. Many law firms, focused on billing targets, may not prioritize employee exposure to clients' trauma. Most legal associations have not yet included trauma-informed training in their professional development programs. As a result, lawyers have limited opportunities to learn about trauma's effects or how to manage their exposure in daily practice.

Stress is a common and often normal part of many legal jobs. It is important to understand that stress or distress in professional work is not always traumatic or harmful. This discussion does not aim to create new mental health diagnoses in legal practice. However, it recognizes that mental illnesses are defined and understood differently over time and in different social contexts. The concern arises because some lawyers may be significantly affected by work-related trauma that is not adequately recognized. Lawyers in criminal law, coronial law, family law, domestic violence, child abuse, immigration and refugee law, and personal injury cases may be particularly at risk of indirect trauma. They often work with traumatized clients and must detail violent events. This can involve discussing clients' experiences and injuries, including actions and consequences that many would find gruesome or upsetting. Lawyers frequently draft affidavits, analyze reports, and examine forensic evidence such as photos, recordings, and physical items. They may also work closely over time with traumatized clients or witnesses who show PTSD symptoms from their direct trauma.

The American Psychological Association defines trauma as "an emotional response to a terrible event like an accident, rape or natural disaster," often followed by immediate shock and denial, with long-term effects that can include unpredictable emotions, flashbacks, strained relationships, and physical symptoms like headaches and nausea. The American Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders–Fifth Edition (DSM–5) briefly describes trauma as "Exposure to actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence." The European International Classification of Diseases–11th Revision (ICD–11) defines it as "an extremely threatening or horrific event or series of events." A helpful definition from the Center for Treatment of Anxiety and Mood Disorders in the United States describes trauma as "a psychological, emotional response to an event or an experience that is deeply distressing or disturbing." Experts distinguish trauma from stress by explaining that a traumatic event is "so overwhelming that it diminishes a person’s capacities to cope, as it elicits intense feelings of fear, terror, helplessness, hopelessness, and despair often subjectively experienced as a threat to the person’s survival." Such an event does not have to be violent but always involves a violation of a person's sense of self and security.

History

The understanding of trauma is a changing field, with ongoing debates among professionals and researchers about definitions, symptoms, causes, and treatments. It is helpful to understand how current knowledge has developed and continues to evolve. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, doctors identified trauma symptoms in soldiers exposed to combat, calling these conditions "nervous shock," "psychic shock," "shell shock," and "war neurosis." In 1942, The Lancet reported that doctors successfully treated patients in a London hospital by telling them to stop exaggerating their fears and return to duty. In 1965, the World Health Organization updated the ICD–8 to include "transient situational disturbance" as a stress-related condition, which became "acute stress reaction" or "adjustment reaction" in the ICD–9 in 1975. After the Vietnam War ended in 1975, American therapists helped thousands of returning service members suffering psychological injuries. Their efforts led to the inclusion of PTSD as a specific disorder in the DSM–III in 1980. However, some therapists who worked with many PTSD patients began to show secondary signs of disturbed thinking patterns and memory problems.

The first researchers to clearly describe indirect trauma in human services were McCann and Pearlman in 1990. They found that therapists working with traumatized clients over time could experience PTSD symptoms, such as intrusive thoughts or images and painful emotional reactions related to their patients' memories. They argued that indirect trauma should not be seen as a sickness, but as a normal reaction to the stressful work of helping victims. By 1995, two related conditions, "secondary trauma stress" and "compassion fatigue," had emerged, though neither has been officially recognized as a distinct diagnosis by the DSM. Two other studies that same year were important in confirming the American understanding of indirect trauma: one on sexual assault counselors and another on trauma therapists.

After the 2001 attack on the World Trade Center in New York, many counselors working with survivors began to show PTSD symptoms, seemingly through "emotional contagion" from their patients. Like the Vietnam veterans' counselors, they did not fit the narrow PTSD diagnosis because they had not directly experienced the traumatic event that harmed their clients. Finally, in 2013, the DSM–5 added a new category for PTSD causation: "repeated or extreme exposure to details of the event(s), i.e. vicarious trauma" and "usually in the course of professional duties."

Some researchers distinguish "vicarious trauma" as the most severe condition from trauma exposure, as it involves a change in a person's thinking or worldview, sometimes altering how they see the world. However, in American discussions, "secondary trauma stress" often refers to the range of symptoms associated with PTSD, including emotional numbness, avoidance, heightened alertness, and intrusive thoughts. These conditions are different from countertransference, which describes the feelings a therapist might develop toward a patient, though they can happen at the same time and make each other stronger. While the DSM–5 accepts that PTSD can result from vicarious, secondary, or indirect exposure to trauma, the discussion is complicated by inconsistent definitions and overlapping symptoms. Neither vicarious trauma nor secondary trauma stress are listed as distinct disorders in the DSM–5 or the European ICD–11; however, both appear more and more in professional, management, coaching, and supervision literature. For example, the American Bar Association (ABA) refers only to secondary trauma stress, not vicarious trauma. To avoid confusion due to different meanings in various countries, this review uses "indirect trauma" to cover the range of symptoms associated with trauma, including both vicarious trauma and secondary trauma stress.

An earlier review of studies in 2003 identified several professions at risk of indirect trauma, but did not mention the legal profession. However, the reviewers found several factors that would affect lawyers as much as other professionals: a history of previous trauma, overall mental well-being, social support, age, gender, education, socioeconomic status, and coping styles. Today, most human services recognize that professionals exposed to trauma in their work may sometimes experience PTSD symptoms. This is supported by research involving counselors, social workers, medical clinicians, mental health therapists, judges, police, and lawyers. While research on indirect trauma continues, especially in America, several organizations have created "trauma-informed toolkits" to help professionals in their work. In 2015, a large study concluded there was a "small but significant" effect on therapists from working with traumatized clients. More recently in Canada, the national government introduced a program of "trauma and violence informed approaches" into all aspects of policy and practice in human services, aiming to "provide positive supports for all people," without specifically mentioning vicarious or secondary trauma. Additionally, legal cases are emerging, including one in Australia where a court found The Age newspaper liable for failing to provide a journalist with a safe workplace, awarding $180,000 for work-acquired PTSD.

A related concept, "subthreshold PTSD," describes the experience of individuals who do not fully meet the DSM–5 criteria for PTSD, yet still suffer disabling symptoms. There is no completed research on subthreshold PTSD in lawyers; however, informal evidence suggests it is a common experience. Research with other professions indicates that it is clinically significant and can lead to lasting psychological and behavioral problems, despite being underreported and inconsistently named.

