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A Model for a Statewide Critical Incident Stress (CIS) Debriefing Program for Emergency Services Personnel

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 June 2012

Keith W. Neely*
Affiliation:
Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon, USA
William J. Spitzer
Affiliation:
Director of Social Services, Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia, USA
*
Oregon Health Sciences University, 3181 S. W. Sam Jackson Park Road, Portland, OR 97201-3098USA

Abstract

Purpose:

Emergency services personnel are highly vulnerable to acute and cumulative critical incident stress (CIS) that can manifest as anger, guilt, depression, and impaired decision-making, and, in certain instances, job loss. Interventions designed to identify such distress and restore psychological functioning becomes imperative.

Methods:

A statewide debriefing team was formed in 1988 through a collaborative effort between an academic department of emergency medicine and a social work department of a teaching hospital, and a metropolitan area fire department and ambulance service. Using an existing CIS debriefing model, 84 pre-screened, mental health professionals and emergency services personnel were provided with 16 hours of training and were grouped into regional teams.

Debriefing requests are received through a central number answered by a communicator in a 24-hour communications center located within the emergency department. Debriefings are conducted 48–72 hours after the event for specific types of incidents. Follow-up telephone calls are made by the debriefing team leader two to three weeks following a debriefing. The teams rely on donations to pay for travel and meals.

Results:

One hundred sixty-eight debriefings were conducted during the first four years. Rural agencies accounted for 116 (69%) requests. During this period, 1,514 individuals were debriefed: 744 (49%) firefighters, 460 (30%) EMTs, and 310 (21%) police officers, dispatchers, and other responders. Deaths of children, extraordinary events, and incidents involving victims known to the responders (35%, 14%, and 14% respectively) were the most common reasons for requesting debriefings. Feedback was received from 48 (28%) of the agencies that requested the debriefing. All of those who responded felt that the debriefing had a beneficial effect on its personnel. Specific individuals identified by agency representatives as having the greatest difficulty were observed to be returned to their pre-incident state.

Conclusion:

CIS debriefings are judged as beneficial. A statewide response team is an effective way to provide these services at no cost to agencies.

Type
Special Report
Copyright
Copyright © World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine 1997

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