Abstract

This study developed guidelines for psychological first aid. This guideline promotes core response and disaster capabilities for disaster mental-health professionals, such as mental-health nurses and counseling psychologists at disaster sites. A research team composed of a first-aid professor and counseling psychology professor developed this psychological first-aid guideline to promote the psychological response required at disaster sites. The team verified each question’s content adequacy at each guideline-development stage to determine the appropriateness of response to a disaster. The PFA performance stage and achievement objectives were moved to the next stage only when the research team fully agreed upon them. This guideline revised and supplemented the six steps suggested in the handbook to five steps through expert meetings. The modified part was made into one step, without separating the first rapport formation and safety check. The checklist for evaluation was developed after verification by a total of four people, including one emergency-rescue-department professor, one counseling psychology professor, one paramedic, and one health educator. Based on previous studies, the cutting point is 24 points. The final completed psychological first aid consists of five stages: rapport formation and safety verification, psychological stabilization, information collection, problem resolution, and recovery, with details to be carried out at each step. These guidelines contribute to the promotion of disaster-response capabilities of disaster psychologists. Continuous training and practical exercises based on the five stages will provide fundamental data for a disaster-simulation psychological-first-aid educational development.

Highlights

  • Many people worldwide have lost precious possessions through natural or human disasters, and in some cases, even their lives have been threatened [1]

  • This guideline highlights the stability of the disaster site and suggests that therapeutic communication can be applied for confidentiality

  • The guidelines developed in this study are for mental-health nurses and counseling psychologists to implement psychological first aid (PFA) quickly and consistently

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Summary

Introduction

Many people worldwide have lost precious possessions (such as homes, health, and property) through natural or human disasters, and in some cases, even their lives have been threatened [1]. It is essential to understand how to respond in the early stages of a disaster. According to the Korea Nursing Dictionary, full-scale treatments at specialized institutions implement first aid in advance of the early stages of a disaster. Still, it can significantly impact the recovery of victims [4]. Psychological first aid (PFA) is a short-term care process provided to professional disaster experiences that aims to help stabilize the mind and body, reduce stress and pain, and promote a return to daily life [5]. The sooner the crisis intervention of psychological first aid through counseling is carried out, the sooner the after-effects can be minimized and coping ability can be improved [6]

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