Lawyer Well-being and Effectiveness

Extensive research in the United States and Australia has confirmed that lawyers suffer disproportionately from mental health issues that reduce their effectiveness. A 2019 survey of 1800 lawyers in the UK found that 48% reported a mental health problem in the past month, a significant increase from previous years. Common issues for lawyers include high stress and anxiety, depression, substance use, and suicidal thoughts, despite their often robust public image. Ironically, trying to maintain this image and appear resilient in difficult situations can worsen existing mental health problems for some lawyers. As a professional group, lawyers already show high rates of pessimism, skepticism, and perfectionism, tend to avoid risks, and have low levels of trust. Other factors likely contributing to lawyers' mental health concerns include work conditions that lead to compassion fatigue and burnout.

Compassion fatigue is the emotional and physical exhaustion that affects many professionals and caregivers. It can result from constantly using empathy when responding to clients or patients who are suffering or injured. Burnout is likely a more common experience for lawyers and has been linked to a loss of idealism for the profession and both direct and indirect health consequences. Furthermore, burnout may be increasing among younger lawyers as they compete to prove their worth to employers, especially as law firms adopt more technology and more law graduates enter an already crowded job market. A recent study of helping professionals across the United States found that burnout was a significant risk factor, explaining nearly half of the cases where participants were diagnosed with indirect trauma. Related to burnout is bullying, which several studies have identified in the legal profession, linking it to PTSD symptoms among lawyers. Bullying tends to increase lawyers' vulnerabilities. While both compassion fatigue and burnout reduce lawyers' effectiveness, the broader legal profession has not yet fully accepted evidence confirming that exposure to bullying or clients' trauma can contribute to lawyers developing these conditions.

Broader research on lawyer well-being has identified psychological risks for lawyers and various protective strategies. These include mindfulness, a greater focus on ethics, building resilience, transforming the justice system, therapeutic jurisprudence, integrative law, and restorative justice. Most of these suggestions involve systemic changes in legal education and practice and could help protect lawyers from indirect trauma. However, none have been widely adopted or thoroughly tested where they are partially applied.

Controversies

Debates among therapists and researchers continue regarding trauma, PTSD, and vicarious or secondary trauma. Since 1994, the DSM has stated that trauma can lead to acute stress disorder (ASD), with symptoms appearing immediately or within a month after traumatic exposure. If ASD symptoms last longer than a month, which happens in about 50% of cases, the diagnosis should be PTSD. In some instances, ASD symptoms may worsen in the first month, often due to ongoing stressors or additional traumatic events. However, in 2018, the ICD–11 revised "acute stress reaction," downgrading it from a disorder to a "transient" symptom of trauma exposure.

The ICD has not followed the DSM–5 in recognizing indirect causes of PTSD symptoms from professional duties, and research on "vicarious trauma" remains debated in psychological and psychiatric literature. The ICD–11 has further narrowed the definition of PTSD by reducing the number of categories compared to the earlier ICD–10. As mentioned, neither the DSM–5 nor the ICD–11 officially recognizes "vicarious trauma" as a distinct condition; however, the British Medical Association (BMA) does acknowledge vicarious trauma, defining it as "a process of change resulting from empathetic engagement with trauma survivors."

According to DSM-5, PTSD symptoms are varied and can include intrusive thoughts, nightmares, flashbacks, negative mood, irritability, hypervigilance (being overly alert), aggression, emotional stress, or physical reactions after being exposed to reminders of trauma. The ICD–11 uses a different definition, stating that PTSD can result from either a "single incident" or ongoing "complex" trauma. Complex trauma is a term used elsewhere for repeated or hidden exposures, often interpersonal events like systemic abuse in a relationship or child abuse from which a person cannot escape. The concept of complex trauma is not in the DSM, but it aligns with attachment theory, which is widely accepted.

New conditions, medical standards, and emerging concepts carry the risk of "false positives" in diagnoses, which some believe happened with PTSD when it was first accepted as a disorder by the DSM–III. A related debate involved the practice of "debriefing" as an immediate treatment for people exposed to trauma. Research shows mixed results and little support for debriefing after traumatic experiences, for either adults or children. Current psychological first aid models specifically warn against "critical incident stress debriefing," suggesting it is only helpful if the person wants to discuss what happened, and only with care to avoid pushing them to disclose more than they wish.

Both the ICD–11 and the DSM–5 accept that many PTSD symptoms are shared with other conditions, such as anxiety and depression, which can occur alongside PTSD. However, unlike the ICD, which aims to restrict definitions and the number of disorders, the DSM has expanded categories while warning against "absolute boundaries" between related conditions, suggesting that "single-disorder presentations" are the exception. Consequently, American discussions, more aligned with the DSM, have been open to identifying and developing concepts related to secondary trauma in human services. In contrast, the European perspective, more aligned with the ICD, has aimed to limit categories and resist "new" conditions.

Indirect Trauma in Legal Practice

Most studies on indirect trauma focus on the experiences of various human service professions, though there is a growing conversation about the legal profession. Some earlier studies avoided using trauma terms; for instance, a 1995 Canadian project found that many prosecutors suffered from "role overload," which affected the administration of justice. However, in 2003, Jaffe and colleagues discovered that most judges had been exposed to trauma, with a possible cumulative effect linked to more experience on the bench. Also in 2003, Levin and Greisberg referred to earlier American studies on lawyers' well-being and published their own findings, showing that lawyers experienced "significantly higher rates of secondary trauma stress and burnout" compared to mental health providers and social workers. That same year, Silver and colleagues published a qualitative discussion drawing on existing research and their personal experiences in legal practice with traumatized clients. In a small 2008 study, Vrklevski and Franklin measured 100 lawyers using a new Vicarious Trauma Scale and confirmed that repeated trauma exposure in lawyers was linked to higher scores of symptomatic distress. Levin and colleagues revisited the issue in 2011 and found significantly higher rates of PTSD symptoms in American attorneys than in their administrative staff. In a follow-up study, Levin's team observed that lawyers continuously exposed to indirect trauma tended to withdraw, which reduced their effectiveness and work hours over time. In 2015, Katz and Haldar used their clinical legal experience to advocate for a trauma-informed lawyering model in family law practice. In a later study, Katz and Haldar (2016) suggested that lawyers could provide more effective client representation by adopting trauma-informed techniques developed "in the therapeutic context."

In Canada, a study surveying 478 practicing attorneys found significant increases in PTSD symptoms linked to more work-related trauma. Additionally, the Canadian Bar Association recently held an indirect trauma session at its annual conference, and the American Bar Association encouraged the adoption of trauma-informed legal practice. It updated its advice for lawyers who might be at risk of indirect trauma, stating that trauma-informed legal practice can improve legal advocacy, attorney-client relationships, and ensure proper screening, assessment, and treatment. It also noted that awareness of secondary traumatic stress can help with prevention, identification, and self-care among legal professionals.

