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Journal Article

Citation

Wesemann U, Mahnke M, Polk S, Willmund G. BJPsych Open 2020; 6(5): e79.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Royal College of Psychiatrists)

DOI

10.1192/bjo.2020.57

PMID

32741399

Abstract

In a pilot study, female emergency personnel showed increased paranoid ideation following a terror attack. This newly designed confirmatory study aims to replicate these previously found gender-specific results and investigate the progression of effects after 2 years. Participants were exposed and unexposed emergency personnel (n = 120). Exposed female versus exposed male personnel showed higher paranoid ideation at both time points. There was a group × time interaction effect in paranoid ideation: paranoid ideation increased over time in the exposed versus the unexposed female group. The same effect was observed with exposed female emergency personnel showing a significant 2-year post-deployment increase compared with the total group including unexposed female as well as exposed and unexposed male emergency personnel. There is, as yet, no conclusive explanation for this difference. Sexual harassment in a male-dominated profession may be a vulnerability factor. Differentiated preparation and follow-up for emergency responders is recommended moving towards health-related equality.


Language: en

Keywords

gender; trauma; emergency personnel; paranoid ideation; Terror attack

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