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A comparison of firefighter mental health...
Journal article

A comparison of firefighter mental health education programs: A descriptive thematic analysis of firefighter experiences

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In response to the inherent critical incident exposures experienced by firefighters, various mental health education programs have been developed. The purpose of this study was to explore the perceptions of firefighters who took such programs to understand differences/similarities across these programs. METHODS: We recruited 14 participants, who had taken or delivered two or more programs for firefighters (Resilient Minds (RM), Road to Mental Readiness (R2MR), and Before Operational Stress (BOS)). Participants participated in semi-structured interviews, which explored information that they learned, recalled, used, and their preferences. Data was analysed using thematic analysis. RESULTS: Participants believed that all programs had some shared teaching methods, goals, skills, and topics; however, each program had key focuses/distinctive features. RM was said to be largely group participation and focused on assisting yourself, peers, and citizens. R2MR and BOS was said to be largely lecture style with a focus on the self. 70 % of participants who took RM (n = 7) and one other course preferred RM due to the specificity of training to firefighters, more active teaching methods, and focus on practical skill development. Others (43 %) had no program preference. Participants suggest that a tiered approach to mental health education would benefit firefighters. CONCLUSIONS: All programs were seen as helpful. Despite some congruency in goals and content, most firefighters preferred RM because the content was fire-specific, and the pedagogical approach was seen as more active and engaging. Program characteristics are important to facilitate appropriate program selection, as such, programs should be explicit about these aspects.

Authors

Stretton SM; MacDermid JC; Lomotan M; Killip SC

Journal

Comprehensive Psychiatry, Vol. 136, ,

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 1, 2025

DOI

10.1016/j.comppsych.2024.152547

ISSN

0010-440X

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