Perspectives of Volunteer Firefighters during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Stumbling Blocks and Silver Linings
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design and Setting
2.2. Study Participants, Data Collection, and Interview Procedures
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Characteristics of Study Participants
3.2. Work Challenges: Perceived “Stumbling Blocks” of the COVID-19 Pandemic
3.3. Personal Challenges: Perceived “Stumbling Blocks” of the COVID-19 Pandemic
3.4. Work Benefits: Perceived “Silver Linings” of the COVID-19 Pandemic
3.5. Personal Benefits: Perceived “Silver Linings” of the COVID-19 Pandemic
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Gender | N | % |
---|---|---|
Female | 9 | 27 |
Male | 24 | 73 |
Age (Years) | N | % |
20–29 | 2 | 6 |
30–39 | 3 | 9 |
40–49 | 8 | 24 |
50–59 | 9 | 27 |
60–69 | 10 | 30 |
70+ | 1 | 3 |
Role-Related Challenges | Perspectives of Volunteer Firefighters |
---|---|
Fear of COVID exposure and transmission during emergency response | It made me realize just how risky working on an ambulance is. And for my agency we don’t get hazardous duty pay or hazard duty retirement, which is ridiculous, but I can’t really think about it at present, it just made me realize how ridiculous that is. I’m really concerned that despite the fact that I have been this vigilant for this long. I’m still going to end up getting it and bring it home to my family and someone I love will still end up dying from it, making this whole pandemic vigilance worthless. That is truly my biggest fear. |
Frustration with emergency responders not following public health measures | I found it doubly horrifying that people who say they want to be in service to other people, public, you know, public safety healthcare workers, would not comply. A friend of mine does a charitable event for first responders in another state. When they were visiting all the local fire departments about participating in the event, she made a statement that had she worn a mask or asked other people to put on a face covering, that she would have been laughed out of the department. There seems to be this overriding culture of not wanting to follow the public health call and ridiculing anybody that was insisting on it. |
Difficulty fostering camaraderie | So typically, we would interact and intermix with them [trainees] more. And I think it created a little bit of a fracture because normally, we would have been interacting with those guys all the time, as they just came into the department. They said they were very isolated to just their own shift. They weren’t interacting with the volunteers, as much. So I think it’s taken a much longer time to develop that interaction and, you know, familiarity. It’s not getting to socialize as much. You know, we spend 24 hours in the same building, we’re not really supposed to interact with each other that’s hard to do. |
Personal Challenges | Perspectives of Volunteer Firefighters |
---|---|
Fracturing of relationships | Unfortunately, this thing has turned political, which I think is why you have, why people are so passionate on one side or another. My sister-in-law keeps preaching from rooftops all the time she wishes it would stop being political. I wish it wouldn’t have happened, but unfortunately it is. So just trying to get people to sit down and have a calm rational discussion about it has become a real challenge. I have learned that some topics are better to not even talk about it because you don’t know if they’re going to explode on you and yell at you knowing you got to work with them. And some people just have a difficult time dealing with the vaccine. |
Disruptions to social support system | It really did close people off, but I think more than the adults. But the children are the biggest sufferers because they lost their social relationships, you know. My nephew graduated high school and didn’t get to go to his high school graduation. I have two pre-teen boys who missed the better part of an entire school year and or did miss an entire school year really. I’m more concerned about the emotional and mental impacts on our children than I am anything that faces me. When I think about juniors and seniors in high school in our community, who missed out on perhaps the best years of their life because of this, they didn’t get to experience those things. |
Chronic stress and negative impacts on mental health | I don’t like people as much anymore because of this information and then repeatedly argumentative about things that they don’t understand. I get it, people inherently fear the unknown, but it’s frustrating. I’m incredibly frustrated every day. Doesn’t look like it’s going away anytime soon. If I could, if I could make the same living, I could do anything but healthcare, I would do that. I see kids so tired of hearing about the same stuff over and over and over, doesn’t matter if it’s on the Internet, or TV or radio or whatever, where they’re constantly talking about the good and the bad of the pandemic. After a while you just get tired of hearing about it, so it, does it, does stress you out? Yes. Does it make you more tired? Probably. But is it something you will keep hearing about? Probably. |
