School of Psychology, National University of Ireland Galway, Galway, Ireland.
Cochrane Common Mental Disorders, University of York, York, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Dec 6;12(12):CD013242. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013242.pub2.
Military personnel and frontline emergency workers may be exposed to events that have the potential to precipitate negative mental health outcomes such as depression, symptoms of post-traumatic stress and even post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Programmes have been designed to build psychological resilience before staff are deployed into the field. This review presents a synthesis of the literature on these "pre-deployment resilience-building programmes".
The objective of this review was to assess the effectiveness of programmes that seek to build resilience to potentially traumatic events among military and frontline emergency service personnel prior to their deployment. These resilience programmes were compared to other interventions, treatment as usual or no intervention.
Studies were identified through searches of electronic databases including Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, Web of Science and Google Scholar. The initial search took place in January 2019, with an updated search completed at the end of September 2020.
Only studies that used a randomised controlled trial (RCT)/cluster-RCT methodology were included. The programmes being evaluated must have sought to build resilience prior to exposure to trauma. Study participants must have been 18 years or older and be military personnel or frontline emergency workers.
Studies that met the inclusion criteria were assembled. Data extracted included methods, participants' details, intervention details, comparator details, and information on outcomes. The primary outcomes of interest were resilience, symptoms of post-traumatic stress and PTSD. Secondary outcomes of interest included acute stress disorder, depression, social support, coping skills, emotional flexibility, self-efficacy, social functioning, subjective levels of aggression, quality of sleep, quality of life and stress. Assessment of risk of bias was also completed. A total of 28 studies were included in a narrative synthesis of results.
All 28 included studies compared an experimental resilience building intervention versus a control or no intervention. There was a wide range of therapeutic modalities used, including cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) informed programmes, biofeedback based programmes, stress-management programmes, mindfulness and relaxation programmes, neuropsychological-based programmes, and psychoeducational-informed programmes. The main outcomes are specified here, secondary outcomes such as depression, social support, coping skills, self-efficacy, subjective levels of aggression and stress are reported in text. No studies reported on the following pre-specified outcomes; acute stress disorder, emotional flexibility, social functioning, quality of sleep and quality of life. Resilience Eight studies reported resilience as an outcome. We narratively synthesised the data from these studies and our findings show that five of these interventions had success in building resilience in their respective samples. Two of the studies that reported significant results utilised a CBT approach to build resilience, while the other three successful programmes were mindfulness-based interventions. Symptoms of post-traumatic stress Our narrative synthesis of results included eight studies. Two of the eight studies produced significant reductions in symptoms of post traumatic stress compared to controls. These interventions used neuropsychological and biofeedback intervention models respectively. PTSD caseness Four studies reported PTSD caseness as an outcome. Our narrative synthesis of results suggests that evidence is mixed as to the effectiveness of these interventions in reducing clinical diagnosis of PTSD. One study of a neuropsychology-orientated Attention Bias Modification Training (AMBT) programme had success in reducing both symptoms of post-traumatic stress and numbers of participants receiving a diagnosis of PTSD. A stress-management programme reported that, when baseline differences in rates of pre-deployment mental health issues were controlled for, participants in the control condition were at 6.9 times the risk of a diagnosis of PTSD when compared to the intervention group. Given the diversity of intervention designs and theoretical orientations used (which included stress-management, neuropsychological and psychoeducational programmes), a definitive statement on the efficacy of pre-deployment programmes at reducing symptoms of post-traumatic stress and PTSD cannot be confidently offered.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: While a number of evaluations of relevant programmes have been published, the quality of these evaluations limits our ability to determine if resilience-building programmes 'work' in terms of preventing negative outcomes such as depression, symptoms of post-traumatic stress and diagnoses of PTSD. Based on our findings we recommend that future research should: a) report pre-/post-means and standard deviation scores for scales used within respective studies, b) take the form of large, RCTs with protocols published in advance, and c) seek to measure defined psychological facets such as resilience, PTSD and stress, and measure these concepts using established psychometric tools. This will provide more certainty in future assessments of the evidence base. From a clinical implications point of view, overall there is mixed evidence that the interventions included in this review are effective at safe guarding military personnel or frontline emergency workers from experiencing negative mental health outcomes, including PTSD, following exposure to potentially traumatic events. Based on this, practitioners seeking to build resilience in their personnel need to be aware of the limitations of the evidence base. Practitioners should have modest expectations in relation to the efficacy of resilience-building programmes as a prophylactic approach to employment-related critical incident traumas.
