An investigation of the lived experiences of Intensive Care Paramedics


Autoria(s): Shakespeare-Finch, Jane E.; Savill, Susan
Data(s)

2013

Resumo

Intensive Care Paramedics (ICPs) attend to only the most clinically challenging of emergency medical cases, often working in a chaotic and frenetic atmosphere. They are regularly exposed to human tragedy and with that, the potential to experience traumatic events is not uncommon. There is very little known about the well-being of ICPs; how they cope with the demands of their role, or about their mental health in general. Nineteen experienced ICPs (4 female, 15 male) participated in a semi-structured interview. Themes were extracted from the data using an Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis approach. All participants discussed a work-related event they attended that traumatized them, usually experienced in the earlier parts of their career. Some spoke of an immediate overwhelming of their capacity to cope and others of a gradual onset of traumatic stress when reflecting on the event at a later time. More than half of the participants described events that involved children as the most difficult. Data revealed four superordinate themes: Social Support, Cognitive Coping, Proactive Coping, and Long Term Effects. Each superordinate theme comprised a number of constituent themes which are presented in this paper and exemplified with participant quotes. Although ongoing distress was described by some participants, all of the ICPs interviewed discussed positive aspects of their job; things that made the role worthwhile and fulfilling. This research highlights the important factors involved in coping with, and growing from, the extraordinary events that ICPs face. Results have implications for employing organizations and staff support services as well as for paramedics more broadly as they learn to cope with events inherent in their career. Findings indicate that positive adaptation and personal growth as a result of exposure to extremely high levels of potentially traumatic experiences is not only possible, but highly probable.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/62197/

Publicador

AST Management Pty Ltd

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/62197/1/S-FandSavill2013.pdf

Shakespeare-Finch, Jane E. & Savill, Susan (2013) An investigation of the lived experiences of Intensive Care Paramedics. In Australia & New Zealand Disaster & Emergency Conference, AST Management Pty Ltd, Mercure Hotel, Brisbane, Australia, pp. 230-246.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 Please consult the authors

Fonte

Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; School of Psychology & Counselling

Palavras-Chave #170106 Health Clinical and Counselling Psychology #paramedic #well-being #trauma #coping #social support
Tipo

Conference Paper