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Original Research

The project ECHO first responder resiliency program: curriculum development, listening groups and lessons learned to support providers virtually during a pandemic

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Pages 682-690 | Received 20 Dec 2021, Accepted 20 Dec 2021, Published online: 08 Feb 2022
 

Abstract

The First Responder (FR) Resilience ECHO Program continues as a virtual telementoring platform supporting FRs both within New Mexico and internationally. The program began initially to support FRs through the opioid epidemic, and as the COVID-19 pandemic grew, the curriculum and audience broadened to include self-care and resilience skills to participants around the world. The notion of a FR was changed as providers everywhere were facing new challenges in their front-facing experience, whether this be a sense of overwhelm, an experience of detachment or of overload. The curriculum was altered with ongoing input from participants to address the needs of those working to help others during the COVID-19 pandemic, and included didactics in psychological first aid, self-care and resilience, peak performance skills, communication methods, diagnostic and systems descriptions, as well as the development of effective peer support programs around the nation. Perhaps the most important innovation was the development of listening groups, where participants could connect with one another in breakout rooms (15–20 min) to witness one another’s account of their current situation. Project ECHO is a well-established and renowned telementoring program that assists clinicians in the treatment of disease through the demonopolization of knowledge. The FR Resiliency ECHO Program grew out of the core ECHO model to assist FRs in developing skills to work with various crises that our society currently faces, in particular, the opioid epidemic and later, the COVID-19 pandemic. The project created a unique online experience and curriculum to facilitate both skill development and a sense of ongoing connection to a community of peers. This article describes the curriculum, the development of the listening group experience, and the feedback received from participants through focus groups.

Disclosure statement

The authors report no disclosures of conflicts of interest in the preparation of this project or manuscript.

Additional information

Funding

This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB) of the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Centre (#20-045).

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