By Kris Weatherall, Local 304, Provincial Human Rights Committee
Workers across Ontario’s public services—including paramedics, correctional officers, 911 operators, child protection workers—are regularly exposed to deeply disturbing events, many involving human rights violations.
These professionals are tasked with protecting vulnerable populations and maintaining public safety, but in doing so, they often become second-hand victims of trauma. This phenomenon is known as vicarious trauma: the emotional residue of exposure to the pain, suffering, and injustice experienced by others.
For members of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU/SEFPO), vicarious trauma is not just a workplace health concern, but a human rights issue that intersects with occupational safety, mental health, and ethical duty.
Vicarious trauma, also called secondary traumatic stress, differs from burnout. While burnout results from cumulative work stress, vicarious trauma stems from empathic engagement with individuals who have experienced trauma—often in violation of their rights. OPSEU/SEFPO members who work in front-line roles are particularly vulnerable due to the nature of their work environments, such as:
- Paramedics routinely respond to medical emergencies, accidents, and crises that often stem from systemic failures, including poverty, homelessness, or lack of mental health services—each of which can be traced to broader human rights failures.
- Corrections Officers work in institutions where overcrowding, violence, mental illness, and lack of rehabilitative support are endemic.
- Child Protection Workers interact with children and families living in poverty, neglect, or abuse, frequently within systems that fail to uphold the right to adequate housing, health, and education.
For these workers, bearing witness to systemic injustice can result in feelings of helplessness, guilt, anger, and desensitization—key markers of vicarious trauma.
Many members witness repeated violations of human rights, often in environments that normalize such breaches:
- Right to adequate health care (Article 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights) is often denied due to systemic underfunding in health and emergency services.
- Right to humane treatment and dignity (Articles 1 and 5 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights) is routinely challenged in correctional institutions where inhumane conditions persist due to underfunding, overcrowding, and a lack of services.
- Children’s right to protection and development (Article 26 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights) is jeopardized when social services lack the resources or mandate to intervene effectively.
When workers are unable to prevent or even address these violations, the psychological toll is immense. Over time, repeated exposure without appropriate institutional support can result in trauma becoming embedded in organizational culture.
The psychological, emotional, and even physical impacts of vicarious trauma include:
- Anxiety, depression, emotional exhaustion
- Cynicism and withdrawal from work or clients
- Disrupted personal relationships and sleep disorders
- Heightened risk of substance use or suicide
This not only jeopardizes the mental health and safety of workers but also diminishes their ability to perform their duties effectively, increasing turnover and organizational instability.
Despite awareness of the issue, systemic barriers persist:
- Stigma: Workers may fear appearing weak or unfit if they disclose psychological stress.
- Lack of Support Structures: Many workplaces lack access to trauma-informed supervision or mental health services.
- Normalization of Trauma: Exposure to trauma becomes expected, or even valorized, in frontline roles.
- Insufficient Training: Few employers provide adequate training on recognizing or managing vicarious trauma.
OPSEU/SEFPO has a critical role to play in advocating for the recognition and mitigation of vicarious trauma as a workplace hazard and a human rights concern. Recommendations include:
- Recognition of vicarious trauma as an occupational injury under workplace safety legislation and collective agreements.
- Mandatory trauma-informed training for all members, through educationals.
- Access to confidential, culturally competent mental health supports, including peer support and Employee Assistance Programs tailored to trauma exposure.
- Policy changes to prevent re-traumatization, such as ensuring adequate staffing, safe caseloads, and rest time.
- Advocacy for systemic reform to reduce the underlying causes of human rights violations witnessed by workers (e.g., decriminalization of mental illness, investment in housing and child welfare).
Vicarious trauma is not a personal failure; it is a systemic consequence of working within unjust systems.
For OPSEU/SEFPO members who dedicate their lives to public service, addressing vicarious trauma must become a priority. It is a matter of occupational health, human dignity, and solidarity. Unions, employers, and policymakers must work together to safeguard the mental health and rights of those who bear witness to the trauma of others.
OPSEU/SEFPO needs to acknowledge that our members bearing witness to human rights violations within their daily work has extraordinary impacts that we need to proactively support, protect and keep in the conversations.