Knowledge Translation Program, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, 209 Victoria Street, East Building, Toronto, Ontario, M5B 1 W8, Canada.
Department of Geriatric Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Syst Rev. 2020 May 31;9(1):121. doi: 10.1186/s13643-020-01367-w.
First responders are a high-risk population for occupational stress injuries as they often encounter prolonged stress within their line of work. The aim of this rapid overview of reviews is to summarize existing evidence on interventions for the prevention and management of occupational stress injury (OSI) in first responders.
MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Web of Science, and Cochrane Library were searched for systematic reviews examining the impact of prevention, rehabilitation, and resilience-building strategies targeting frontline community safety personnel in February 2019. Pairs of reviewers screened titles and abstracts followed by full-text articles and conducted data abstraction and quality appraisal using the AMSTAR II tool. To ensure a rapid overview process, the search strategy was limited to the last 10 years, quality appraisal of reviews and abstraction of study-level data was completed by one person and verified by another, and the quality of the individual primary studies was not appraised. The findings were summarized descriptively.
A total of 14 reviews with 47 unique primary studies were found after screening 1393 records. A majority of studies targeted OSI in police officers (78.7%), followed by firefighters (17%) and correctional officers (4.3%). Of the 47 included primary studies, 24 targeted prevention of OSI (i.e., resilience training, stress management, suicide prevention, and other health promotions) and 23 targeted rehabilitation (i.e., drug therapy, psychotherapy, and other therapies). Prevention strategies including resilience training programs had positive outcomes, while suicide prevention and psychotherapy interventions reported mixed results.
Some promising interventions targeting the prevention and rehabilitation of OSI among police officers, firefighters, and correctional officers were identified in the included studies, and these results will serve as a basis for the development of evidence-based strategies to mitigate future risks in this population. However, several gaps were also identified in this area that will require further investigation prior to widespread implementation of effective interventions.
PROSPERO CRD42019125945.
急救人员是职业性应激损伤的高危人群,因为他们在工作中经常面临长期的压力。本快速综述的目的是总结现有的干预措施,以预防和管理急救人员的职业性应激损伤(OSI)。
在 2019 年 2 月,我们检索了 MEDLINE、EMBASE、PsycINFO、CINAHL、Web of Science 和 Cochrane Library,以查找针对一线社区安全人员的预防、康复和增强韧性策略的系统评价。由两名评审员筛选标题和摘要,然后是全文文章,并使用 AMSTAR II 工具进行数据提取和质量评估。为了确保快速综述过程,搜索策略仅限于过去 10 年,对综述的质量评估和研究水平数据的提取由一个人完成,并由另一个人进行验证,并且没有评估单个原始研究的质量。研究结果以描述性方式进行总结。
经过筛选 1393 条记录后,共发现 14 篇综述,其中有 47 项独特的原始研究。大多数研究针对警察的 OSI(78.7%),其次是消防员(17%)和狱警(4.3%)。在 47 项纳入的原始研究中,24 项针对 OSI 的预防(即韧性训练、压力管理、自杀预防和其他健康促进),23 项针对康复(即药物治疗、心理治疗和其他治疗)。预防策略,包括韧性训练计划,有积极的结果,而自杀预防和心理治疗干预报告了混合的结果。
在纳入的研究中,针对警察、消防员和狱警的 OSI 预防和康复,确定了一些有希望的干预措施,这些结果将为制定减轻这一人群未来风险的循证策略提供基础。然而,在这一领域也发现了一些空白,需要进一步调查,然后才能广泛实施有效的干预措施。
PROSPERO CRD42019125945。