在新西兰克赖斯特彻奇地震后,通过培训教育工作者提供恢复计划(ERASE-Stress),减少他们的初级和次级创伤压力症状。

R. Berger, Hisham Abu-Raiya, Joy Benatov
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引用次数: 37

摘要

当前的调查评估了普遍的基于学校的弹性干预(ERASE-Stress)对在新西兰坎特伯雷地震中与小学生一起工作的教育者的影响。在重大灾害背景下,教育工作者可能遭受“双重创伤”;他们可能会经历初级创伤(由于灾难本身)和次级创伤(由于与受创伤的学生一起工作)的症状。63名教育工作者被随机分配到“消除压力干预”或“应急和创伤事件管理”(METI)项目作为对照组。在培训结束时以及8个月的随访时评估该计划的疗效。与对照组教育工作者相比,接受ERASE-Stress干预的教育工作者的创伤后痛苦和继发创伤症状显著减少,作为地震幸存者帮助者的职业自我效能感感知水平显著提高,对个人未来的乐观态度和希望感增强,积极应对策略得到改善,适应不良应对方法的使用减少。“消除压力”训练的这些有益结果,使其成为教育工作者在重大灾难背景下处理受创伤学生的潜在有用工具。(PsycINFO数据库记录
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reducing primary and secondary traumatic stress symptoms among educators by training them to deliver a resiliency program (ERASE-Stress) following the Christchurch earthquake in New Zealand.
The current investigation evaluated the impact of a universal school-based resiliency intervention (ERASE-Stress) on educators who were working with elementary schoolchildren exposed to the Canterbury earthquake in New Zealand. In the context of major disasters, educators may suffer from "dual trauma"; they can experience symptoms of both primary trauma (as a result of the disaster itself) and secondary trauma (as a result of working with traumatized students). Sixty-three educators were randomly assigned to either the ERASE-Stress intervention or an alternative Managing Emergencies and Traumatic Incidents (METI) program which served as a control group. Efficacy of the program was evaluated at the end of the training as well as at 8 months follow-up. Compared with educators in the control group, those in the ERASE-Stress intervention significantly reduced their posttraumatic distress and secondary traumatization symptoms, improved their perceived level of professional self-efficacy as a helper of earthquake survivors, developed an optimistic outlook regarding their personal future and enhanced their sense of hope, and honed some of their positive coping strategies and reduced the utilization of some maladaptive coping methods. These beneficial consequences of the ERASE-Stress training make it a potentially useful tool for educators working with traumatized students in the context of major disasters. (PsycINFO Database Record
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