Crisis Interventions
Myth or Fact?
Reactions to Trauma
On the Front Lines
Coping: Safe or Unsafe?
100

What is Psychological First Aid?

100

PTSD symptoms occur immediately after a traumatic event.

Myth - Symptoms could take months or years to appear.

100

What are some common emotional responses to trauma?

There are many emotional responses that people could have to trauma.  This includes sadness, anger, confusion, grief, guilt.

100

What are some common traumatic events encountered by first responders?

Witnessing death, hearing about others’ trauma.

100

Using substances to numb the feelings and thoughts.

Unsafe - these behaviors can lead to dependency and emotional instability.

200

What is resilience training?

200

Anyone who experiences or witnesses a traumatic event can develop PTSD.

Fact

200

What are some common physical responses to trauma?

There are many common physical responses to trauma.  These include stomache aches, headaches, nausea, fatigue. 

200

How can trauma show up in colleagues and team members?

This can be displayed as irritability, anxiety, detachment, memory problems, hyper-vigilance, fatigue, chronic pain, withdrawal, and many more.

200

Engaging in some form of physical activity, such as walking, yoga, or stretching.

Safe

300

What are the five phases of disaster?

Initial, Heroic, Honeymoon, Disillusionment, Reconstruction

300

Everyone who experiences trauma develops PTSD.

Myth - Traumatic events do not automatically lead to PTSD, and everyone reacts differently to trauma.

300

How would re-experiencing the trauma look like?

Re-experiencing the trauma may look like nightmares, dreams, distressing thoughts, or flashbacks.

300

According to SAMHSA, roughly ___ in ___ first responders experience PTSD.

1 in 3

300

Going on a drive when you are feeling really angry.

Unsafe - Intense emotions can impair judgment and can lead to high-risk behaviors.

400
Interventions in Disaster Mental Health depend on the stage in which a victim is currently in; what are the three stages?

Acute Stage, Intermediate Support, and Ongoing Support

400

Trauma has to happen to you directly.

Myth - One does not have to directly experience a trauma to be negatively affected by them. Vicarious or secondary trauma results from repeated exposure to others' trauma. 
400

What are some examples of avoiding the trauma?

Avoiding the trauma may look like using substances, avoiding activities, people, or places related to the trauma, or avoiding talking about the trauma.

400

What are some barriers that first responders may experience to receiving proper care for PTSD? 

Some barriers include difficulty getting time off from work, cost of treatment, and stigma. 

400

Using "safety behaviors" such as sitting by the exit, carrying lucky items, or only going to places where you feel safe.

Unsafe - while they can reduce anxiety temporarily, they can reinforce fear and avoidance over time.

500

What is coping ahead and how can one proactively prepare as a first responder?

Coping ahead is making a plan for a known future stressor or situation. This can include attending therapy, understanding the impact of the job, resilience building, peer support.

500

Trauma can stimulate strength and personal growth.

Fact

500

How can negative feelings or thoughts be presented after a trauma?

Negative feelings or thoughts may be presented as having strong negative beliefs about yourself, other people, or the world around you, or having loss of interest of activities you used to enjoy.

500

More than __ percent of first responders experience a traumatic events on the job.

80 percent

500

Often making jokes about the traumatic situation.

Unsafe - humor can be used as a coping skill, but in the long-run it can be used to deflect or avoid emotions.

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