Comparing post-traumatic stress severity in professional and volunteer Australian firefighters

Author:

Counson I1,Sanatkar S1,Knight A2,Lawrence D3,Harvey S B1

Affiliation:

1. Black Dog Institute, School of Psychiatry, UNSW Sydney , Randwick, NSW 2031 , Australia

2. School of Life Course & Population Sciences, King’s College London , London, SE1 1UL , UK

3. School of Population Health, Curtin University , Bentley, WA 6102 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Background While extensive research has highlighted increased risk for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in firefighters, previous research has yielded mixed results regarding the role of work status (professional versus volunteer) in the development of psychopathological symptoms. Aims To explore the predictive strength of work status on PTSD or post-traumatic stress symptom severity in a large sample of professional (PFFs) and volunteer (VFFs) Australian firefighters exposed to operational work-related trauma. Methods The stratified random sample comprised 1317 PFFs (n = 1148 (87%) males and 13%, n = 169 (13%) females) and 898 VFFs (n = 744 (83%) males and n = 154 (17%) females) who reported having experienced trauma while working or volunteering. Participants completed demographic, health and work-related questions and mental health measures of stress, trauma, PTSD, social support and use of mental health prevention programmes. Results The results revealed a significant relationship between work status and PTSD, with PFFs reporting higher levels of PTSD symptom severity compared to VFFs. This association persisted after controlling for demographics, health, stress away from work, social support and use of organizational mental health support programmes (debriefing and face-to-face training for mental and physical self-care). Conclusions This study suggests the importance of work status in PTSD amongst Australian firefighters exposed to operational trauma. Future research is needed to substantiate our findings and examine why PFFs may be more prone to developing PTSD. Implications for the provision of mental health programmes offered by fire organizations to their members are discussed.

Funder

Beyond Blue and the Bushfire and Natural Hazards Cooperative Research Centre

National Health and Medical Research Council

Department of Home Affairs

Department of Health for The Bushfire Support Service and the National Emergency Workers Support Service

SIRA NSW

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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