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Journal Article

Citation

Bracken-Scally M, McGilloway S, Mitchell JT. Can. J. Aging 2016; 35(2): 161-174.

Affiliation

Department of Emergency Health Services;University of Maryland,Baltimore County.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Cambridge Press)

DOI

10.1017/S0714980816000210

PMID

27112913

Abstract

The aim of this study was to explore policies and procedures to support employees who retire from the emergency services. Interviews were conducted with participants who were familiar with existing policies and procedures in a large ambulance (n = 8) and fire (n = 6) service in Ireland. Four key themes were identified: (1) "I don't think it's a job at 65 to be running out on an emergency ambulance"; (2) "They do genuinely feel a wee bit isolated"; (3) improving the "cultural shock"; and (4) "I just keep going and hope for the best".

FINDINGS point towards retirement as a major life change and highlight a need for more structured, effective pre-retirement preparation. Factors unique to emergency service personnel include the physical and emotional stress involved in emergency service; a strong identification with the service; and a lack of clarity about rules and entitlements, requiring better information and preparation.


Language: en

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