军人和一线应急人员可能会接触到一些有可能引发负面心理健康后果的事件,例如抑郁、创伤后应激症状,甚至创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)。已经设计了一些方案来在工作人员部署到现场之前建立心理弹性。本综述介绍了关于这些“部署前建立弹性方案”的文献综合。
本综述的目的是评估旨在提高军事人员和一线应急服务人员对潜在创伤性事件的弹性的方案的有效性,这些弹性方案与其他干预措施、常规治疗或不干预进行了比较。
通过电子数据库(包括 Ovid MEDLINE、Embase、PsycINFO、Web of Science 和 Google Scholar)进行了研究检索。初始搜索于 2019 年 1 月进行,2020 年 9 月底完成了更新搜索。
只有使用随机对照试验(RCT)/聚类 RCT 方法学的研究才被包括在内。正在评估的方案必须在接触创伤之前寻求建立弹性。研究参与者必须年满 18 岁,且必须是军人或一线应急人员。
符合纳入标准的研究被收集起来。提取的数据包括方法、参与者的详细信息、干预措施的详细信息、对照组的详细信息以及结果信息。主要关注的结果是弹性、创伤后应激症状和 PTSD。次要关注的结果包括急性应激障碍、抑郁、社会支持、应对技能、情绪灵活性、自我效能、社会功能、主观攻击性水平、睡眠质量、生活质量和压力。还完成了对偏倚风险的评估。共有 28 项研究纳入了结果的叙述性综合。
所有 28 项纳入的研究将一项实验性弹性建立干预措施与对照组或不干预进行了比较。使用了广泛的治疗方式,包括认知行为疗法(CBT)指导方案、基于生物反馈的方案、应激管理方案、正念和放松方案、神经心理学指导方案和心理教育指导方案。这里指定了主要结果,抑郁、社会支持、应对技能、自我效能、主观攻击性和压力等次要结果在文本中报告。没有研究报告以下预先指定的结果;急性应激障碍、情绪灵活性、社会功能、睡眠质量和生活质量。
八项研究报告了弹性作为一个结果。我们对这些研究的数据进行了叙述性综合,我们的发现表明,其中五项干预措施在各自的样本中成功地建立了弹性。两项报告显著结果的研究使用了 CBT 方法来建立弹性,而另外三个成功的方案是基于正念的干预措施。
我们对结果的叙述性综合包括八项研究。其中两项研究与对照组相比,创伤后应激症状显著减轻。这些干预措施分别使用了神经心理学和生物反馈干预模型。
四项研究报告了创伤后应激障碍病例数作为一个结果。我们的叙述性综合表明,这些干预措施在减少临床诊断的创伤后应激障碍方面的有效性证据不一。一项关于注意偏差修正训练(AMBT)的神经心理学导向方案的研究成功地降低了创伤后应激症状的发生和 PTSD 诊断的人数。一项应激管理方案报告说,当控制了基线预部署心理健康问题的差异时,与对照组相比,干预组参与者 PTSD 诊断的风险是对照组的 6.9 倍。鉴于干预设计和理论取向的多样性(包括应激管理、神经心理学和心理教育方案),不能自信地就部署前方案在预防创伤后应激症状和 PTSD 方面的疗效做出明确的结论。
虽然已经发表了许多关于相关方案的评估,但这些评估的质量限制了我们确定弹性建立方案是否能够在预防抑郁、创伤后应激症状和 PTSD 等负面结果方面“有效”的能力。基于我们的发现,我们建议未来的研究应该:a)报告各自研究中使用的量表的前后均值和标准差分数,b)采用大型 RCT 形式,并提前公布方案,c)努力测量定义明确的心理方面,如弹性、创伤后应激障碍和压力,并使用既定的心理计量工具来测量这些概念。这将为未来对证据基础的评估提供更多的确定性。从临床意义的角度来看,总的来说,有混合证据表明,本综述中纳入的干预措施在保护军人或一线应急人员免受潜在创伤性事件暴露后出现负面心理健康结果(包括 PTSD)方面是有效的。基于此,寻求在其人员中建立弹性的从业者需要意识到证据基础的局限性。从业者在将弹性建立方案作为预防与就业相关的创伤性事件的预防性方法时,应该对其疗效持适度的期望。