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Coping strategies and resources of volunteer telephone counsellors at a South African organisation: An exploratory study

Telephone counsellors are significant assets in communities where numerous treatment barriers restrict individuals from accessing professional mental health care. However, working on a crisis line can be detrimental to volunteers' well-being, creating risk for secondary trauma, burnout and vicarious...

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Main Author: Cerf, Tayla
Other Authors: Kaminer, Debra
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Psychology 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Cerf, Tayla
author2 Kaminer, Debra
author_browse Cerf, Tayla
Kaminer, Debra
author_facet Kaminer, Debra
Cerf, Tayla
author_sort Cerf, Tayla
collection Thesis
description Telephone counsellors are significant assets in communities where numerous treatment barriers restrict individuals from accessing professional mental health care. However, working on a crisis line can be detrimental to volunteers' well-being, creating risk for secondary trauma, burnout and vicarious trauma. While these risks are well-established, there is considerably less research on the coping strategies and resources that can support telephone counsellors in their work and protect them from negative impacts. The current study explored telephone counsellors' work-related challenges and the coping strategies and resources they use to manage the impact of their work on their professional and personal lives. A qualitative study was conducted with twelve participants at a South African telephone counselling organisation. Participants were interviewed using a semi-structured interview schedule and reflexive thematic analysis was used to interpret and make meaning of the participants' lived experiences. The following eight themes emerged: challenging calls, negative impacts on the self, frustration with telephone counselling conditions, mindful practices to cope with telephone counselling challenges, active engagement with counselling experiences, actively disengaging from counselling experiences, coping through connection, and hopes for coping in the future. The findings indicate that although participants felt professionally and personally challenged by the nature of telephone counselling work, they were cognizant of how best to support themselves and seemed to find their role manageable and meaningful even when faced with adverse counselling experiences. The coping strategies and resources identified by the participants could inform counsellor support initiatives at crisis lines in South Africa and elsewhere.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:39:15.789Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Psychology
publisherStr Department of Psychology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41526 Coping strategies and resources of volunteer telephone counsellors at a South African organisation: An exploratory study Cerf, Tayla Kaminer, Debra Psychology Telephone counsellors are significant assets in communities where numerous treatment barriers restrict individuals from accessing professional mental health care. However, working on a crisis line can be detrimental to volunteers' well-being, creating risk for secondary trauma, burnout and vicarious trauma. While these risks are well-established, there is considerably less research on the coping strategies and resources that can support telephone counsellors in their work and protect them from negative impacts. The current study explored telephone counsellors' work-related challenges and the coping strategies and resources they use to manage the impact of their work on their professional and personal lives. A qualitative study was conducted with twelve participants at a South African telephone counselling organisation. Participants were interviewed using a semi-structured interview schedule and reflexive thematic analysis was used to interpret and make meaning of the participants' lived experiences. The following eight themes emerged: challenging calls, negative impacts on the self, frustration with telephone counselling conditions, mindful practices to cope with telephone counselling challenges, active engagement with counselling experiences, actively disengaging from counselling experiences, coping through connection, and hopes for coping in the future. The findings indicate that although participants felt professionally and personally challenged by the nature of telephone counselling work, they were cognizant of how best to support themselves and seemed to find their role manageable and meaningful even when faced with adverse counselling experiences. The coping strategies and resources identified by the participants could inform counsellor support initiatives at crisis lines in South Africa and elsewhere. 2025-07-03T13:03:52Z 2025-07-03T13:03:52Z 2025 2025-07-03T12:57:32Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41526 Eng application/pdf Department of Psychology Faculty of Humanities University of Cape town
spellingShingle Psychology
Cerf, Tayla
Coping strategies and resources of volunteer telephone counsellors at a South African organisation: An exploratory study
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Coping strategies and resources of volunteer telephone counsellors at a South African organisation: An exploratory study
title_full Coping strategies and resources of volunteer telephone counsellors at a South African organisation: An exploratory study
title_fullStr Coping strategies and resources of volunteer telephone counsellors at a South African organisation: An exploratory study
title_full_unstemmed Coping strategies and resources of volunteer telephone counsellors at a South African organisation: An exploratory study
title_short Coping strategies and resources of volunteer telephone counsellors at a South African organisation: An exploratory study
title_sort coping strategies and resources of volunteer telephone counsellors at a south african organisation an exploratory study
topic Psychology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41526
work_keys_str_mv AT cerftayla copingstrategiesandresourcesofvolunteertelephonecounsellorsatasouthafricanorganisationanexploratorystudy