Community health volunteers and teachers delivering trauma-focused therapy to youth in Kenya showed significantly lower secondary traumatic stress when their organizations provided strong supervisory support and implementation climate, according to new research examining protective factors in resource-limited settings. The study, published in PLOS Global Public Health, analyzed data from 237 lay counselors trained to deliver adapted trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy in western Kenya.
Organizational Pathways to Low Secondary Traumatic Stress
Protective factors for community health volunteers vs teachers in Kenya, 2024
volunteers studied
analyzed
pathways identified
Source: Dahiya et al., PLOS Global Public Health 2024 | Georgian Medical Journal News
Different Professional Groups Need Tailored Organizational Support
The research revealed distinct organizational pathways that protect different types of lay counselors from secondary traumatic stress. For community health volunteers, three protective configurations emerged: strong supervisory relationships alone, high implementation climate combined with strong implementation leadership, and high program feasibility paired with transactional leadership approaches.
Teachers showed different protective patterns, requiring high implementation climate, positive supervisory relationships within supportive work environments, or a combination of low transactional leadership with high transformational leadership. Dr. Shannon Dorsey and colleagues from the University of Washington noted that no single organizational factor was universally necessary across both groups, suggesting that global health programs must tailor support strategies to specific counselor roles.
Task-Shifting Models Expand Mental Health Access
The study addresses a critical gap in mental health service delivery across low- and middle-income countries, where youth face high rates of trauma exposure but limited access to specialized care. Task-shifting approaches that train non-specialists to deliver evidence-based treatments represent a promising strategy for expanding access, but concerns about counselor well-being have limited implementation.
According to the World Health Organization, nearly one billion people worldwide have a mental health disorder, with the treatment gap particularly acute in resource-constrained settings. The Kenya study’s findings suggest that appropriate organizational support can make trauma-focused treatment delivery sustainable for lay counselors while protecting their psychological well-being.
Implementation Climate Emerges as Key Protective Factor
Implementation climate—characterized by organizational expectations and support for evidence-based practice adoption—appeared as a protective factor across multiple pathways for both counselor groups. This finding aligns with broader clinical implementation research showing that organizational readiness influences both treatment fidelity and provider outcomes.
The study’s use of Coincidence Analysis, a configurational method that examines combinations of factors rather than individual predictors, revealed that protective effects often emerged from specific combinations of organizational supports rather than single factors. This complexity suggests that mental health programs in similar settings should focus on creating comprehensive support systems rather than implementing isolated interventions.
Implications for Global Mental Health Programs
The research provides actionable evidence for organizations implementing task-shifting mental health programs in resource-limited settings. The finding that different types of lay counselors benefit from different organizational configurations highlights the importance of role-specific support strategies in program design.
Future research should examine whether these protective pathways translate to other cultural contexts and treatment modalities, as the evidence base for sustainable community mental health delivery continues to evolve across diverse global settings.
Three distinct organizational pathways protected community health volunteers from secondary traumatic stress: high supervision relationship alone; high implementation climate with strong leadership; and high feasibility with transactional leadership
— Priya Dahiya, University of Washington (PLOS Global Public Health, 2024)
Key takeaways
- Different types of lay counselors require tailored organizational support to prevent secondary traumatic stress
- Implementation climate and strong supervisory relationships consistently emerge as protective factors
- No single organizational intervention provides universal protection across counselor roles
- Task-shifting mental health programs can be sustainable with appropriate organizational design
Frequently asked questions
What is secondary traumatic stress in counselors?
Secondary traumatic stress occurs when counselors experience psychological distress from exposure to their clients’ trauma stories. It can lead to symptoms similar to post-traumatic stress disorder and represents a significant occupational hazard for mental health providers.
How effective are lay counselors at delivering trauma therapy?
Research consistently shows that trained lay counselors can deliver effective trauma-focused treatments when provided with appropriate supervision and organizational support. This approach significantly expands access to care in settings with limited mental health professionals.
Why do different counselor groups need different organizational support?
Community health volunteers and teachers have different professional backgrounds, work environments, and role expectations, which influence how they experience and respond to organizational support structures. Tailored approaches recognize these fundamental differences in professional context.
As global mental health initiatives continue expanding task-shifting approaches, this research provides crucial evidence for designing sustainable programs that protect counselor well-being while maintaining service quality. The findings suggest that investing in comprehensive organizational support systems may be essential for the long-term success of community-based mental health interventions in resource-limited settings.
Was this article helpful?
Disclaimer. This article is health journalism intended for general information and education. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for professional diagnosis or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider about your individual circumstances. Full disclaimer →
Related Coverage




Medically reviewed by Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD. Spotted an error? Contact the editorial team.




