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Journal ArticleDOI

Risk Factors for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Polish Paramedics: A Pilot Study

TLDR
Polish paramedics who agreed to take part in the survey were shown to have a high rate of PTSD, and multi-center screening and early supportive management is recommended.
Abstract
Background Working as a paramedic carries the risk of witnessing events and personal experiences associated with emergency life-threatening circumstances that may result in symptoms associated with posttraumatic stress. This problem is well known but still underestimated. Objectives The specific study objectives were to 1) assess the influence of sociodemographic and occupational factors on posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among paramedics, and 2) suggest preventive strategies in this population. Methods This prospective, descriptive study examined a sample of 100 paramedics who agreed to complete the Author Questionnaire comprising demographic questions and the Impact of Event Scale – Revised. Results The total prevalence of PTSD in the examined group was 40.0% (women = 64.3%, men = 36.1%). It was more frequently reported in paramedics working under an employer's contract than among those who were self-employed. It occurred less frequently in persons with more education. Other sociodemographic factors studied showed no significant impact. A statistically significant effect of exposure to certain types of traumatic events on the incidence of PTSD was found. There was no significant correlation between the prevalence of PTSD and the occurrence of problem situations in respondents' workplaces. Conclusions Polish paramedics who agreed to take part in the survey were shown to have a high rate of PTSD. Multi-center screening and early supportive management is recommended.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Well-being and PTSD in German emergency medical services - A nationwide cross-sectional survey.

TL;DR: Low well-being and PTSD seem to be relevant experiences among German EMS despite their perception of low numbers of emergency responses as mentally distressing, and Paramedics who have been diagnosed with PTSD should be investigated for depression and vice versa, as correlations in both directions exist.
Dissertation

Resilience over recovery: A feasibility study on a self-taught resilience programme for paramedics

Kamran Baqai
TL;DR: In this paper, a self-taught digital resilience training (STDRT) intervention is proposed to teach resilience to paramedics, and a feasibility study was conducted to evaluate the STDRT in order to obtain information pertaining to the feasibility of a randomised controlled trial (RCT).
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of disclosure attitudes in the relationship between posttraumatic stress disorder symptom severity and perceived social support among emergency service workers.

TL;DR: The role of self-perceived disclosure abilities to elucidate the well-known link between PTSD symptom severity and social support is examined and bootstrap mediation analyses reveal the self-referential perceptions of disclosure abilities, particularly a reluctance to talk, to fully account for the link between trauma symptoms and social acknowledgement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ambulance personnel: Systematic review of mental health symptoms.

TL;DR: There is strong evidence that prevalence rates of probable PTSD, depression, and anxiety disorder are elevated in ambulance personnel, and the strongest predictive associations for PTSD symptoms concerned exposure-related and organizational factors, whereas individual-difference factors bore weak or inconsistent associations with symptoms.
Book ChapterDOI

From Extreme to Mundane? The Changing Face of Paramedicine in the UK Ambulance Service

TL;DR: The literature on paramedicine as an occupation is dominated by its representation as a form of ‘extreme work’ entailing significant personal risk, vicarious trauma and an impossible-to-predict workload, and contributions that management and organisation studies academics could make in this regard are outlined.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki: Ethical Principles for Medical Research Involving Human Subjects

TL;DR: Comparing the socialist nature of many European counties, there is a requirement that provision be made for patients to be made whole regardless of the outcomes of the trial or if they happened to have been randomized to a control group that did not enjoy the benefits of a successful experimental intervention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Posttraumatic stress disorder in the National Comorbidity Survey.

TL;DR: Progress in estimating age-at-onset distributions, cohort effects, and the conditional probabilities of PTSD from different types of trauma will require future epidemiologic studies to assess PTSD for all lifetime traumas rather than for only a small number of retrospectively reported "most serious" traumAs.
Journal Article

When disaster strikes...the critical incident stress debriefing process.

TL;DR: The Critical Incident Stress Debriefing is a simple, but effective tool to help the emergency worker cope with what he has seen, and continue a productive career with minimal long-term effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Posttraumatic stress disorder and obesity: evidence for a risk association.

TL;DR: The findings indicate a possible causal pathway for the onset of obesity in females with PTSD symptoms, and need replication with regard to the pathophysiologic and behavioral mechanisms underlying this relationship.
Journal ArticleDOI

The cross-cultural validity of posttraumatic stress disorder: implications for DSM-5.

TL;DR: Criteria modification and textual clarifications are suggested to further improve the cross‐cultural applicability of the PTSD criteria as defined in DSM‐IV‐TR, and options and preliminary recommendations to be considered for DSM‐5 are presented.
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