In Australia in 2016, Trabsky and Baron examined the experiences of lawyers working in the coronial jurisdiction. They found these lawyers were "likely to suffer distress by virtue of being members of the legal profession" and were expected to "steel themselves" against distress from what has been called "secondary traumatization" in certain professions. Based on their findings, they criticized existing guidelines and handbooks that claimed lawyers only needed "resilience, impartiality and dissociation" to cope with the grief and trauma of coronial work. Their recommendations aligned with earlier advice for police, suggesting that lawyers working with trauma should receive additional, specific training to develop coping skills and maintain supportive connections.

The Australian Blue Knot Foundation produced a paper in 2016, reviewing research and growing awareness of trauma's effects on lawyers. It argued for implementing trauma-informed legal systems, stating that "The provision of law and delivery of justice comprise critical terrain to which trauma informed principles should be applied." The following year, a small study by Maguire and Byrne confirmed earlier findings by Levin and Greisberg (2003) that lawyers showed more symptoms of indirect trauma than mental health professionals. Participating lawyers also showed more symptoms of depression, anxiety, and stress. The researchers called for future studies to clarify the cause—whether indirect trauma influences those experiences or if existing mental health issues influence indirect trauma.

Consistent with new research, Australian professional journals are publishing articles to help lawyers cope with indirect trauma in their work. A Queensland judge recently urged lawyers to become aware of the risk of indirect trauma and, among other things, consider adopting the Minds Count Workplace Well-Being Guidelines for the Legal Profession in their organizations. In the UK, discussions about indirect trauma in the legal profession appear to be more subtle. In 2019, the UK Law Society's survey reported on "stress" and "mental ill-health" in lawyers without asking about indirect trauma or related experiences. On the other hand, the UK Bar Council has published an information pack on "vicarious trauma," designed to help "Safeguarding your working practice."

Most empirical research so far reports on the experiences of lawyers in private practice, prosecutors, and judges. There appears to be no published research on the experience of indirect trauma among lawyers in legal aid or community legal services. Their experiences may differ for several reasons: while they often do not bill clients and are not pressured by billing targets, their employer organizations may be underfunded for their caseloads. This can lead to high workloads, including trauma-affected cases, and an increased risk of work-related stress for some lawyers. Additionally, community legal services often involve working with disadvantaged communities, refugees, and clients affected by long-term unemployment, crime, disability, substance use, and high rates of domestic violence and child abuse. Conversely, it is possible that community lawyering attracts lawyers with a more compassionate nature than private practice, and some research suggests that compassion can be a protective quality when exposed to trauma.

Overall, despite significant gaps in research, the legal profession in several countries is starting to recognize the risks for lawyers exposed to indirect trauma and attempting to keep practitioners informed. Given the substantial and growing research on lawyer well-being, there is an increasing need for qualitative studies to understand how indirect trauma affects lawyer vulnerabilities. Quantitative projects are also needed to investigate the extent of exposure and its effects. Furthermore, long-term studies are necessary to help differentiate and explain the effects of trauma in different types of lawyering against various exposures, workplaces, and personalities, as well as the effects of trauma-informed legal education, training, and system changes.

Stigma

In a review of studies aimed at identifying effective workplace responses to indirect trauma in various professions, researchers found a common reluctance to disclose experiences, seemingly due to stigma. Their analysis identified stigma as a significant barrier for professionals who overly personalize their experiences, not wanting to reveal to colleagues, employers, or clients that they are suffering from burnout or other secondary trauma effects. Stigma against mental health issues can contribute to the silence around indirect trauma as a risk in legal practice. For individual lawyers, conscious of their reputation and professional identity, this can reflect a lack of awareness about the potential harm of indirect trauma and perpetuate a sense of shame about mental health concerns generally within the legal profession. Due to the stigma in legal workplaces, many lawyers may think it is counterproductive to disclose symptoms and reveal what they believe will be seen as a professional weakness. Suppressing symptoms not only prevents organizational responses but also risks worsening the effects lawyers may experience.

Several studies describe how stigma creates "psychological dishonesty," which can combine with the stress of complex cases and heavy workloads, eventually harming lawyers' mental well-being, effectiveness, and physical health. Other studies show how workplace systems can worsen a professional's stress by imposing unreasonably high workloads, which is common in the legal profession. Regarding the long hours lawyers often work, a study of 259 therapists found that the main predictor of trauma symptoms was not the intensity of trauma exposure, but the number of hours per week spent working with traumatized clients.

Another review of studies on organizational responses to burnout and indirect trauma found that simply acknowledging to employees that their work is stressful can help overcome the stigma against disclosure. This may help lawyers feel more supported at work and encourage them to seek personal solutions and self-care. Law firm managers, following their business model, might mistakenly assume that lawyers should not be affected by their client's trauma because they do not have a "therapeutic relationship" with clients. Traditionally, many law firms motivate employed lawyers' productivity by requiring them to meet billing targets, with supervision focused on time-management strategies. Overcoming the stigma against mental health issues and introducing trauma-informed policies in legal practice may involve additional costs that law firms have so far avoided. Both organizations and supervisors have a duty of care for employees and may need to recognize how they can help protect lawyers from the effects of indirect trauma. Trauma-informed policies would benefit individual lawyers not only by helping to reduce stigma generally, but also by improving their well-being and satisfaction, and enhancing the effectiveness of their work.

Trauma-informed practice could be supported at both supervisory and management levels in law firms and workplaces. This would ensure that employed lawyers know they have organizational support. Implementing trauma-informed policies and practices will help normalize the effects of indirect trauma in legal practice, reduce the stigma that prevents discussion and disclosure, and support lawyers who may experience trauma exposure symptoms that cause personal suffering and reduced effectiveness.

Managers could discuss lawyers' trauma exposure in meetings as a regular agenda item. This would acknowledge and accept the risk as genuine, share information on how lawyers might experience the effects of client-related trauma, provide strategies for protection, and reassure lawyers that systems are in place to address their issues and minimize risk. If lawyers understand that their workplace, including their supervisor and colleagues, accepts that indirect trauma is a normal response to exposure to clients' trauma, they will be more likely to disclose symptoms and take appropriate action, including self-care and protective steps, instead of denying it by presenting a façade of resilience. Studies of other professions dealing with similar traumatic exposures indicate that unsupportive workplaces are likely to increase the risk of compassion fatigue and lower their ability to cope with clients' trauma. Effectively reducing lawyers' indirect trauma risk may require both the employer organization and individual lawyers to become trauma-informed, and it may necessitate structural and systemic workplace changes.

Organisational Support

The legal profession may be among the last human services to acknowledge that its members face risks of indirect trauma. Until recently, there have been no established guidelines or practices in legal practice regarding self-care, unlike in medical, allied health, and counseling fields. Competition within the legal profession and its adversarial nature may have contributed to denying the risk of indirect trauma to lawyers and hindered recognition of their vulnerability. Furthermore, modern business models and technological innovations have led to reduced staffing in some areas. As competition for employment increases, lawyers may fear showing any weakness, reflecting the stigma discussed earlier.

