Investigating the impact of terrorist attacks on the mental health of emergency responders: systematic review

<p><strong>Background</strong><br> Terrorist attacks have strong psychological effects on rescue workers, and there is a demand for effective and targeted interventions.</p> <br> <p><strong>Aims</strong><br> The present systematic review ai...

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Main Authors: Wesemann, U, Applewhite, B, Himmerich, H
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2022
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author Wesemann, U
Applewhite, B
Himmerich, H
author_facet Wesemann, U
Applewhite, B
Himmerich, H
author_sort Wesemann, U
collection OXFORD
description <p><strong>Background</strong><br> Terrorist attacks have strong psychological effects on rescue workers, and there is a demand for effective and targeted interventions.</p> <br> <p><strong>Aims</strong><br> The present systematic review aims to examine the mental health outcomes of exposed emergency service personnel over time, and to identify risk and resilience factors.</p> <br> <p><strong>Method</strong><br> A literature search was carried out on PubMed and PubPsych until 27 August 2021. Only studies with a real reported incident were included. The evaluation of the study quality was based on the Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative Studies, and the synthesis used the ‘Guidance on the Conduct of Narrative Synthesis in Systematic Reviews’.</p> <br> <p><strong>Results</strong><br> Thirty-three articles including 159 621 individuals were identified, relating to five different incidents with a post-event time frame ranging from 2 weeks to 13 years. The post-traumatic stress disorder prevalence rates were between 1.3 and 16.5%, major depression rates were between 1.3 and 25.8%, and rates for specific anxiety disorders were between 0.7 and 14%. The highest prevalence rates were found after the World Trade Center attacks. Reported risk factors were gender, no emergency service training, peritraumatic dissociation, spatial proximity to the event and social isolation.</p> <br> <p><strong>Conclusions</strong><br> The inconsistency of the prevalence rates may be attributable to the different severities of the incidents. Identified risk factors could be used to optimise training for emergency personnel before and after catastrophic events. Voluntary repetitive screening of rescue workers for mental health symptoms is recommended.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:a3a9f5db-c230-4f29-9c8b-74195aeceb942023-07-10T10:38:28ZInvestigating the impact of terrorist attacks on the mental health of emergency responders: systematic reviewJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:a3a9f5db-c230-4f29-9c8b-74195aeceb94EnglishSymplectic ElementsCambridge University Press2022Wesemann, UApplewhite, BHimmerich, H<p><strong>Background</strong><br> Terrorist attacks have strong psychological effects on rescue workers, and there is a demand for effective and targeted interventions.</p> <br> <p><strong>Aims</strong><br> The present systematic review aims to examine the mental health outcomes of exposed emergency service personnel over time, and to identify risk and resilience factors.</p> <br> <p><strong>Method</strong><br> A literature search was carried out on PubMed and PubPsych until 27 August 2021. Only studies with a real reported incident were included. The evaluation of the study quality was based on the Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative Studies, and the synthesis used the ‘Guidance on the Conduct of Narrative Synthesis in Systematic Reviews’.</p> <br> <p><strong>Results</strong><br> Thirty-three articles including 159 621 individuals were identified, relating to five different incidents with a post-event time frame ranging from 2 weeks to 13 years. The post-traumatic stress disorder prevalence rates were between 1.3 and 16.5%, major depression rates were between 1.3 and 25.8%, and rates for specific anxiety disorders were between 0.7 and 14%. The highest prevalence rates were found after the World Trade Center attacks. Reported risk factors were gender, no emergency service training, peritraumatic dissociation, spatial proximity to the event and social isolation.</p> <br> <p><strong>Conclusions</strong><br> The inconsistency of the prevalence rates may be attributable to the different severities of the incidents. Identified risk factors could be used to optimise training for emergency personnel before and after catastrophic events. Voluntary repetitive screening of rescue workers for mental health symptoms is recommended.</p>
spellingShingle Wesemann, U
Applewhite, B
Himmerich, H
Investigating the impact of terrorist attacks on the mental health of emergency responders: systematic review
title Investigating the impact of terrorist attacks on the mental health of emergency responders: systematic review
title_full Investigating the impact of terrorist attacks on the mental health of emergency responders: systematic review
title_fullStr Investigating the impact of terrorist attacks on the mental health of emergency responders: systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the impact of terrorist attacks on the mental health of emergency responders: systematic review
title_short Investigating the impact of terrorist attacks on the mental health of emergency responders: systematic review
title_sort investigating the impact of terrorist attacks on the mental health of emergency responders systematic review
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AT applewhiteb investigatingtheimpactofterroristattacksonthementalhealthofemergencyresponderssystematicreview
AT himmerichh investigatingtheimpactofterroristattacksonthementalhealthofemergencyresponderssystematicreview