Frontiers in Psychiatry (Jun 2020)

An Open Label Pilot Study of a Brief Psychosocial Intervention for Disaster and Trauma Survivors

  • Meaghan Louise O'Donnell,
  • Meaghan Louise O'Donnell,
  • Winnie Lau,
  • Winnie Lau,
  • Julia Fredrickson,
  • Julia Fredrickson,
  • Kari Gibson,
  • Kari Gibson,
  • Richard Allan Bryant,
  • Jonathan Bisson,
  • Susie Burke,
  • Walter Busuttil,
  • Andrew Coghlan,
  • Mark Creamer,
  • Debbie Gray,
  • Neil Greenberg,
  • Brett McDermott,
  • Alexander C. McFarlane,
  • Candice M. Monson,
  • Andrea Phelps,
  • Andrea Phelps,
  • Josef I. Ruzek,
  • Josef I. Ruzek,
  • Paula P. Schnurr,
  • Paula P. Schnurr,
  • Janette Ugsang,
  • Patricia Watson,
  • Shona Whitton,
  • Richard Williams,
  • Sean Cowlishaw,
  • Sean Cowlishaw,
  • Sean Cowlishaw,
  • David Forbes,
  • David Forbes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00483
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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BackgroundIn the aftermath of disaster, a large proportion of people will develop psychosocial difficulties that impair recovery, but for which presentations do not meet threshold criteria for disorder. Although these adjustment problems can cause high distress and impairment, and often have a trajectory towards mental health disorder, few evidence-based interventions are available to facilitate recovery.ObjectiveThis paper describes the development and pilot testing of an internationally developed, brief, and scalable psychosocial intervention that targets distress and poor adjustment following disaster and trauma.MethodThe Skills fOr Life Adjustment and Resilience (SOLAR) program was developed by an international collaboration of trauma and disaster mental health experts through an iterative expert consensus process. The resulting five session, skills-based intervention, deliverable by community-based or frontline health or disaster workers with little or no formal mental health training (known as coaches), was piloted with 15 Australian bushfire survivors using a pre-post with follow up, mixed-methods design study.ResultsFindings from this pilot demonstrated that the SOLAR program was safe and feasible for non-mental health frontline workers (coaches) to deliver locally after two days of training. Participants' attendance rates and feedback about the program indicated that the program was acceptable. Pre-post quantitative analysis demonstrated reductions in psychological distress, posttraumatic stress symptoms, and impairment.ConclusionsThis study provides preliminary evidence that the delivery of the SOLAR program after disaster by trained, frontline workers with little or no mental health experience is feasible, acceptable, safe, and beneficial in reducing psychological symptoms and impairment among disaster survivors. Randomized controlled trials of the SOLAR program are required to advance evidence of its efficacy.

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