Adopting trauma-informed policies, which involve gradual changes in workplace practices, can improve both the safety and effectiveness of employed lawyers exposed to trauma. Examples from health systems can be adapted for legal workplaces. This could start with a "trauma-aware" workplace, where staff receive training to understand trauma, its effects, and how people often adapt to it. A "trauma-sensitive" firm would then implement some concepts of trauma-informed practice. "Trauma responsive" is the next stage, where a firm encourages changes in lawyer behavior to strengthen their resilience and protective factors. A "trauma-informed" firm would ensure that all personnel—professional, management, and support staff—are aware of trauma and its adaptations, and that all system practices respond to trauma, including its direct and indirect effects.

Legal practice managers might worry about "opening a Pandora's Box" of uncontrollable issues by discussing indirect trauma with lawyers and introducing new policies. However, some research confirms that lawyers who feel a sense of "psychological safety" may work more effectively and diligently. Indirect trauma in legal practice is likely common; however, it is not inevitable. The risk can be reduced by ensuring good protocols and providing lawyers with appropriate information, training, preparation, and support. The risk may be influenced by a lawyer's background, culture, personal history, and personality. It can build up gradually from repeated exposures and can be made worse by stress from other workplace conditions. Indirect trauma experiences can be eased by both self-care and changes in the workplace and supervision. If these are not enough, it can be effectively treated by various therapies. Trauma-informed policies should aim to inform and empower individuals, who are then in the best position to decide what they need. Ideally, managers will be familiar with the work conditions of employed lawyers so they can identify risks that may worsen or make a lawyer more sensitive to indirect trauma. Unfortunately, these conditions often include inherent aspects of legal workplace culture, such as heavy workloads and billing targets, a competitive environment, adversarial practices, and the stress of making an error that could cause a client's loss.

Trauma-informed training as part of professional development can help lawyers not only protect themselves but also improve their client skills and effectiveness. This is achieved through a better understanding of how clients who have suffered childhood abuse or other complex trauma respond and make decisions. Several studies offer guidance for professionals on safely communicating with traumatized clients and helping them access therapeutic care if appropriate. If lawyers are supported by proper workplace guidelines and practice good self-care strategies, they can protect themselves and enhance their competence, effectiveness, and resilience when working directly with traumatized clients.

The legal profession has a wide range of systems. Until common practices are established and tested, individual workplaces can create their own trauma-informed policies that reflect their staff's experiences. Fortunately, researchers have proposed several models based on the experiences of other professions and findings from empirical research. A review of studies found an emerging agreement among researchers on five principles for trauma-informed practice: safety, trust, collaboration, choice, and empowerment. Other researchers have added "culture" as an important principle, as it includes gender and historical issues relevant to the organization and the lawyer. Culture may be particularly crucial in law firms to help counter the stigma against mental health issues and the historical lack of a caring approach for staff in many legal workplaces, compared to other human services.

The resulting six principles offer a solid basis for designing trauma-informed policies for a legal workplace. However, these policies must be relevant to the work activities and understood by all staff as a process and a resource for development, not as a new set of rules or a condition of employment. Trauma-informed policy must be flexible, allowing it to adapt to other changes, including new systems, new staff, new clients, and new laws and systems. It should also improve understandings from new research on how to work safely with traumatized clients. It is important to discuss the policy in regular meetings to reduce stigma, allow staff to share experiences, and enable practical modifications as the policy develops.

One model that could be adapted for legal practice is "trauma-informed care" (TIC). It applies the principles mentioned above as an "organizational change process structured around the presumption that everyone in the agency (from clients through to management) may have been directly or indirectly exposed to trauma within their lifetime." Although not yet applied in legal practice, where TIC has been implemented in related areas, both staff and clients report feeling more empowered and satisfied with services, including reduced evidence of indirect trauma. Assessments of TIC training so far show its significant effectiveness across various measures. Other studies show that when trauma-informed policies are not applied, staff experience higher rates of indirect trauma symptoms and reduced effectiveness in serving clients.

The "Vicarious Trauma Toolkit" (VTT) is an effective model created by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). It includes a collection of articles and other resources to help organizations build their own programs to protect staff. The toolkit can be searched by discipline and includes resources for "Law Enforcement" and "Victim Services." One section, the "Vicarious Trauma – Organizational Readiness Guide," can help law firms assess their current needs. The guide helps identify knowledge gaps and assists organizations in developing a more trauma-informed policy with an improved ability to support professional staff.

A third model is Sandra Bloom's "Sanctuary Toolkit," based on experiences of organizational change in designing strategies to respond effectively to trauma. The Sanctuary model includes seven "cultures": non-violence, emotional intelligence, social learning, shared governance, open communication, and social responsibility. As studies on indirect trauma evolve, more programs are likely to emerge, improving options for legal organizations to develop effective policies to better protect staff and clients from trauma effects. Research on the effectiveness of these models is ongoing, and the results so far confirm earlier studies. These show that even policies focused solely on promoting self-care can help professionals cope with traumatic exposure and improve well-being and effectiveness.

Trauma-informed Supervision

Legal supervisors hold a crucial position in trauma-informed practice, as their support is essential for individual lawyers to work effectively and safely with traumatized clients. Legal supervisors can benefit from the experiences of supervisors in other professions who have learned to help individuals adapt to indirect trauma. They understand it not just as an individual concern, but within the context of their organization, their work, and their role in the broader legal system. Failing to validate a lawyer's response to trauma during supervision can strengthen stigma and worsen self-blame and feelings of incompetence. This can increase symptoms and the risk of further harm from continued exposure.

An effective model of trauma-informed supervision provides lawyers with professional development that aligns with competent and compassionate legal service for clients in need. Experienced supervisors understand that the topics lawyers most need to discuss in supervision are often those they avoid, especially while stigma persists, such as mental health issues related to indirect trauma. Weak supervision that lacks trauma awareness and avoids difficult questions risks worsening rumination and other symptoms of compassion fatigue or indirect trauma. This can potentially lead to serious problems or the loss of the lawyer from the workplace and the profession. On the other hand, attempting therapeutic approaches, forcing a debrief, or otherwise engaging "too deeply" in issues could unnecessarily label the lawyer's response as a sickness. This could be a boundary violation and undermine the lawyer's confidence in their own abilities.

