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Vicarious Trauma & Trauma Exposure SWMS

Vicarious trauma prevention and management for workers exposed to traumatic material β€” emergency services, social work, health, legal, and counselling sector roles.

βš–οΈWHS Regulation 2025 & Codes of Practice β€” legally binding from 1 July 2026 (s26A)
πŸ‘·Reviewed by certified occupational health and safety professionals
πŸ—ΊοΈState-specific variants for all 8 Australian jurisdictions
$99 AUDβœ“ Instant Download Available

SWMS variants reference your state’s WHS legislation. Instant download after payment.

Workers in emergency services, child protection, healthcare, legal practice, counselling and victim support are routinely exposed to traumatic material β€” graphic case files, distressed clients, body recoveries, abuse disclosures and confronting imagery. Repeated indirect exposure can produce vicarious trauma, secondary traumatic stress and compassion fatigue, with clinical presentations indistinguishable from PTSD. Under the WHS Act section 19 primary duty of care, and reinforced by the Safe Work Australia Model Code of Practice: Managing Psychosocial Hazards at Work (2022), PCBUs must identify and control psychosocial hazards including trauma exposure with the same rigour as physical hazards. A documented SWMS is mandatory where workers are reasonably foreseeable to encounter traumatic content as a core function, because the cumulative dose, frequency and severity of exposure constitute a quantifiable risk requiring systematic controls, supervision arrangements, and consultation under WHS Regulation 2025 Part 3.2. This SWMS provides the structured risk register, control hierarchy and review cadence regulators expect to see during psychosocial inspections.

Hazards identified

7 hazards covered, sorted by priority.

Cumulative exposure to graphic case material (images, transcripts, evidence)HIGH

Vicarious trauma, intrusive imagery, sleep disturbance, clinical PTSD diagnosis and protracted workers compensation psychological injury claim.

Empathic engagement with distressed clients disclosing abuse or violenceHIGH

Secondary traumatic stress, emotional numbing, relationship breakdown and elevated suicide risk in prolonged untreated cases.

Inadequate clinical supervision and debriefing frequencyHIGH

Unprocessed trauma accumulates undetected, breach of WHS s19 duty, regulator improvement notice and reportable mental injury.

Excessive caseload density of trauma-laden mattersHIGH

Compassion fatigue, decision-making errors, client harm, professional registration complaints and PCBU negligence exposure.

Solo exposure to confronting material without peer presenceMEDIUM

Isolation amplifies trauma encoding, delayed help-seeking, deterioration to acute stress disorder requiring extended absence.

After-hours on-call trauma response without recovery windowsMEDIUM

Disrupted circadian rhythm, fatigue compounding trauma response, increased error rate and motor vehicle incidents en route.

Stigma around mental health disclosure within the work teamMEDIUM

Delayed presentation, self-medication via alcohol, escalation to crisis, and regulator finding of inadequate psychosocial culture controls.

Control measures

Hierarchy-of-controls order: elimination β†’ substitution β†’ isolation β†’ engineering β†’ administrative β†’ PPE.

  1. 1Elimination β€” remove unnecessary worker exposure to raw traumatic material by redacting, summarising or using trained intake officers to triage content before it reaches downstream practitioners.
  2. 2Elimination β€” cease assigning new trauma-heavy matters to workers showing early warning indicators identified through validated screening (ProQOL, K10) until clinically cleared.
  3. 3Substitution β€” substitute live exposure with written briefs, substitute graphic imagery with descriptive summaries, and substitute extended interviews with shorter structured forensic protocols.
  4. 4Engineering β€” implement caseload management software that caps concurrent trauma matters per worker and auto-flags exposure dose thresholds for supervisor review.
  5. 5Engineering β€” provide dedicated decompression spaces, acoustic privacy for distressed disclosures, and separate physical zones for trauma material storage and review.
  6. 6Administrative β€” schedule mandatory clinical supervision minimum fortnightly per Safe Work Australia Psychosocial COP 2022, with documented attendance and trauma-informed supervisor competency.
  7. 7Administrative β€” rotate trauma-exposed duties, enforce recovery periods after critical incidents, and implement structured peer debriefing within 72 hours of high-impact exposure.
  8. 8Administrative β€” deliver trauma-informed practice training, vicarious trauma literacy, and self-care planning at induction and annually, with records retained per WHS Reg 2025.
  9. 9PPE β€” provide confidential Employee Assistance Program access with trauma-specialist clinicians, 24/7 availability, and unlimited sessions for trauma-exposed cohorts.
  10. 10PPE β€” equip workers with personal grounding tools, psychological first aid pocket guides, and authorised micro-break protocols usable mid-task without supervisor approval.

