| Literature DB >> 33092146 |
Gregory S Anderson1, Paula M Di Nota2, Dianne Groll3, R Nicholas Carleton4.
Abstract
Public safety personnel (PSP) and frontline healthcare professionals (FHP) are frequently exposed to potentially psychologically traumatic events (PPTEs), and report increased rates of post-traumatic stress injuries (PTSIs). Despite widespread implementation and repeated calls for research, effectiveness evidence for organizational post-exposure PTSI mitigation services remains lacking. The current systematic review synthesized and appraised recent (2008-December 2019) empirical research from 22 electronic databases following a population-intervention-comparison-outcome framework. Eligible studies investigated the effectiveness of organizational peer support and crisis-focused psychological interventions designed to mitigate PTSIs among PSP, FHP, and other PPTE-exposed workers. The review included 14 eligible studies (n = 18,849 participants) that were synthesized with qualitative narrative analyses. The absence of pre-post-evaluations and the use of inconsistent outcome measures precluded quantitative meta-analysis. Thematic services included diverse programming for critical incident stress debriefing, critical incident stress management, peer support, psychological first aid, and trauma risk management. Designs included randomized control trials, retrospective cohort studies, and cross-sectional studies. Outcome measures included PPTE impacts, absenteeism, substance use, suicide rates, psychiatric symptoms, risk assessments, stigma, and global assessments of functioning. Quality assessment indicated limited strength of evidence and failures to control for pre-existing PTSIs, which would significantly bias program effectiveness evaluations for reducing PTSIs post-PPTE.Entities:
Keywords: CISD; CISM; mental health services; occupational health; post-traumatic stress injuries; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33092146 PMCID: PMC7589693 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17207645
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Key terms used for database searches.
| Domain | Target | Search Terms |
|---|---|---|
| Population | Public safety personnel | Public safety personnel |
| Intervention (Services) | Post-exposure services | Peer support |
| Condition | Post-traumatic stress injuries | Mental health |
Eligible studies investigating organizational services for public safety, frontline healthcare, and public transport professionals following potentially psychologically traumatic exposures.
| Study | Sample Size | Population (Country) | Design | Intervention Description | Intervention Duration | Study Duration | Outcomes | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Addis and Stephens, 2008 [ | 57 | Sworn, civilian, and former police workers (New Zealand) | Retrospective cohort study | Received organizationally-offered or -facilitated debriefing (attended group session, individual meeting with psychologist, or both) vs. no debriefing | Not provided | 5 years after murder of on-duty officer and manhunt | Perceived stress of event, IES-R, GHQ, TSS, PSS | 5 years following a PPTE, only 21% (12 of 57) of respondents received organizationally-offered or -facilitated debriefing, and reported higher perceived stress of the event and PTSD scores than non-debriefed participants |
| Duncan et al., 2018 [ | 120 | Allied health professionals (physicians, nurses, mental health professionals) in pediatric liver transplant centers (USA) | Cross-sectional study | Formal organizational debriefing procedures vs. no debriefing | Not provided | N/A | MBI-EE, Bereavement Experiences Scale, Guilt/Blame/Anger subscale (not reported) | Significantly less EE among respondents who indicated they had formal debriefing procedures at their organizations compared to those without formal debriefing following the death of a patient. No significant differences in outcomes between those who did and did not have access to other types of support (i.e., bereavement or coping training or guidelines, support staff, informal support). Results not reported for individuals who have ( |
| Jeannette and Scoboria, 2008 [ | 142 | Firefighters (Canada) | Cross-sectional study | CISD vs. individual debriefing vs. informal discussion vs. no intervention | Not provided | N/A | Preference rating for each type of intervention following five scenarios increasing in severity | Firefighters expressed interest in working within their peer group for all events, and an increasing interest in formal intervention as event severity increased. Individual debriefing was preferred to CISD in scenarios of low to moderate intensity, and all interventions were of high interest for high intensity scenarios. Means and SDs for preference ratings for each scenario type not provided, requested from authors |
| Sattler et al., 2014 [ | 286 | Firefighters (USA) | Cross-sectional study | CISD | Not provided | N/A | Number of critical incident exposures in their career, attendance and experience with CISD, burnout, post-traumatic stress symptoms (past 30 days), post-traumatic growth inventory, problem- and emotion-focused coping and disengagement | 94% of respondents indicated exposure to a critical incident during their career, 52% participated in CISD, and 64% of these participants reported stress reduction 2 weeks after attending. Having a positive attitude toward CISD was positively associated with post-traumatic growth but not related to post-traumatic symptoms. Participants indicated they receive support from co-workers and family, and reported minimal burnout. Purely descriptive study, no comparison between groups or over time |