Supervisors who are aware of trauma theory will understand the benefits of being proactive with indirect trauma. This helps normalize reactions and enables lawyers to make informed decisions in their work and self-care. However, they will not force the lawyer to disclose or discuss an issue until they are ready. Where possible, in a supportive environment and with the lawyer's consent, it might be helpful to discuss an issue with other staff in meetings. This can help normalize the experience and minimize stigma. Supervisors can draw from the firm's policies or a proven model—for example, the six principles of trauma-informed practice mentioned earlier. One study of experienced supervisors across various professions highlighted the importance of two principles: safety and empowerment. Safety in supervision includes the lawyer feeling safe, which might involve improving structural, operational, or administrative procedures in the firm, as well as building a trusting connection with the lawyer. Empowerment involves allowing the lawyer to actively participate in their own supervision, feeling able to share their thoughts and emotions, for example, about a client's traumatic experience. Supervision requires not only carefully listening to the lawyer's priorities but also encouraging them to set parts of the agenda for supervision meetings and supporting their decisions where possible. An effective strategy is to help the lawyer understand not just how to manage difficult cases and their reactions to clients' trauma, but also to notice how they have developed and grown as a result of their practice so far. Using a "supervisory alliance," the supervisor can foster professional growth by asking the lawyer to come to sessions prepared to talk about their successes with clients and other signs of growth. As with professional coaching, the supervisor needs to clarify workload expectation limits, not just billing or workload targets. They must also ensure that lawyers are aware of their personal habits and how their well-being and self-care are directly linked to their professional performance.

A trauma-informed supervision process requires the supervisor to have a good understanding of the lawyers involved, including their character and background, as well as the nature of their work. Since responses to trauma are individual and depend on many personal and situational factors, supervisors need to anticipate uncertainty and diverse reactions to clients' trauma; no two lawyers will be the same. Knowing a lawyer's background might help a supervisor understand their response to certain situations. However, having a personal history of trauma, such as childhood abuse, does not necessarily increase the risk of developing subsequent indirect trauma symptoms. Lawyers experiencing burnout, bullying, and compassion fatigue are more likely to develop symptoms from indirect trauma. In contrast, the quality of connection and social support they experience in the workplace and their community are protective factors that can improve their effectiveness and should be promoted when possible. Inexperience as a lawyer or being new to the job may increase vulnerability. However, having extensive experience working with traumatized clients is not necessarily protective, as indirect trauma can be cumulative. Without appropriate supervision, adequate breaks, and self-care, lawyers may develop emotional exhaustion, leading to compassion fatigue and indirect trauma symptoms.

Key strategies in trauma-informed supervision align with reducing stigma in the workplace. They validate the lawyer's experience with compassionate understanding, acceptance, and affirmation, and normalize reactions to trauma exposure rather than labeling them as abnormal with diagnoses, sensitivities, or medical responses. Symptoms of indirect trauma stress are "a normal and universal response to abnormal (violence induced) or unusual events (disasters)." However, with trauma-informed policies that encourage appropriate self-care, supervisors can help lawyers manage the symptoms and minimize the effects.

Self-care

Focusing on self-care is as much about workplace safety, risk management, and legal responsibility as it is about simply resting and relaxing.

Individual lawyers have a duty to practice self-care, and taking effective steps to protect themselves from indirect trauma is a vital part of professional development and maintaining professional competence. A crucial first step is for lawyers to learn about trauma theory. This knowledge will help them understand the importance of self-awareness and motivate them to build resilience and healthy habits. Individual resilience is often defined as the ability to deal with hardship, but it is best understood as something that develops and adapts, rather than a fixed strength or personality trait.

Trauma-informed lawyers understand that exposure to trauma has an impact, that this effect is normal, and that it can be managed. Similarly, lawyers who adopt a "growth mindset," as opposed to a "fixed" mindset, are more likely to learn from their experiences and find what works best for them in terms of an adaptive attitude and safe responses to their clients' trauma. One expert, Martin Seligman, has argued that maintaining a growth mindset over time allows a person not only to show resilience to trauma but also to actually grow stronger from the traumatic experience.

Often, a legal workplace culture and the stigma it creates cause some lawyers to hold onto rigid beliefs. They may feel they need to present a tough image and are unwilling to admit their vulnerabilities in the competitive legal profession. Some lawyers can be susceptible to false confidence, lacking self-awareness, which may increase their vulnerability to indirect trauma. Other lawyers may simply resist or fear change. Both types of resistance can be lessened through trauma-informed supervision, which improves their understanding of trauma theory and focuses on the "culture" principle discussed earlier as part of the shift towards a trauma-informed organization. Once lawyers drop their pretense of being unbreakable, they can access many resources to strengthen their professional resilience and the effectiveness of their practice.

The American Psychological Association offers a system of 10 practices that can help professionals in any field build resilience to work effectively with traumatized clients. Similarly, the British Medical Authority lists 14 self-care practices designed to reduce the risk of indirect trauma for health professionals. While some of these measures are broad principles that might seem overly simple to a cynical lawyer (e.g., "Take care of yourself" and "Look after your physical and mental well-being"), the key point is that lawyers generally do not take care of themselves, which is why some are vulnerable to indirect trauma. Many studies on lawyer well-being confirm their tendency to overwork and adopt unhealthy habits to cope with work stress, including alcohol and drug abuse, as well as poor diet, sleep, and fitness routines. Many also lose touch with supportive friends and community due to work pressures. Supervisors who are informed about indirect trauma research are likely to encourage and motivate lawyers towards self-care and to normalize discussions about basic self-care practices, especially regarding personal habits and maintaining supportive connections.

A review of research on the effectiveness of self-care practices for professionals dealing with secondary trauma supported a four-step process: increasing self-awareness, committing to addressing the stress, creating a personal action plan, and following through with that action. The core of this model is the ancient wisdom "Know Thyself," often seen as the first step in best-practice self-care strategies. In trauma-informed practice, improving self-awareness helps individuals recognize their thoughts and feelings about a client's trauma. This is the beginning of normalizing and validating those reactions internally. Individuals discover what works for them, as a strategy that helps one lawyer may not work for another.

Mindfulness is a key principle of "knowing thyself," and many studies show how self-awareness and self-compassion are enhanced through various mindfulness techniques. These techniques can improve lawyers' resilience to trauma, as well as their performance and overall well-being. Examples include Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy, and Compassionate Mind Training. A basic mindfulness practice is the regular habit of secular meditation, which might involve simply sitting quietly for 15 dedicated minutes each day. Many other practices enhance mindfulness to improve trauma resilience, including yoga, tai chi, and walking.

The self-awareness gained through mindfulness practice can help integrate and resolve cognitive (ideas, memories, images), somatic (body-related), and affective (emotional) aspects of anxiety-related trauma. It also helps improve self-compassion and other positive outcomes such as "post-traumatic growth," leading to a forward-looking optimism and a greater appreciation of life and meaning at work. Post-traumatic growth is an "antifragile" effect, going beyond mere resilience, where some individuals become stronger after traumatic exposure. As one expert explains, "Antifragility is beyond resilience or robustness. The resilient resists shocks and stays the same; the antifragile gets better." In 2013, a broad review of qualitative studies found that post-traumatic growth can result from trauma exposure, provided individuals follow personal and organizational coping strategies.