Feeling frustrated that people are not taking the pandemic seriously | There are definitely a group of people in the broader community, not just in my town but in the broader community to county, that were against the masks. I’m sure that a lot of them embrace anti vax viewpoints, and I don’t think that’s going to stop. You know that they are of that mindset. And it’s frustrating to watch it, it’s pretty scary to watch it. Our citizens are refusing to get vaccinated in just numbers that don’t make sense to me, and that’s frustrating. |
Perceived Benefits | Perspectives of Volunteer Firefighters |
---|---|
Reinforcement of commitment to serve as volunteer firefighters | We try to maintain the fact that we’re doing it for other people. You know we’re all volunteering to serve the community. So, everybody was under the same impression that we can’t stop doing what we do on a daily basis. We need to keep doing it and COVID or not, that’s not an excuse. You know, we’ll do our best to stay away from each other and protect each other, but in the end, it wasn’t for us, it was for them. And that’s kind of how we view everything that we do. Oddly enough, we gained more volunteers during the pandemic. Number of individuals actually attending our training nights, our drills, has increased. |
Opportunity to improve training and work safety | Flexibility really was something that came out of this where we could have our firefighters do training, which helps our people that were missing training due to work schedules, family emergencies, vacations, and stuff. Now instead of missing the training they were able to do it online at their own leisure. And so, I do believe that is a huge plus that came out of COVID is now the awareness to doing webinars and zoom meetings, you know, facetiming people, online courses and stuff. So, I think one of the things that it has done is it has helped us to think about cleaning our equipment, and our facilities, more frequently. I can tell you in the 26 years of being a firefighter, you didn’t go out clean the steering wheel in that fire truck, ever… so, I can tell you that our trucks are getting clean, definitely after every call. So, that’s a huge plus. |
Personal Benefits | Perspectives of Volunteer Firefighters |
---|---|
Developing stronger connections with others | We talked with people about our different things that we’re going through and honestly have been open with our friends about it. And our friends have been really a big help. I’ve spent a whole lot more time at home. I spent a whole lot more time with my family. |
Having a new outlook on life | I think it’s brought some proposed perspective to what’s really important in life, you know, quality of life, family time, those types of things. Because when I look back at where I was just a year ago or two years ago, I was pretty high strung. Now I’m a lot more relaxed than I ever was just, you know, again, figuring out what the things are in life that are really important in your house, your family, you know, your beliefs, all of those things, and putting that back into perspective. I’ve made my choice that the most important thing right now is my children and my grandchildren. |
Observing the best of our society | I’m happy to do it, the folks in both of the departments I do it with are just extraordinary. I mean, these people will roll out of bed at 2 in the morning, in the middle of, you know, horrible weather, and go out. They help somebody they might not even know. Local grocery stores right off the bat teamed up with the Lion’s Club together for the elderly and they would deliver their groceries. So, a lot of people did their part and you don’t see that and they most certainly were doing the right thing for the elderly. That’s a good thing. |
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Gaughan, A.A.; Rush, L.J.; MacEwan, S.R.; Panchal, A.R.; McAlearney, A.S. Perspectives of Volunteer Firefighters during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Stumbling Blocks and Silver Linings. Challenges 2022, 13, 46. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe13020046
Gaughan AA, Rush LJ, MacEwan SR, Panchal AR, McAlearney AS. Perspectives of Volunteer Firefighters during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Stumbling Blocks and Silver Linings. Challenges. 2022; 13(2):46. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe13020046
Chicago/Turabian StyleGaughan, Alice A., Laura J. Rush, Sarah R. MacEwan, Ashish R. Panchal, and Ann Scheck McAlearney. 2022. "Perspectives of Volunteer Firefighters during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Stumbling Blocks and Silver Linings" Challenges 13, no. 2: 46. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe13020046
APA StyleGaughan, A. A., Rush, L. J., MacEwan, S. R., Panchal, A. R., & McAlearney, A. S. (2022). Perspectives of Volunteer Firefighters during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Stumbling Blocks and Silver Linings. Challenges, 13(2), 46. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe13020046