Paraprofessional delivery of online narrative exposure therapy for firefighters

Author:

Olthuis Janine V.1ORCID,Kaltenbach Elisa2ORCID,Giberson Emma1ORCID,Saryeddine Tina34,Asmundson Gordon J. G.5ORCID,Carleton R. Nicholas5ORCID,Cramm Heidi6ORCID,Crombach Anselm7ORCID,Devlin Julie8,Mack Jeff9,Lingley‐Pottie Patricia210ORCID,Rao Sanjay10ORCID,Sullivan Michael11ORCID,Wozney Lori2ORCID,McGrath Patrick J.210ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology University of New Brunswick Fredericton New Brunswick Canada

2. IWK Health Centre Halifax Nova Scotia Canada

3. Canadian Association of Fire Chiefs Ottawa Ontario Canada

4. Telfer School of Management University of Ottawa Ottawa Ontario Canada

5. Department of Psychology University of Regina Regina Saskatchewan Canada

6. School of Rehabilitation Therapy Queen's University Kingston Ontario Canada

7. Department of Psychology Universität des Saarlandes Saarbrücken Germany

8. Conservation and Protection Fisheries and Oceans Canada Ottawa Ontario Canada

9. Fredericton Fire Department Fredericton New Brunswick Canada

10. Department of Psychiatry Dalhousie University Halifax Nova Scotia Canada

11. Department of Psychology McGill University Montreal Québec Canada

Abstract

AbstractFirefighters are at increased risk for developing posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and face numerous barriers to accessing mental health care. Innovative ways to increase access to evidence‐based interventions are needed. This study was a case series testing the acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary effectiveness of a paraprofessional‐delivered, virtual narrative exposure therapy (eNET) intervention for PTSD. Participants were 21 firefighters who met the criteria for clinical or subclinical probable PTSD and completed 10–12 sessions of eNET via videoconference. Participants completed self‐report measures pre‐ and postintervention and at 2‐ and 6‐month follow‐ups as well as a postintervention qualitative interview. Paired samples t tests evidenced statistically significant decreases in PTSD, anxiety, and depressive symptom severity and functional impairment from pre‐ to postintervention, ds = 1.08–1.33, and in PTSD and anxiety symptom severity and functional impairment from preintervention to 6‐month follow‐up, ds = 0.69–1.10. The average PTSD symptom severity score fell from above to below the clinical cutoff for probable PTSD at postintervention and follow‐ups. Qualitative interviews indicated that paraprofessionals were considered central to participants’ success and experience with the intervention. No adverse events or safety concerns were raised. This study is an important step in demonstrating that appropriately trained and supervised paraprofessionals can effectively deliver eNET to firefighters with PTSD.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology

Reference49 articles.

1. American Psychological Association. (2017).Clinical practice guideline for the treatment of PTSD.https://www.apa.org/ptsd‐guideline/ptsd.pdf

2. Exposure to duty-related incident stressors in urban firefighters and paramedics

3. Beck A. T. Steer R. A. &Brown G. K.(1996).Manual for the Beck Depression Inventory—II. Psychological Corporation.https://doi.org/10.1007/978‐1‐4419‐1005‐9_441

4. The Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist for DSM-5 (PCL-5): Development and Initial Psychometric Evaluation

5. Canadian Association of Fire Chiefs. (2021).The Great Canadian Volunteer Firefighter Census 2021.https://cdn.ymaws.com/cafc.ca/resource/resmgr/census_2021/_EN_Census_Report.pdf

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