Improved self-awareness may include discovering one's psychological or character strengths, which can be used more effectively than trying to compensate for areas where one is less naturally talented. One effective strengths model is based on the applied positive psychology theories of Martin Seligman and colleagues. These theories have been tested in several areas, including coaching, education, and professional development. Another method is based on the "Broaden and Build" theory, which involves intentionally practicing gratitude and positivity. This theory has growing research confirming its benefits for enhancing and creating psychological resources. A simpler practice, verified with different professions, is positive self-talk, focusing on affirmations and motivational comments. Studies suggest that self-talk can enhance resilience, reduce rumination, and improve mood. It is best introduced through supervision to overcome resistance due to stigma. It involves addressing oneself as if advising a good friend: "Let it go until tomorrow"; "That's your work talking, that's not accurate." Therapists advocate supportive self-talk using "non-first-person" language to create emotional distance from traumatic memories and feelings that can arise unexpectedly.

As a lawyer's self-awareness grows with trauma-informed supervision and self-care practices, they will likely also become more compassionate towards themselves and less judgmental about their goals and performance, including their successes and failures. Self-compassion helps lawyers understand how their own well-being is fundamental to providing the best practice for their clients and is important for coping with indirect trauma. Self-compassion, combined with improved self-awareness, helps lawyers manage a client's trauma with a balanced awareness of themselves and others, rather than over-identifying with their client, their feelings, or their situation.

Conclusion

While there have been relatively few studies specifically on lawyers directly exposed to indirect trauma, studies of related professions like judges, child welfare officers, police, and prosecutors offer valuable insights. Academic debates about diagnoses are not the main concern for lawyers working with traumatized clients. There is enough evidence to understand the causes of symptoms and to adopt protective practices. Recognizing the specific risks of lawyers' exposure to clients' trauma is not "buying into" a controversy but accepting the responsibility to act. Lawyers need training, supportive supervision, updated systems, and conditions that enable them to provide the best legal assistance for their clients, which includes managing their own exposure to trauma. Acknowledging the need for change is essential for the profession to take the next step and implement policies and practices to better protect lawyers working with trauma.

Legal systems that focus on restorative justice, including therapeutic jurisprudence, rather than punishment-based models, will be open to trauma-informed theories and practice. Restorative justice has been primarily discussed within criminal law, which is also one of the areas most affected by trauma and its consequences. Related fields, including coronial law, family law, domestic violence, child abuse, and personal injury law, also involve trauma and can benefit from social justice and client-focused practices that prioritize healing and, where possible, repairing relationships. While recognizing the individual experience of direct and indirect trauma is important, a restorative justice approach to trauma-informed legal practice would avoid the limitations where traditional psychiatric and psychological approaches to trauma often ignore or minimize the broader social contexts and relationships that shape people's experiences.

Law firms and legal workplaces are obligated to ensure their systems are safe. This may require employers to ensure that trauma-informed policies apply to both the organization's workplace and systems, and to all individuals. These individuals, in turn, are encouraged to adopt self-care practices. Employed lawyers and sole practitioners need to recognize that self-care habits will not only enhance their well-being and help protect them from work-related trauma but also improve their productivity and effectiveness at work. The science on trauma-informed practice is relatively new, yet it has been effectively adopted in other professions. It offers the legal profession an opportunity to catch up, protect its members, and affirm its role as a responsible and compassionate human service.

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Abstract

Vicarious or secondary trauma experience has always been part of legal practice although many do not acknowledge the risk it can have on the mental health, well-being and performance of legal professionals. The listening to, observing and then detailing of traumatic events for the purposes of legal process in some cases may harm lawyers who need to work closely with clients, victims and witnesses. This article reviews the research on trauma in many areas of professional human services that could inform and improve our understanding of legal practice. It examines the discursive history of trauma and recent studies on lawyer well-being, before discussing the controversies about recognising vicarious trauma and the stigma against mental health concerns in the legal profession. The article concludes by reviewing options to assist law firms in considering trauma-informed policy, practices and supervision strategies and to help individual lawyers recognise the value of self-care.

Summary

Lawyers often deal with upsetting events in their daily work. They may hear disturbing stories from clients who have been hurt or seen terrible things. This can affect lawyers' well-being and how well they do their job. While some lawyers handle these situations without lasting harm, others can suffer greatly.

When people hear about the trauma of others, it can cause them harm too. This is sometimes called "secondary trauma." It can even lead to problems like post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Experts have found ways for workplaces to become "trauma-informed." This means they learn how to work with people who have experienced trauma in a safer and better way. By doing this, lawyers can better handle stress, get support, and become stronger.

Many people in the legal field have often ignored this problem. They might say lawyers should just "toughen up." Law schools usually don't teach students about these risks. Many law firms focus on how much money lawyers bill, not on their mental health. Also, most legal groups haven't added training about trauma to their programs. This means lawyers don't get the chance to learn about trauma or how to deal with it in their work.

Stress is a normal part of legal work. It is not always harmful. This is not about creating new mental health problems for lawyers. But some lawyers are deeply affected by the trauma they see at work, and this is not always noticed. Lawyers who work in areas like criminal law, family law, or cases about child abuse may be at higher risk. They often have to look at shocking details and work with clients who are suffering.

Trauma is when someone has a very strong emotional reaction to a terrible event. This could be an accident, violence, or a natural disaster. It can cause shock, denial, flashbacks, relationship problems, and even physical pain. Experts say trauma is different from stress because it's so overwhelming that it makes it hard for a person to cope.

How We Understand Trauma

The way we understand trauma has changed over time. Experts sometimes disagree about what it means and how to treat it. A long time ago, doctors saw trauma in soldiers and called it things like "shell shock." In the 1980s, after the Vietnam War, PTSD was officially recognized as a problem for soldiers.

Later, experts noticed that therapists who worked with people who had experienced trauma also started to show signs of PTSD. This was called "indirect trauma." It was seen as a normal reaction to hard work, not a weakness. Other terms like "secondary trauma stress" and "compassion fatigue" also started to be used.

In 2013, a main guide for mental health added that PTSD can happen from "repeated or extreme exposure" to details of upsetting events, often at work. This is sometimes called "vicarious trauma." This type of trauma can change how a person sees the world.

Even though these ideas are used, the official guides for mental health don't list "vicarious trauma" or "secondary trauma stress" as separate problems. To avoid confusion, this article uses "indirect trauma" to include all these related issues.

Studies have shown that many types of workers, like counselors, social workers, doctors, and police, can suffer from indirect trauma. Lawyers are also at risk. More and more, people in the legal field are starting to realize this. Some groups have even made tools to help workers deal with trauma.

There is also a term called "subthreshold PTSD." This is for people who have trauma symptoms but don't quite fit the official definition of PTSD. Even without a full diagnosis, these symptoms can be very hard to live with.

Lawyers' Well-being and Work

Many studies show that lawyers often have mental health problems. They may suffer from high stress, worry, sadness, substance use, and thoughts of suicide. This happens even though lawyers often try to act strong. Trying to seem tough can make mental health problems worse for some lawyers.

