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Ambulance ramping predicts poor mental health of paramedics.

Wendy J. Phillips, Bernadine Cocks, Christopher Manthey

2022Psychological Trauma Theory Research Practice and Policy10 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Ambulance ramping involves a patient remaining under paramedic care until a hospital emergency department bed becomes available. This study examined whether negative ramping experiences (verbal abuse, physical abuse, compromised patient care, and patient fatality) contribute to relatively high levels of depression, anxiety, stress, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in paramedics. METHOD: = 10.73; 52.2% male) completed an online survey. RESULTS: Path analysis found that negative ramping experiences were positively associated with symptoms of depression, anxiety, stress, and PTSD. Interactions indicated that negative ramping experiences predicted greater depression, stress, and PTSD among paramedics with higher, but not lower, work-related self-efficacy. All interactions with resilience were nonsignificant. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that policymakers should aim to reduce ambulance ramping, and that future research could fruitfully investigate the mental health benefits of training programs that include strategies to minimize paramedics' feelings of powerlessness, frustration, and self-blame, during ramping. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

PsycINFOAnxietyMental healthDepression (economics)FeelingPsychologyClinical psychologyPsychiatryMedicineMEDLINELawEconomicsPolitical scienceMacroeconomicsSocial psychologyClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic SkillsSimulation-Based Education in HealthcarePosttraumatic Stress Disorder Research
Ambulance ramping predicts poor mental health of paramedics. | Litcius