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Stress reactivity and cognitive performance in a simulated emergency (firefighting)

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

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Stress reactivity and cognitive performance in a simulated emergency (firefighting). / Robinson, Sarita J.; Leach, John; Owen-Lynch, Jane et al.
In: Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine, Vol. 84, No. 6, 06.2013, p. 592-599.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Robinson, SJ, Leach, J, Owen-Lynch, J & Sünram-Lea, S-I 2013, 'Stress reactivity and cognitive performance in a simulated emergency (firefighting)', Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine, vol. 84, no. 6, pp. 592-599. https://doi.org/10.3357/ASEM.3391.2013

APA

Robinson, S. J., Leach, J., Owen-Lynch, J., & Sünram-Lea, S-I. (2013). Stress reactivity and cognitive performance in a simulated emergency (firefighting). Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine, 84(6), 592-599. https://doi.org/10.3357/ASEM.3391.2013

Vancouver

Robinson SJ, Leach J, Owen-Lynch J, Sünram-Lea S-I. Stress reactivity and cognitive performance in a simulated emergency (firefighting). Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine. 2013 Jun;84(6):592-599. doi: 10.3357/ASEM.3391.2013

Author

Robinson, Sarita J. ; Leach, John ; Owen-Lynch, Jane et al. / Stress reactivity and cognitive performance in a simulated emergency (firefighting). In: Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine. 2013 ; Vol. 84, No. 6. pp. 592-599.

Bibtex

@article{36e10afd63f94150a01d79ee465f9593,
title = "Stress reactivity and cognitive performance in a simulated emergency (firefighting)",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: During emergencies maladaptive behavior can reduce survival. This study compared the effects of a basic firefighter training course on twenty-one volunteers (with no firefighting experience) with age and gender-matched controls. METHODS: Stress reactivity (salivary cortisol and anxiety) were monitored across the course - day 1 (classroom), day 2 (physical equipment training) and day 3 (simulated fire emergency). Cognitive performance (visual attention, declarative and working memory) considered important in surviving a fire emergency were measured immediately post-training or after a 20 min delay. RESULTS: Prior to threat subjects showed an anticipatory cortisol increase but no corresponding increase in self-reported anxiety. On day 3 cortisol was higher in fire-fighters tested immediately after (10.37 nmol/L) and 20 min after training (7.20 nmol/L) compared to controls (3.13 nmol/L). Differences in cognitive performance were observed post-threat, with impairments in visual declarative memory in the fire- fighting subjects tested immediately, and WM impairments observed in those tested after a 20 min delay. CONCLUSIONS: Cognitive impairments were found following a simulated emergency and could explain maladaptive responses observed during real fires. Moreover, the results suggest the type of cognitive impairments observed may be time dependent, with different cognitive difficulties becoming evident at different times following an emergency.",
keywords = "fire emergency, anxiety, memory, cortisol",
author = "Robinson, {Sarita J.} and John Leach and Jane Owen-Lynch and Sandra-Ilona S{\"u}nram-Lea",
year = "2013",
month = jun,
doi = "10.3357/ASEM.3391.2013",
language = "English",
volume = "84",
pages = "592--599",
journal = "Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine",
issn = "0095-6562",
publisher = "AEROSPACE MEDICAL ASSOC",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Stress reactivity and cognitive performance in a simulated emergency (firefighting)

AU - Robinson, Sarita J.

AU - Leach, John

AU - Owen-Lynch, Jane

AU - Sünram-Lea, Sandra-Ilona

PY - 2013/6

Y1 - 2013/6

N2 - BACKGROUND: During emergencies maladaptive behavior can reduce survival. This study compared the effects of a basic firefighter training course on twenty-one volunteers (with no firefighting experience) with age and gender-matched controls. METHODS: Stress reactivity (salivary cortisol and anxiety) were monitored across the course - day 1 (classroom), day 2 (physical equipment training) and day 3 (simulated fire emergency). Cognitive performance (visual attention, declarative and working memory) considered important in surviving a fire emergency were measured immediately post-training or after a 20 min delay. RESULTS: Prior to threat subjects showed an anticipatory cortisol increase but no corresponding increase in self-reported anxiety. On day 3 cortisol was higher in fire-fighters tested immediately after (10.37 nmol/L) and 20 min after training (7.20 nmol/L) compared to controls (3.13 nmol/L). Differences in cognitive performance were observed post-threat, with impairments in visual declarative memory in the fire- fighting subjects tested immediately, and WM impairments observed in those tested after a 20 min delay. CONCLUSIONS: Cognitive impairments were found following a simulated emergency and could explain maladaptive responses observed during real fires. Moreover, the results suggest the type of cognitive impairments observed may be time dependent, with different cognitive difficulties becoming evident at different times following an emergency.

AB - BACKGROUND: During emergencies maladaptive behavior can reduce survival. This study compared the effects of a basic firefighter training course on twenty-one volunteers (with no firefighting experience) with age and gender-matched controls. METHODS: Stress reactivity (salivary cortisol and anxiety) were monitored across the course - day 1 (classroom), day 2 (physical equipment training) and day 3 (simulated fire emergency). Cognitive performance (visual attention, declarative and working memory) considered important in surviving a fire emergency were measured immediately post-training or after a 20 min delay. RESULTS: Prior to threat subjects showed an anticipatory cortisol increase but no corresponding increase in self-reported anxiety. On day 3 cortisol was higher in fire-fighters tested immediately after (10.37 nmol/L) and 20 min after training (7.20 nmol/L) compared to controls (3.13 nmol/L). Differences in cognitive performance were observed post-threat, with impairments in visual declarative memory in the fire- fighting subjects tested immediately, and WM impairments observed in those tested after a 20 min delay. CONCLUSIONS: Cognitive impairments were found following a simulated emergency and could explain maladaptive responses observed during real fires. Moreover, the results suggest the type of cognitive impairments observed may be time dependent, with different cognitive difficulties becoming evident at different times following an emergency.

KW - fire emergency

KW - anxiety

KW - memory

KW - cortisol

U2 - 10.3357/ASEM.3391.2013

DO - 10.3357/ASEM.3391.2013

M3 - Journal article

VL - 84

SP - 592

EP - 599

JO - Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine

JF - Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine

SN - 0095-6562

IS - 6

ER -