Other reasons for lawyers' mental health problems include long work hours, having too much empathy for clients (compassion fatigue), and feeling worn out (burnout).

Compassion fatigue happens when people get emotionally and physically tired from constantly caring for others who are hurting. Burnout is also common in lawyers and can make them lose their passion for their job. It can also lead to health problems. Young lawyers might feel more burnout because they have to work harder to prove themselves in a tough job market. Burnout can also make indirect trauma worse. Being bullied at work can also cause lawyers to have PTSD symptoms.

The legal field has not fully accepted that being bullied or hearing about clients' trauma can cause these problems for lawyers.

Research on lawyers' well-being has also looked at ways to protect them. These include things like being mindful, focusing on good ethics, becoming stronger, and changing how the justice system works. Most of these ideas need big changes in how lawyers are taught and how they work.

Disagreements About Trauma

There are still disagreements among experts about trauma and its effects. For example, some say that trauma can cause "acute stress disorder" right away, and if it lasts, it becomes PTSD. But different health guides have different ways of describing these conditions.

One guide for mental health still does not agree that PTSD can be caused by hearing about trauma at work, even though another guide does. Experts also disagree about what "vicarious trauma" truly means.

PTSD can show up in many ways, like bad thoughts, nightmares, anger, or strong reactions to things that remind someone of the trauma. Some experts talk about "complex trauma," which comes from ongoing or repeated harmful events, like abuse.

Sometimes, too many new mental health problems are named, which can lead to wrong diagnoses. Also, some research shows that immediately talking about a traumatic event, called "debriefing," may not always be helpful. It's better to let people talk only when they are ready.

Many PTSD symptoms are also seen in other problems like anxiety and sadness. Some experts think mental health problems often happen together, not as single issues. This means American experts have been more open to new ideas about indirect trauma, while European experts have been more careful.

Indirect Trauma in Legal Work

Most studies on indirect trauma have looked at other types of helping professions. But more and more, research is focusing on lawyers. In 1995, a study found that many prosecutors in Canada were suffering from "role overload," which affected their work. Later, studies showed that judges and lawyers also experienced indirect trauma and burnout.

One study in 2008 found that lawyers who dealt with many traumatic events had more symptoms of distress. Another study found that lawyers exposed to indirect trauma tended to pull back from their work. This made them less effective.

Some experts have argued for "trauma-informed lawyering," especially in family law. This means using methods from therapy to help lawyers better represent their clients.

In Canada, a study found that more work-related trauma led to more PTSD symptoms in lawyers. The Canadian Bar Association has even held sessions on indirect trauma. The American Bar Association encourages lawyers to use trauma-informed practices. They say it can make lawyers better at their jobs, improve client relationships, and help lawyers take care of themselves.

In Australia, studies have found that lawyers in certain fields, like those dealing with deaths, also suffer from indirect trauma. These studies suggest that lawyers need special training and support.

An Australian group argued that trauma-informed principles should be used throughout the legal system. One study even found that lawyers showed more symptoms of indirect trauma than mental health professionals.

Legal magazines are starting to publish articles to help lawyers with indirect trauma. Some judges are also urging lawyers to learn about this risk. While some countries are discussing this more openly, others, like the UK, are more quiet about it, often calling it "stress" instead of indirect trauma.

Most research has looked at lawyers in private practice and judges. There isn't much on lawyers in legal aid or community services. These lawyers might face different challenges, like heavy workloads and working with very poor or vulnerable people. But it's also possible they are more compassionate, which could help protect them.

Even though there are still things we don't know, the legal field in many places is starting to understand the risks of indirect trauma. There is a need for more studies to understand how indirect trauma affects lawyers and how to help them.

The Problem of Shame

Studies show that people often don't want to talk about indirect trauma because they feel ashamed. They don't want to tell co-workers or bosses that they are struggling. This shame keeps people from getting help and can make the problem worse. Lawyers might worry about their reputation and think that showing mental health problems is a sign of weakness.

This shame can lead to "psychological dishonesty." This, combined with stressful cases and heavy workloads, can harm lawyers' mental and physical health. Some studies show that workplaces that give too much work can make stress worse for professionals.

One study found that simply telling employees their work is stressful can help them feel more supported. This makes them more likely to seek help for themselves. Law firms might think that because lawyers don't have a "therapeutic relationship" with clients, they shouldn't be affected by trauma. But managers have a duty to care for their employees.

Trauma-informed policies would help lawyers by reducing shame, improving their well-being, and making their work better.

Bosses and managers should talk about trauma exposure in meetings. They should accept it as a real risk, share information, and assure lawyers that there are systems to help. If lawyers know their workplace understands that indirect trauma is a normal reaction, they will be more likely to talk about their symptoms and get help. Workplaces that don't offer support can make compassion fatigue worse. Dealing with indirect trauma might require changes from both the workplace and individual lawyers.

Help From the Workplace

The legal field may be one of the last professions to admit its members face risks from indirect trauma. In the past, there weren't rules about self-care for lawyers like there were for doctors or counselors. Competition and the tough nature of legal work may have made it harder to admit these risks. Also, modern workplaces that focus on technology and less staff might make lawyers afraid to show any weakness.

Bringing in trauma-informed policies slowly can make workplaces safer and better for lawyers. This can start with a "trauma-aware" workplace, where staff learn about trauma. Next is "trauma-sensitive," where some ideas are put into practice. Then "trauma responsive," where lawyers are helped to become stronger. Finally, a "trauma-informed" firm means all staff understand trauma, and all practices help deal with its effects.

Some managers might worry that talking about indirect trauma will open up too many problems. But research shows that lawyers who feel "psychologically safe" at work do better. Indirect trauma is likely common, but it can be lessened with good plans, information, training, and support. A lawyer's personal background can affect their risk.

Indirect trauma can build up over time and get worse with other work stress. It can be helped by self-care and changes at work, or by therapy if needed. Trauma-informed policies should help individuals feel informed and strong so they can decide what they need. Managers should know about their lawyers' work conditions to spot risks. These risks often come from the legal world itself, like long hours, pressure to bill, and fear of making mistakes.

Training in trauma-informed practices can help lawyers protect themselves. It can also make them better at working with clients who have experienced trauma. If lawyers get the right support at work and practice self-care, they can become stronger and more effective.

The legal field has different types of workplaces, so each one can create its own trauma-informed policies. Experts suggest five main ideas for trauma-informed practice: safety, trust, teamwork, choice, and feeling strong. Other experts add "culture" to this list, looking at things like gender and history. Culture is very important in law firms to fight against the shame of mental health issues and the lack of care for staff.

These six ideas can be a good base for creating trauma-informed policies. But these policies must be right for the work and seen as a helpful tool, not just new rules. They should be flexible and change as needed. Talking about the policy often in meetings can help reduce shame and let staff share their experiences.

