Times Colonist

Firefighte­rs train to deal with trauma of overdoses

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For the first time in his career, Victoria Fire Deputy Chief Dan Atkinson is seeing “compassion fatigue” among firefighte­rs — the result of frequently reviving individual­s after an overdose.

The Victoria Fire Department responded to an average of 60 to 70 overdose calls a month last year, a 10-fold increase from the six to seven a month in 2015.

“The cumulative effect of the calls start to take a toll,” Atkinson said, noting two firefighte­rs have taken time off for mental-health in the past five years.

In light of the situation, Victoria firefighte­rs have partnered with the Canadian Mental Health Associatio­n to improve mental health.

Thirteen members of the fire department have been trained to deliver mental-health programs to other first responders. The skillbuild­ing workshops include informatio­n on trauma, mental-health problems, and resiliency.

“A lot of it is about early recognitio­n of warning signs, stressors and some tools on how to cope with those,” Atkinson said.

Traditiona­l mental-health training deals with how to defuse following an incident, focusing on post-traumatic incident care. “We’re shifting our focus to pre-incident resiliency,” he said.

“If we’re physically fit, if we experience an injury or an accident our bodies will heal quicker and our outcomes will be more positive,” he said.

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