Psychologists refer to the mental health impact on people who do jobs like 911 communicators as vicarious trauma. That means these individuals take on the stress and emotional devastation of the people who call them, even though they are not at the scene. An aggravating factor in the effects of vicarious trauma on call-takers and dispatchers is that they are often left wondering what happened to that person who was so terrified on the phone. Once the call is passed on to the proper responders, it’s time for another call.
MANIFESTATIONS
Stress and trauma-related symptoms manifest in emergency communicators in multiple ways and can be very similar to the experiences of first responders, medical professionals, and military personnel.
One of the most common forms of stress experienced by both first responders and emergency communicators is compassion stress. The most effective police officers, firefighters, and 911 communicators pursue their careers because they want to help people. Compassion stress is the result of that desire, and it can be devastating when the individual experiences the no-win situation where the person cannot be helped. The result can be compassion fatigue, where the communicator starts to lose some of the empathy for the people on the other end of the line, especially if the person is not calling about a clear emergency. It can also lead to sloppy performance when lives are on the line.
Another type of stress common to first responders and emergency communicators is critical incident stress. This is the result of an event that shakes the person’s sense of normality. A 65-year-old man dying of a heart attack on the way to the hospital is tragic, but generally not traumatic for anyone who doesn’t know the deceased. In contrast, a fire at a daycare center that kills multiple children is likely to haunt all of the people who responded to the call and even the communicators who took the 911 call and dispatched the responders. Critical incident stress can lead to physical, emotional, and cognitive reactions that may be immediate or can be delayed for months. Emergency communicators involved in some of the most horrific incidents such as school shootings can even suffer from post-traumatic stress syndrome.
PTSD can be particularly devastating for emergency communicators because not all states recognize them as public safety employees. “The dispatchers who handled Sandy Hook suffered from PTSD and were not eligible for benefits,” Carver says. “Imagine that you have suffered this trauma and you don’t have a support system.”