One helpful idea is "trauma-informed care" (TIC). This means everyone in the workplace, from clients to managers, is seen as someone who might have experienced trauma. When TIC is used, both staff and clients report feeling better and happier with services.

Another good tool is the "Vicarious Trauma Toolkit" from the U.S. Department of Justice. It has many resources to help organizations build programs to protect their staff. A part of this toolkit helps law firms figure out what they need.

A third idea is Sandra Bloom's "Sanctuary Toolkit." It focuses on things like non-violence, understanding emotions, learning together, sharing power, and open talks. As we learn more about indirect trauma, more programs will appear to help legal groups protect their staff and clients. Studies show that even just encouraging self-care can help workers deal with trauma and do better at their jobs.

Help From Supervisors

Supervisors in legal jobs are very important for trauma-informed practices. Their support helps lawyers work well and safely with clients who have experienced trauma. Legal supervisors can learn from others who have helped people deal with indirect trauma, not just as a personal problem, but as something connected to their job and workplace. If a supervisor doesn't accept a lawyer's reaction to trauma, it can make shame worse and make the lawyer feel like they are not good enough.

Good supervision helps lawyers grow professionally and provide caring legal help. Supervisors should know that lawyers often avoid talking about mental health issues, especially because of the shame involved. Poor supervision that doesn't understand trauma can make problems like compassion fatigue worse, possibly leading to serious issues or lawyers leaving their jobs. But supervisors should also be careful not to act like therapists or force lawyers to talk about things they don't want to.

Supervisors who understand trauma will be proactive. They will help lawyers see that their reactions are normal and help them make good choices about their work and self-care. But they should not force a lawyer to share until they are ready. If the lawyer agrees, talking about problems with other staff can make it feel more normal and less shameful. Supervisors can use the six ideas of trauma-informed practice. Two key ideas for supervision are safety and feeling strong. Safety means the lawyer feels safe to talk, and that the firm has clear rules and trust. Feeling strong means the lawyer can take part in their own supervision, share their thoughts, and feel like their decisions are supported. Supervisors should listen to the lawyer's needs and help them set goals. A good way to do this is to help lawyers see how they have grown and done well in their work. Supervisors also need to set clear limits on workloads and remind lawyers that their personal well-being is linked to their work performance.

Supervisors need to know their lawyers well, including their background and the type of work they do. Since everyone reacts to trauma differently, supervisors should expect different responses. A lawyer's personal history of trauma doesn't always mean they will have more problems with indirect trauma later. But lawyers who are experiencing burnout, bullying, or compassion fatigue are more likely to have symptoms. Strong connections and social support at work and in their community can protect lawyers and make them better at their jobs. New lawyers might be more vulnerable. But even experienced lawyers can get tired from repeated exposure to trauma if they don't get enough breaks and self-care.

Important ways to supervise in a trauma-informed way include reducing shame at work. This means showing understanding and acceptance of lawyers' experiences, and making their reactions to trauma seem normal, not like a medical problem. Reactions to indirect trauma are "normal and common responses to abnormal events." With trauma-informed policies that encourage self-care, supervisors can help lawyers manage symptoms and lessen their effects.

Taking Care of Oneself

Taking care of oneself is not just about relaxing; it's about protecting one's health and doing well at work. Lawyers have a duty to care for themselves. Learning about trauma helps lawyers understand why self-care is important and how to become stronger. Being strong means being able to deal with hard things, and it can grow over time.

Lawyers who understand trauma know that it affects them, that this effect is normal, and that it can be managed. Also, lawyers who believe they can learn and grow from experiences are more likely to get through tough times. Some people even become stronger after a traumatic event.

Sometimes, the culture in law firms makes lawyers feel like they have to seem tough and not show weakness. This can make them less aware of their own needs and more likely to be harmed by indirect trauma. Supervisors can help lawyers change this mindset by teaching them about trauma and focusing on a caring workplace culture. Once lawyers stop pretending to be invulnerable, there are many ways they can build strength.

The American Psychological Association and the British Medical Authority offer many ideas for self-care. While some ideas might seem simple, the truth is that many lawyers don't take good care of themselves. Studies show lawyers often overwork, drink too much, eat poorly, don't sleep enough, and lose touch with friends. Supervisors who know about indirect trauma should encourage lawyers to practice self-care and talk about it openly.

A good self-care plan often involves four steps: knowing yourself better, deciding to deal with stress, making a plan, and following through. The most important step is "knowing thyself." This means understanding your own thoughts and feelings about a client's trauma, which helps to make these reactions feel normal. You figure out what works best for you, because what helps one lawyer might not help another.

Mindfulness, like meditation, yoga, or walking, is key to "knowing thyself." It helps people become more aware of their thoughts and feelings, and feel more kindness towards themselves. This can help lawyers deal with anxiety and trauma, and even grow from hard experiences. Some people become stronger after trauma, not just resilient.

Being aware of your strengths can also help. Instead of focusing on weaknesses, using your natural strengths can be more effective. Ideas from positive psychology and gratitude practices can also help build inner resources. Simple positive self-talk, like telling yourself encouraging things as if you were advising a friend, can also make you stronger and reduce worry. It's often helpful to use "non-first-person" language in self-talk, like "Let it go until tomorrow," to create some distance from difficult thoughts.

As lawyers become more self-aware and practice self-care, they will likely be kinder to themselves. This self-compassion helps lawyers understand that their own well-being is vital for doing their best work and dealing with indirect trauma. It helps them balance caring for clients with caring for themselves, instead of getting too caught up in a client's pain.

Wrapping Up

Studies on lawyers and indirect trauma are still fairly new, but we can learn a lot from research on other jobs like judges or police. We know enough about the causes of trauma symptoms to start protecting lawyers now. It's not about taking sides in expert debates, but about taking responsibility. Lawyers need training, good supervision, and better work systems to help their clients and manage their own exposure to trauma. Changing is important for the legal field to protect its members.

Legal systems that focus on fixing problems and healing, rather than just punishment, will be more open to trauma-informed practices. This kind of justice often applies to criminal law, which is a field greatly affected by trauma. Other areas like family law or cases about child abuse can also benefit from practices that prioritize repairing relationships and helping people. It's important to remember that trauma is not just a personal problem; it's also shaped by bigger social issues.

Law firms must make sure their workplaces are safe. This means having trauma-informed policies for everyone and encouraging individuals to practice self-care. Lawyers need to know that self-care will not only help them, but also make them better and more effective at their jobs. Trauma-informed practices are still somewhat new, but they have worked in other jobs. This gives the legal field a chance to catch up, protect its members, and show that it is a caring profession.

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Footnotes and Citation

Cite

James C. (2020). Towards trauma-informed legal practice: a review. Psychiatry, psychology, and law : an interdisciplinary journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and Law, 27(2), 275–299. https://doi.org/10.1080/13218719.2020.1719377

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