Publication | Closed Access
The Prevalence of Post-Traumatic Growth in Emergency Ambulance Personnel
23
Citations
15
References
2003
Year
Trauma ResuscitationTraumatologyInjury PreventionMental HealthTrauma Systems PlanningPsychologyTrauma (Addiction Psychology)Trauma SystemEmergency Ambulance PersonnelTrauma (Critical Care Medicine)Deprivation ApproachHealth SciencesTrauma Center CareEmergency Medicine TraumaCompassion FatiguePsychosocial ResearchRapid Trauma AssessmentTrauma CarePatient SafetyOut-of-hospital Emergency Medical ServiceNegative SymptomsMedicineTrauma In ChildEmergency MedicinePost-traumatic Stress Disorder
Departing from a deprivation approach to the study of trauma, a small body of literature has recently emerged that examines positive, rather than negative, post-trauma changes. Studies to date have focused on individuals’ positive reactions to a personally endured traumatic event for example, as bereaved parents, living with HIV/AIDS, or surviving cancer. Negative symptoms following a traumatic event that is experienced during the course of fulfilling professional obligations (e.g., in ambulance, fire and police services), are reported to be akin to the negative post-trauma symptoms found in direct survivors of a traumatic event. In this study, we investigated the prevalence of self-reported positive changes (posttraumatic growth) in emergency ambulance personnel, a population that are readily exposed to potentially traumatic incidents. Results indicated that a large proportion of both seasoned ambulance personnel and new recruits to the service, perceived positive changes in themselves that they attributed to having experienced a traumatic event at work. A significant mean difference was also detected between personnel who had endured a personal trauma in addition to a work-related trauma (n = 281) and personnel who had endured trauma only in the course of their employment responsibilities (n = 217). The study supports theoretical and clinical expectations that the experience of occupational trauma can act as a catalyst for significant positive post-trauma changes.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1