Applicable Codes of Practice

Safe Work Australia Model Code of Practice: Managing Psychosocial Hazards at Work (July 2022)βš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

Specifies trauma exposure as a named psychosocial hazard requiring identification, assessment, control and review under the hierarchy of controls.

WHS Act 2011 (model) section 19 β€” Primary duty of careβš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

Imposes non-delegable duty on PCBUs to ensure psychological health so far as reasonably practicable, including from cumulative trauma exposure.

AS/NZS ISO 45003:2021 Psychological health and safety at work β€” Guidelines for managing psychosocial risks

Provides the recognised framework for psychosocial risk assessment, including trauma exposure dose, frequency, duration and worker consultation requirements.

WHS Regulation 2025 Part 3.2 β€” Managing psychosocial risks (state variants incl. Comcare equivalent)βš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

Mandates identification of psychosocial hazards, implementation of control measures, and consultation with workers exposed to trauma-laden duties.

High-Risk Construction Work triggered

Legal consequence

Although not High Risk Construction Work, PCBU duties under WHS Act s19 remain enforceable; penalties for psychosocial breaches are substantial and indexed, with worker consultation evidence and SWMS records retained minimum five years.

Who this is for

  • β†’Emergency services PCBUs deploying frontline responders
  • β†’Statutory child protection and family violence agencies
  • β†’Health services managing ED, ICU and forensic clinicians
  • β†’Legal and victim-support practices handling trauma briefs

What you receive

  • βœ“Editable DOCX template β€” Microsoft Word compatible
  • βœ“State-specific WHS legislation schedule (NSW/VIC/QLD/SA/WA/TAS/NT/ACT)
  • βœ“Hazard register with risk ratings + hierarchy-of-control mapping
  • βœ“Worker sign-on register, pre-start checklist, and incident escalation flow

Worked example

At a metropolitan child protection intake unit, a team leader runs the Monday pre-start huddle using this SWMS as the standing agenda item. The crew of six caseworkers reviews the hazard register, with the team leader noting two workers carried high-acuity matters over the weekend on-call roster. Referring to the controls section, she applies the engineering control β€” caseload software is checked and one worker is already flagged amber for cumulative trauma dose. Per the administrative rotation control, that worker is reassigned from a fresh sexual assault disclosure matter to an administrative court-prep task for 48 hours, and her fortnightly clinical supervision is brought forward. The team signs the SWMS register acknowledging today's hazards and selected controls. Mid-morning, a worker returns visibly distressed from a removal interview. The team leader applies the PPE-tier control β€” authorised micro-break and EAP warm-referral β€” without requiring formal approval, consistent with the SWMS provisions. At day's end, the SWMS is annotated with the in-task adjustment and exposure logged, creating the consultation and review evidence trail expected under the Safe Work Australia Psychosocial Code 2022 and demonstrating active discharge of the section 19 primary duty.

Related legislation

  • WHS Act 2011 (model)
  • WHS Regulation 2025
  • Managing Psychosocial Hazards at Work CoP
What's in this SWMS

Document details

Regulation
WHS Regulations β€” state variants incl. Comcare; Safe Work Australia Managing Psychosocial Hazards COP 2022; trauma-informed practice guidance
HRCW Category
Not HRCW β€” vicarious trauma as psychosocial hazard under WHS Act s.19
Hazards Identified
10 hazards with controls
Format
Editable DOCX (Microsoft Word)
Author
Certified Industrial Hygienist (CIH)
Delivery
Instant download after payment