Caboolture Hospital, Australia.
The University of the Sunshine Coast, 90 Sippy Downs Dr, Sippy Downs, QLD 4556, Australia.
Australas Emerg Care. 2021 Dec;24(4):308-313. doi: 10.1016/j.auec.2021.03.005. Epub 2021 Apr 6.
There is growing concern for the health and wellbeing of paramedic students who are required to undertake work integrated learning (WIL) in the ambulance setting to become a registered paramedic. Paramedic culture, barriers to help seeking, and difficulty in accessing peer support is limiting their ability to express emotions and cope with workplace stress. This study aimed to examine whether participation in a peer social support group, using the CARES skills framework, changed paramedic students' emotional expression and emotion-focused coping. A convenience sample of seventy-eight participants were recruited from a paramedic program at a single regional university in Australia. Due to small participant numbers third year students were assigned to the intervention group (n = 44) and second year students were assigned to the control group (n = 34). The intervention group received training on how to undertake a peer social support group using the skills embedded in the CARES framework and were encouraged to meet every two weeks over a twelve-week period. All participants completed online surveys consisting of the DASS-21 stress subscale, General Help Seeking Questionnaire, Emotional Approach Coping Scale, Emotional Expressivity Scale and Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support in week 1 and in week 12. Findings suggest that peer social support participation significantly increased emotional expression and emotion-focused coping when compared to the control group. Furthermore, this intervention significantly reduced participants' reliance upon help seeking without a significant increase in external social support. This is the first known study to investigate the role of peer social support amongst paramedic students, and the findings provide new information on how to help individuals cope with the stressors of working in the ambulance setting. Future studies should investigate whether the positive effects of peer social support are consistent over time and focus on minimising sampling issues.
人们越来越关注从事工作整合学习(WIL)的护理学生的健康和福祉,他们需要在救护环境中进行 WIL 才能成为注册护理人员。护理人员文化、寻求帮助的障碍以及难以获得同伴支持,限制了他们表达情感和应对工作场所压力的能力。本研究旨在探讨参与同伴社会支持小组是否会改变护理学生的情感表达和情绪聚焦应对方式。在澳大利亚一所地区大学的护理课程中,通过方便抽样方法招募了 78 名参与者。由于参与者人数较少,将三年级学生分配到干预组(n=44),将二年级学生分配到对照组(n=34)。干预组接受了使用 CARES 框架中的技能进行同伴社会支持小组的培训,并被鼓励在 12 周的时间内每两周会面一次。所有参与者在第 1 周和第 12 周都完成了在线调查,包括 DASS-21 压力分量表、一般寻求帮助问卷、情绪趋近应对量表、情绪表达量表和多维感知社会支持量表。研究结果表明,与对照组相比,同伴社会支持的参与显著增加了情感表达和情绪聚焦应对。此外,这种干预措施显著减少了参与者对寻求帮助的依赖,而没有显著增加外部社会支持。这是首次研究同伴社会支持在护理学生中的作用的研究,研究结果提供了有关如何帮助个体应对在救护环境中工作的压力源的新信息。未来的研究应调查同伴社会支持的积极影响是否随时间而持续,并注重最小化抽样问题。