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| Tuckey and Scott, 2014 [ | 67 | Volunteer firefighters (Australia) | RCT | Mitchell model group CISD vs. stress management education vs. screening only (no treatment control) | 90 min CISD and education sessions within three days of the PPTE (motor vehicle accident, failed resuscitation) | 1 month follow up | IES-R, K-10, quality of life enjoyment and satisfaction questionnaire, past week alcohol consumption | Mean levels of post-traumatic stress (IES-R) and psychological distress (K-10) were generally low and did not differ between groups pre- or post-intervention. Controlling for pre-intervention scores, CISD was associated with significantly less alcohol consumption one-month post-intervention relative to the screening only condition, but not the education group, and higher post-intervention quality of life compared to the education but not screening only group |
| Burns et al., 2017 [ | 181 | First-year nursing students completing a practical unit (Australia) | RCT | MHFA vs. waitlist controls | 2 × 6.5 h courses | 2 months | Mental health knowledge, confidence, first aid intentions, stigmatizing attitudes towards self and others, SDS | Significant improvement on all outcome measures in the MHFA intervention group only. |
| Carleton et al., 2018 [ | 133 | Police officers (Canada) | Prospective cohort study | Psychoeducational resilience promotion, stress management, coping skill building (R2MR) | 4 h course | Immediately post-training, and at 6 and 12 months | BRS, DASS subscales, PCL, AUDIT | No change in mental health or resilience outcomes post-training, or at 6 or 12 month follow up, but small significant reduction in stigma post-training |
| Clarner et al., 2017 [ | 259 | Public transport operators (Germany) | Retrospective cohort study | PFA peer support by colleagues vs. PFA peer support by supervisors vs. no intervention | Not provided | 180 days following the PPTE (accident, attack, collision, suicide) | Sickness absence in days after the PPTE | Descriptive and regression analyses explore numerous situational factors that contribute to sickness absence in each group, but data provided are not useable in the present meta-analysis |
| Gulliver et al., 2016 [ | 172 | Firefighters and officers (USA) | RCT | Reach Out group intervention vs. Reach Out video intervention vs. health video control intervention | 90 min | 3 months | Attempts to intervene with a colleague in distress, number of successful interventions in the past 3 months, intervention effectiveness, treatment adherence | Participants in the Reach Out video condition reported a significant increase in successful interventions and intervention effectiveness from pretest to the 3 month follow up compared with the control group. |
| Hunt et al., 2013 [ | 210 | Police officers (England) | Retrospective cohort study | TRiM peer support and risk assessment intervention | Not provided | 2 month period following the PPTE (multiple fatality incident) | TRiM risk assessment score, sickness absence | Significant reduction in TRiM scores for individuals who received additional treatment from the agency clinical psychologist (36 of 210) compared to the untreated group. Means and SDs for sickness absence by various treatment groups not provided, authors contacted |
| Milligan-Saville et al., 2017 [ | 44 managers of 1966 employees | Fire and rescue duty managers (Australia) | Cluster RCT | RESPECT manager training program vs. WLC | 4 h face-to-face group session | 12 months (6 months preceding and following training) | Change in rate of work-related and standard sickness absence of reporting personnel 6 months before and after the program | Work-related sick leave decreased among employees for managers in the training group, and increased in the control group. Standard sick leave rates increased among both groups, perhaps due to follow-up period being in the winter months |
| Mishara and Martin, 2012 [ | 14,309 | Police officers, supervisors and union representatives (Canada) | Retrospective cohort study | Together for Life suicide prevention and peer support program administered to Montreal police service ( | 2 × half-day suicide awareness and support session + full-day session for supervisors and union reps led by psychologist in 2000–2001 and 2006 | 22 years | Police suicides in the ten years preceding (1986–1996) and 12 years following (1997–2008) training | The Montreal police suicide rate decreased significantly by 78.9%to 6.42/100,000 per annum, while the other Quebec police had an 11.4% non-significant increase in suicides to 29.0/100,000; |
| Watson and Andrews, 2018 [ | 859 | Police employees (UK) | Cross-sectional study | TRiM vs. no TRiM | Not indicated | N/A | PCL-C, Stigma and Barriers to Care Questionnaire, MSS self and public stigma subscales | Participants in forces that offer TRiM reported significantly less public stigma and fewer post-traumatic symptoms and barriers to care compared to participants in forces that do not offer TRiM or any standardized PPTE support or process |
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| Müeller-Leonhardt et al., 2014 [ | 88 | Healthcare workers (Germany) | Cross-sectional study | CISM vs. untrained staff | 60 min within an hour of the PTE | N/A | VAS% for contributing factors to critical incident recovery, sources of support for coping with critical incident symptoms | Non-CISM personnel rated family and colleagues as primary sources of support and spontaneous recovery as the greatest contributing factor, while CISM peers endorsed the program and peers. |
Note: RCT: randomized control trial; WLC: waitlist control; CISD: critical incident stress debriefing; CISM: critical incident stress management; MHFA: mental health first aid; PFA: psychological first aid; TRiM: trauma risk management; N/A: not applicable; IES-R: Impact of Events Scale Revised; GHQ: General Health Questionnaire; K-10: Kessler-10; MBI-EE: Maslach Burnout Inventory Emotional Exhaustion Subscale; MSS: Military Stigma Scale; PCL-C: Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Checklist; PPTE: potentially psychologically traumatic event; PSS: Police Stress Survey; SDS: Social Distance Scale; TSS: Traumatic Stress Schedule; SD: standard deviation; VAS: visual analog scale.
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Figure 2Quality assessment for strength of research evidence using the Newcastle–Ottawa quality assessment scale for cohort studies—full sample summary (n = 14 studies).