Learn the essential skills of psychological first aid from the experts―the creators of the Johns Hopkins RAPID PFA method. Psychological first aid, or PFA, is designed to mitigate the effects of acute stress and trauma and assist those in crisis to cope effectively. PFA can be applied in emergencies, including disasters, terrorist attacks, and the COVID-19 pandemic. In the second edition of this essential guide, George S. Everly, Jr., and Jeffrey M. Lating draw on their experiences in Kuwait after the Gulf War, in New York City after the September 11 attacks, and during the COVID-19 pandemic to describe the principles and practices of PFA in an easy-to-follow, prescriptive, and practical manner. Informed by current events, the second edition includes updated chapters as well as three completely new chapters on • cultural awareness • PFA considerations with children • the use of PFA to facilitate community mental health and resilience Aimed at mental health practitioners, first responders, and global health disaster teams such as Médecins Sans Frontières and the World Health Organization, but also beneficial to those with little or no previous mental health training, The Johns Hopkins Guide to Psychological First Aid thoroughly explains RAPID PFA. RAPID, a unique evidence-informed and evidence-based PFA method, follows a set of easily understood principles. In each chapter, Everly and Lating―who have traveled nationally and internationally to teach the RAPID PFA model in numerous public health, fire, police, military, business, and faith-based settings―provide a step-by-step approach and include a key point summary. A unifying case exemplifies each phase of the RAPID PFA model in an ongoing dialogue that presents ideal PFA responses, examples of common mistakes, and various outcomes.
I just happened across a free class being taught at Coursera by George Everly, one of the authors of this guide - and it's called Psychological First Aid. (Full disclosure, Dr. Everly is personally known to me, has taught me and is a colleague.) Dr. Everly teaches at a few places, but one of them is the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health.
This guide is great, but it may be a lot for someone to read and understand. Even better are his courses - any of his courses. You can access them via Hopkins' website too, or via Coursera, and if you don't want a certification, it's free. This course is designed for people not already trained in mental health or trauma, and everyone should take this course. It's free - it could be life-changing. The worst that could happen is you never use the information, which means you have averted being anywhere near violence, war or disaster, lucky you - though you will have wasted some hours.
I, personally, believe it's important to know basic 1st Aid, and this means psychological 1st aid too. I heartily recommend learning about resilience and stress response and self-care and the urgent but basic things that anyone who learns can do to change people's lives, or save them. (and that last phrase is not hyperbole. Trauma is the root cause of many suicides and many physical ailments, even more lives that are not being lived to potential.) Look up the courses, read this 200-pg guide. Be ready, then hope you just wasted your time.
This book is a well-written and clear guide to the concept of psychological first aid, as well as reviewing the RAPID PFA framework. While I'm not sure you could go out and practice PFA simply based on reading this book, it gives you a good foundation on which to base that practice with more experience and guidance.
Psychological First Aid is a must have must-have book for anyone interested in the service of people suffering cute and chronic trauma scenarios. It is so well-written and packed with structured information. I have read it twice and will soon read it a third time. Much of the information offered in this book, we know, it is a good reminder. For those who find this information to be relatively new, I think they will be glad to be informed - it can only help - whatever our personal and social occupations. I suggest this is a very needed companion to all the information one can gather for ministering to domestic violence victims of all ages.